No cable for decades, just OTA.

I live in a fairly urban area, but at the bottom of a localized geographic bowl about a mile in diameter, surrounded 360 deg. by 100 ~ 200 ft. limestone ridges. No line of sight to any horizon. I ended up installing a 30 yr. old deep-fringe ChannelMaster antenna on the roof, on a short mast connected to a vintage NOS Archer (Radio Shack) rotator (Made in USA, if that gives an indication of it's age). I could probably have gotten away with the antenna in the attic, but wading through 18" of loose fiberglass insulation discouraged me from doing so.

The deep-fringe antenna gets me a very good signal, far better than the cheap "digital" indoor antennas. Depending on what direction it's pointed, I can see the more powerful Indy and Cinci stations, but their programming is a dupe of my home stations.

No such thing as a "digital" antenna. RF is RF is RF as far as TV frequencies go. "Digital" is just marketing hype. Frequencies are mostly the same as the old analog broadcasts. Modulation is what's changed.

I've used a ChannelMaster DVR for the last few years for time-shifting. My current one has a 1Gb HDD for storage that's never been more than half full. Two built-in tuners to record two OTA programs concurrently while watching a third on the TV. New ones have larger HDD's.

Landline is VOIP using an Ooma device. $4.95/mo. plus $44.95 for 15 Meg. broadband.

slmjim