Digital television in Germany
In two steps during 2003 terrestial analog TV broadcasting in the area of Berlin and surrounding Brandenburg was switched completely to DVB-T with good reception in the public, because with its more than 20 channels it establishes a free competitor to cable TV. Other metropolitan areas to follow in 2004. Terrestial reception had lost most of its users in the 1990s and is believed to get a comeback now, especially in the mobile area.
Since early in the decade most of the 30+ TV stations broadcast their satellite signal analog and digital (DVB-S). 2003 the one digital-only bouquet is the one of Germany's only pay TV network Premiere, which (in form of its former owner Leo Kirch) got into serious fiscal trouble due to its early and proprietary (Betacrypt, d-box) enforcment of DTV.
Cable transmission is still mostly analog, again with the exception of Premiere (DVB-C) and some less important stations that didn't fit any more into the analog band. This situation is caused by the long and slow process of selling the infrastructure from former monopolist Deutsche Telekom to others, which for some years stopped nearly all new investments in that area.
Broadcast is always in DVB and SDTV PAL. No German network has announced HDTV broadcasts yet, but the pan-european network Euro1080 starts in 2004.
All analog television broadcasting in Germany are to be terminated by law by 2010.