enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Telephone and Data Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_and_Data_Systems

    Telephone and Data Systems, Inc. is a Chicago-based telecommunications service company providing wireless products and services; cable and wireline broadband, TV and voice services; and hosted and managed services to approximately 6 million customers nationwide through its business units TDS Telecom and U.S. Cellular (NYSE: USM) and OneNeck IT Solutions.

  3. TDS Telecom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TDS_Telecom

    TDS Telecom is an American telecommunications company with headquarters in Madison, Wisconsin.It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Telephone and Data Systems Inc, and is the seventh-largest local exchange carrier in the U.S. [1] TDS Telecom offers telephone, broadband Internet and television services to customers in 30 states and more than 900 rural and suburban communities, though it also ...

  4. Red Button (digital television) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Button_(digital...

    'Red Button' on a Bush TV remote control. The Red Button is a push-button on the remote control for certain digital television set top boxes in the UK, Australia, Belgium, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Thailand and by DirecTV and Comcast in the United States. It is for interactive television services [1] such as BBC Red Button and Astro (Malaysia).

  5. Trust Domain Extensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust_Domain_Extensions

    TDX also supports a remote attestation feature which allows users to determine that a remote system has TDX protections enabled prior to sending it sensitive data. [ 1 ] Intel TDX is of particular use for cloud providers, as it increases isolation of customer virtual machines and provides a higher level of assurance that the cloud provider ...

  6. Consumer Electronics Control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_Electronics_Control

    For example, a user press on a remote control will generate a 3-byte frame: a header byte, a <User Control Pressed> opcode (0x44), and an operand byte identifying the button. Including the initial idle time and extra-long start bit, this takes 88.5 ms (37 bit times). A later <User Control Released> opcode (0x45) has no operands.

  7. CableCARD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CableCARD

    CableCARD support is most common on higher end televisions that include a special slot for the CableCARD and a built-in cable tuner. The card acts like a unique "key" to unlock the channels and services to which the cable customer has subscribed, and the television's remote-control will also control the cable channels.

  8. Digital television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_television

    People can interact with a DTV system in various ways. One can, for example, browse the electronic program guide. Modern DTV systems sometimes use a return path providing feedback from the end user to the broadcaster. This is possible over cable TV or through an Internet connection but is not possible with a standard antenna alone.

  9. Remote control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_control

    In 1980, the most popular remote control was the Starcom Cable TV Converter (from Jerrold Electronics, a division of General Instrument) [15] which used 40-kHz sound to change channels. Then, a Canadian company, Viewstar, Inc., was formed by engineer Paul Hrivnak and started producing a cable TV converter with an infrared