Alison Greenwald
|
2
|
 |
|
03-19-2003 10:49 AM ET (US)
|
|
I can't imagine this being a hugely popular item, but it's certainly possible to get TV reception in the office or on a surface train if you are near a window and relatively near a broadcast tower. In a subway, signals can be repeated through leaky cable, the same way cell phone signals are done in many places and FM radio is done in some tunnels.
Usefulness is irrelavant anyway; I think the real market is people who have to have the latest toy, even if they are never going to use it.
|
Chris Johnson
|
1
|
 |
|
03-19-2003 03:38 AM ET (US)
|
|
Does anyone actually get TV reception anywhere this device is likely to be, like the office or the train? I gave up on free-to-air reception about 6 months after I got cable.
It's now more useful if you can export your TIVO recordings to a portable player, or something similar. (Personally I still use VHS, so my milage will vary.)
|