used on many
cable TV headends of Deutsche Bundespost Kabelfernsehen (predecessor of Kabel Deutschland) from the 1980s–c. 1999. May also have been used in the Netherlands. With a basic plan, Kabel Deutschland offers about 30
free-to-air analogue TV and an equal number of
FM and
digital radio channels. All analogue TV channels are available in the
digital DVB-C encoding format, Plus an additional 70 television channels are not available in analogue. On top of that, about 100 digital
pay TV channels can be ordered as a subscription-based service. This includes Germany's pay TV broadcasters
Sky Deutschland as well as Kabel Deutschland's own offerings. On 1 February 2012, Kabel Deutschland ceased to use the Astra 23.5°E position for distribution, switching to its terrestrial fibre network. Furthermore, Kabel Deutschland offers Internet (
Kabel Internet, up to 1000 MBit/s downstream and 75 MBit/s upstream from November 2014) and telephone services (
Kabel Phone). For historical reasons, Kabel Deutschland cannot offer its products directly to all who are connected via Kabel Deutschland's network, since only one third of all viewers are direct customers. In the early-1980s, when the cable network was established, Kabel Deutschland's predecessor, Deutsche Bundespost had to leave in-house cables to other companies or the house owners. This turned out to be a significant obstacle since Kabel Deutschland now has to make single contracts with hundreds of small cable operators. ==References==