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Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
On Sat, 02 Dec 2006 09:21:30 +0000, Jerry wrote:
No you were lying yet again, you are a psychopathical liar from I can see, you will lie in the same sentence as telling fact, you probably don't even realise that you do so now... Well, that might be putting it too strongly, but I too was beginning to suspect that JF has some mental "issues". Though it might simply be age-related cognitive problems - he did say that he's pushing 70. |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
Mike Smith wrote:
On Sat, 02 Dec 2006 09:21:30 +0000, Jerry wrote: No you were lying yet again, you are a psychopathical liar from I can see, you will lie in the same sentence as telling fact, you probably don't even realise that you do so now... Well, that might be putting it too strongly, but I too was beginning to suspect that JF has some mental "issues". Though it might simply be age-related cognitive problems - he did say that he's pushing 70. He's simply a Usenet 'stirrer'. An articulate troll if you like. No better (for uk.tech.digital readers) than [half_pint] and all his/her aliases. -- Mark Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply. |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
In article ews.net, MJ Ray wrote:
Zak wrote: Jerry wrote: No they can't (easily), not unless the EPG and delivery etc. is removed from BSkyB's control, even the BBC has to pay to have their FTA channels listed on the EPG. I think they can. They have to pay for their inclusion of the EPG but could as well add another EPG to the bit stream. Huh? I thought Sky's EPG encoding used the DVB-SI stream in a manner incompatible with Event Information Tables (the standard EPG) - that is, Sky-coding prevents adding another EPG to the bitstream. BBC told me that they can't add the standard EPG to satellite. Is that incorrect? EIT data is already carried (it currently provides the current/following data which identifies actual programme info during overruns), this is table 0x4E on PID 0x0012. You can see this data in action if you switch say from ITV to BBC just after the hour when the prev programme is overrunning - the Now & Next banner will first show the cached EPG data (the later programme) and then update to show the EIT data (which can only be found on the transponder carrying the programme.) It also provides the synopsis when you press Info whilst viewing a programme. So there surely cannot be any problem with data format to add tables 0x4F (current/following for other transponders) 0x50-0x5F (later events, this transponder) and 0x60-0x6F (later events, other transponders) which are identical in format. Two areas where there might be an issue: a) Bandwidth. Carrying the full EPG is quite a lot of data. The complete SkyEPG (all days forward including synopsis) is currently only carried on the "default" transponder. Only the current and next 6-hour chunks are carried on other transponders (and without synopsis data). Since many (all?) Sky boxes don't cache the full EPG, it needs to be broadcast at high rate to provide data interactively. It is not necessary however to transmit this data at a high rate if boxes cache it fully. Allowing it to accumulate over an hour or more would probably be fine. Probably only boxes with a disk would be able to cache the full EIT data. b) The logistics of assembling the data for all broadcasters. At present someone (Sky?) assemble the full SkyEPG from the many broadcasters' input and feed it (two 6 hour chunks) to all transponders. I guess the BBC receive this feed and just include it on their transponders, rather than build it themselves. So they probably do not have easy access to the raw data for non-BBC channels. Of course this wouldn't stop them including EIT data for just their own programming. Mike. |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
Fudge-packing prick
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Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
On 2006-11-30, Sandman wrote:
On Thu, 30 Nov 2006 13:07:08 +0000, Bill Wright wrote: "JohnT" wrote in message ... "JF" wrote in message ... Sorry -- can't stop. The muddled thinking that pervades this newsgroup like November mist on a Sussex down dictates that commercial reality is too hideous a spectre to accept, and that that messengers shall be shot at. May we please have those pearls of wisdom translated into English? He means you're all talking ****e. Bill, you might like him for his reactionary politics, but you're doing yourself no favours by siding with somebody so lacking in integrity. So anyone who is lacking in integrity must be disagreed with, regardless of whether they're actually right or wrong? -- David Taylor |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
On Tue, 05 Dec 2006 10:37:17 +0000, TroJon wrote:
Fudge-packing prick I fear you are a trifle homophobic. -- Jim Watt http://www.gibnet.com |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
Please don't perpetrate the notion that Sky 'own' 28.2E or any satellites, they don't. No wonder Joe Public imagine that in the UK [Satellite TV]=[Sky]. But conversely the BBC take the "don't_mention_SKY" thing too far the other way. I mean when they say their services are available on "Digital Satellite" they somehow expect us to know that they don't mean Hotbird or Astra 19.2e etc. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
"Graham" wrote in message ... snip But conversely the BBC take the "don't_mention_SKY" thing too far the other way. I mean when they say their services are available on "Digital Satellite" they somehow expect us to know that they don't mean Hotbird or Astra 19.2e etc. Anyone who doesn't know that would be in need of someone who does, or are you seriously suggesting that someone would buy a dish and receiver without knowing (or finding out) what they need? |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
"Jerry" wrote:
"Graham" wrote: But conversely the BBC take the "don't_mention_SKY" thing too far the other way. I mean when they say their services are available on "Digital Satellite" they somehow expect us to know that they don't mean Hotbird or Astra 19.2e etc. Anyone who doesn't know that would be in need of someone who does, or are you seriously suggesting that someone would buy a dish and receiver without knowing (or finding out) what they need? Now that high-street electronics shops are selling dish-receiver sets for 80 quid (much less than the 150 quid the BBC falsely claim), it seems fairly likely that someone might do that. http://www.maplin.co.uk/module.aspx?...8737&doy=19m12 http://www.maplin.co.uk/module.aspx?...9085&doy=19m12 -- MJR/slef Free Sat FAQ: http://mjr.towers.org.uk/blog/2006/astefaq |
Plans for Sky's unused spectrum at 28.2 East?
On 19 Dec 2006 21:03:30 GMT, MJ Ray wrote:
"Jerry" wrote: "Graham" wrote: But conversely the BBC take the "don't_mention_SKY" thing too far the other way. I mean when they say their services are available on "Digital Satellite" they somehow expect us to know that they don't mean Hotbird or Astra 19.2e etc. Anyone who doesn't know that would be in need of someone who does, or are you seriously suggesting that someone would buy a dish and receiver without knowing (or finding out) what they need? Now that high-street electronics shops are selling dish-receiver sets for 80 quid (much less than the 150 quid the BBC falsely claim), it seems fairly likely that someone might do that. http://www.maplin.co.uk/module.aspx?...8737&doy=19m12 http://www.maplin.co.uk/module.aspx?...9085&doy=19m12 If they mentioned those they would probably be accused of anti-competitive practices by Uncle Rupert. |
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