A claim by Hauppauge that its Nova-S USB2.0 box will be able to receive
soon-to-be-launched free satellite TV broadcasts has been denied by the
organisation gearing up to transmit them.
Hauppauge
announced the
£79.99
USB2.0-linked Nova-S device last week and said that, with the aid of
additional software, it would be able to render HD Freesat transmissions as well
as those using standard resolution.
But a statement from the broadcaster today said: “Freesat would like to
clarify that the Hauppauge free-to-air USB2 satellite tuner is not a Freesat
licensed product and as such will not receive Freesat services. Freesat licensed
products can be identified by the Freesat logo and are subject to a stringent
test and conformance regime.”
Details of the Freesat services, a joint enterprise between
ITV and the
BBC,
are thin on the ground but a provisional launch date of May 8 has been set,
according to reports on the web. There is very little precise information on its
website,
other than to say that it will launch in Spring – of which, of course, there is
very little left.
A spokeswoman at Freesat's public-relations company said she could not
elaborate on the statement, though she agreed that it raised more questions than
it answered. She could not, for instance, clarify whether it meant that
conditional access technology would restrict reception to authorised devices.
The statement came too late to get an immediate comment from Hauppauge.
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