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BBC THREE wins "best non-terrestrial channel" at Edinburgh TV festival
Is SkyOne on Freeview then?
Paul DS. "Ian" wrote in message ... In message , Sam Nelson writes In article , Charlie Pearce writes: That's funny, I could have sworn you could watch it on Freeview... So, even the people that run broadcasting organisations these days don't understand how their technology works? Ludicrous. From their website, "The six channels in the running for the Best Non Terrestrial Channel Award are Dave, E4, BBC Three, BBC Four, ITV2 and Sky One." What they mean is "Best Digital-Only Terrestrial Channel", but maybe that's too long to fit on the award. :¬) -- Ian |
BBC THREE wins "best non-terrestrial channel" at Edinburgh TV festival
In message , Paul D.Smith
writes Is SkyOne on Freeview then? Paul DS. "Ian" wrote in message ... In message , Sam Nelson writes In article , Charlie Pearce writes: That's funny, I could have sworn you could watch it on Freeview... So, even the people that run broadcasting organisations these days don't understand how their technology works? Ludicrous. From their website, "The six channels in the running for the Best Non Terrestrial Channel Award are Dave, E4, BBC Three, BBC Four, ITV2 and Sky One." What they mean is "Best Digital-Only Terrestrial Channel", but maybe that's too long to fit on the award. :¬) -- Ian You're right, I didn't spot that. It should be Sky Three. If they meant Sky One, then they must have been referring to "Best Satellite channel". Perhaps they're suggesting that Sky One is all you miss if you're not a Sky subscriber. :¬) -- Ian |
BBC THREE wins "best non-terrestrial channel" at Edinburgh TV festival
The message
from "ChrisM" contains these words: ====snip==== (what DO you call an aerial on a spacecraft then? I suppose it's an antenna?) It most definitely _is_ ! I use 'antenna' all the time 'cos I can't spell 'aerial'[1] :-) [1] Unless I can cheat and see the word in the quoted text (I'm good at recognizing when a word is _correctly_ spelt, but ICBA to type out the two or more permutations to work out the correct spelling when I don't have that luxury). Mind you, I'm dismayed that I haven't learnt the spelling for that word in all the time I've been subscribed to this NG. :-( -- Regards, John. Please remove the "ohggcyht" before replying. The address has been munged to reject Spam-bots. |
BBC THREE wins "best non-terrestrial channel" at Edinburgh TV festival
On Thu, 28 Aug 2008 13:22:59 +0100, Peter Duncanson
wrote: On Thu, 28 Aug 2008 09:35:00 +0100, (Sam Nelson) wrote: In article , Charlie Pearce writes: That's funny, I could have sworn you could watch it on Freeview... So, even the people that run broadcasting organisations these days don't understand how their technology works? Ludicrous. Surely the problem is that their use of the word "terrestrial" is a hangover from when the distinction was between "terrestrial" and "satellite". With that meaning of the word the terrestrial services are BBC1, BBC2, ITV, C4 and five, everything else is non-terrestrial. With the arrival of digital terrestrial services that meaning of the word has been undermined, but it is not easy to find a single word to replace it. "Analogue" might have been useful for a few years, but not now. This is not the first time, nor will it be the last, when a word has lost touch with its origins. The word "filming" is still sometimes used when no film is involved. And who would think twice about referring to an aerial on a spacecraft, even though "aerial" means "in the air" and spacecraft aerials are in a vacuum? And of course 'taping' a programme, even when using a PVR or DVD-R. Marky P. |
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