-- Edited by dorian on Wednesday 27th of February 2019 09:50:47 AM
Tony Bev said
10:04 AM Feb 27, 2019
They probably are, Dorian
I am not game to click on them, as I am travelling with restricted security/bandwidth
Extraordinary Rendition said
11:57 AM Feb 27, 2019
Dorian , NASA Engineer you say. Golly did those clever folk ever get a man on the moon after all that? ; - )
Jaahn said
01:02 PM Feb 27, 2019
Dorian
Do the physical laws of physics apply to tv antenas. If so how do the people who have designed them for years missed the basics that a NASSA engineer just happened to stumble across ?? (half way to mars perhaps?)
Of course it is a dodgey deal(scam) and it pops up everwhere now !! A fool and his money are easily parted even today. Those reviews are cheap to get.
BuY one and tell us if it is magic
Jaahn
PS Under the NEW RULE IN 2019 I have been getting HD TV for years and years on free to air TV. I must be magic too !! Chase up those battery recondition adds too and save more money !!
-- Edited by Jaahn on Wednesday 27th of February 2019 01:07:46 PM
Extraordinary Rendition said
02:03 PM Feb 27, 2019
Next question: Is TVa scam in and of itself? I got rid of FTA TV back in the 90s since it was far too costly.
dorian said
02:32 PM Feb 27, 2019
The first thing that struck me was the claim that Australian law had changed in 2019 to prevent content providers from scrambling their transmissions. I confess that, in the light of the government's recent stupid, draconian encryption legislation, I wondered whether they had done something equally as baffling to digital transmissions. As expected, my searches turned up nothing. Still, it's not a referral one would expect to get from a top rating tech web site. BTW, one of the abovementioned URLs links the buyer to the TV Shopping Network (an expired URL).
Terryt said
03:39 PM Mar 1, 2019
From reading the Snopes report it appears it may or may not work as well or better than any other aerial for normal tv stations (includng hd) but you won't get any pay tv for nothing
Is this an elaborate scam?
https://ceevooantenna.com/content/tech/ceevoo-rules-au.php
http://weeklylifestyles.com/tvpro/
The URL was a click-through ad at Tom's Hardware.
More ...
https://guff.com/revolutionary-antenna-developed-by-nasa-engineer-gets-popular-tv-channels-without-paying-for-it
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/super-antenna-octa-air-legitimate-replacement-cable/
-- Edited by dorian on Wednesday 27th of February 2019 09:50:47 AM
I am not game to click on them, as I am travelling with restricted security/bandwidth
Dorian
Do the physical laws of physics apply to tv antenas. If so how do the people who have designed them for years missed the basics that a NASSA engineer just happened to stumble across ?? (half way to mars perhaps?)
Of course it is a dodgey deal(scam) and it pops up everwhere now !! A fool and his money are easily parted even today. Those reviews are cheap to get.
BuY one and tell us if it is magic
Jaahn
PS Under the NEW RULE IN 2019 I have been getting HD TV for years and years on free to air TV. I must be magic too !! Chase up those battery recondition adds too and save more money !!
-- Edited by Jaahn on Wednesday 27th of February 2019 01:07:46 PM
Next question: Is TV a scam in and of itself? I got rid of FTA TV back in the 90s since it was far too costly.
The first thing that struck me was the claim that Australian law had changed in 2019 to prevent content providers from scrambling their transmissions. I confess that, in the light of the government's recent stupid, draconian encryption legislation, I wondered whether they had done something equally as baffling to digital transmissions. As expected, my searches turned up nothing. Still, it's not a referral one would expect to get from a top rating tech web site. BTW, one of the abovementioned URLs links the buyer to the TV Shopping Network (an expired URL).