While looking over the fence is a reasonable guide, Bev is their own company and works on their own timeline.
For example, they are several models of DN receivers that had no equivalent in Canada and in some models, popular s/w features available on U.S. models were removed.
While it might be considered a great deal that Bev has access to a large team of h/w and s/w engineers, history has shown that sometimes things don't always go as planned.
There has been some product so disastrous that they were killed off within 1 year.
Imagine be orphaned with a $1200 HD PVR.
Thankfully, no Canadians were injured in this experiment.
Also witness several product lines were the s/w got progressively worse, should it get better?
Why do providers lock into a single technology source?
In the early DirecTV days, you could choose amongst RCA, Toshiba, Hughes, Sony and others.
They all were compatible with the transmission signal and conditional access, yet each offered their own experience in user interface and product features.
Since millions of FTA receivers have proven their apparent working compatibility with Bev signals and many have amazing features, why hasn't this been leveraged by Bev and remove the distraction of having to deal with h/w technical issues and push that back onto the dealers/installers?
Imagine their advancement in the market if unencumbered by such baggage.
Particularly in light of the less than stellar job they do in that area.
If I want to watch TV, I can go to the store and choose any brand/model I want, we need something similar in the television set top market as well.
There were be more rapid advancement of products and innovative feature if the marketplace had some competition.
Is the future bright for Bev, that's a big question given the current conditions, but being handcuffed to Echostar technology and possibly the associated un-secure Nagra encryption will put Canadians at a disadvantage for some time to come.