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BBC News report: extra second of time
Bill Ridgeway wrote:
There is a piece of technology called Programme Delivery Control (PDC) which, with appropriate recorders, start and stop recording on transmission of the programme. This is available on BBC1, BBC2 (and others?) and Channel 5 but not ITV1 or Channel 4 (This is not definitive!). Only works on analogue transmissions doesn't it? I found it to be unreliable and gave up using it. |
BBC News report: extra second of time
In article , Johnny B Good
wrote: With the way the broadcasters are behaving right now and for the forseeable future, there's definitely a market for an intelligent "PVR" Agreed, but in the meantime, a stupid PVR with an intelligent user is good enough. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
BBC News report: extra second of time
In article , Jay [email protected]
ospam.org scribeth thus "Woody" wrote in message ... "Mike O'Sullivan" wrote in message ... Jay wrote: I see the BBC has got hold of the fact that to bring UK time in line with global timing, we are to have an extra second added to the end of the year tonight (New Years Eve). What a pity the BBC cannot seem to get its own ship in order when it comes to timing?. On Christmas Day 2008 the 'BBC One' schedule ran 7 minutes 21 seconds late, which resulted in almost every programme being recorded that night, missing the last 5 or 6 minutes. Pathetic when you consider the technology they have at their disposal to time programmes these days! Absolutely agree. There is nothing that infuriates me more about the BBC. Actually it is nothing to do with the BBC. Nobody said it was anything to do with the BBC. I just said that the BBC had reported the story on BBC News. Who said anything about it being anything to do with the BBC? What is the BBC's fault is the lack of time keeping on its TV channels. Perhaps they ought to alter the rotational speed of old mutter earth;!.. -- Tony Sayer |
BBC News report: extra second of time
The message en.co.uk
from Roderick Stewart contains these words: In article , Johnny B Good wrote: With the way the broadcasters are behaving right now and for the forseeable future, there's definitely a market for an intelligent "PVR" Agreed, but in the meantime, a stupid PVR with an intelligent user is good enough. I agree, but us 'intelligent users' are rather outnumbered by those who would expect the technology to do the 'Donkeywork' for them. Me, I'm hoping someone with even more acumen would fulfil their hopes and dreams. ;-) -- Regards, John. Please remove the "ohggcyht" before replying. The address has been munged to reject Spam-bots. |
BBC News report: extra second of time
Light of Aria wrote:
One imagines these sorts as the SS/Gestapo of the BBC regime, going around in distinctive black uniforms with peaked caps and red BBC swastika logos on their arms. Your loyalty to the BBC Reich is in doubt: Your name vil go on ze list. "Name?" "Don't tell him Pike!" (kim) |
BBC News report: extra second of time
Brian W wrote:
"Jay" wrote in message ... I see the BBC has got hold of the fact that to bring UK time in line with global timing, we are to have an extra second added to the end of the year tonight (New Years Eve). What a pity the BBC cannot seem to get its own ship in order when it comes to timing?. On Christmas Day 2008 the 'BBC One' schedule ran 7 minutes 21 seconds late, which resulted in almost every programme being recorded that night, missing the last 5 or 6 minutes. Pathetic when you consider the technology they have at their disposal to time programmes these days! Strange. I managed to record 'Doctor Who' on my PC (with a manual tuner setting - no EPG auto-updating) and didn't miss the end. I added two minutes of padding and this was more than enough. "Doctor Who: Confidential" started on BBC3 before "Doctor Who" had finished on BBC1. If you had used the digital programme guide to set a timer you would have missed the end of Doctor Who. (kim) |
BBC News report: extra second of time
"Mike O'Sullivan" wrote in message
... Bill Ridgeway wrote: There is a piece of technology called Programme Delivery Control (PDC) which, with appropriate recorders, start and stop recording on transmission of the programme. This is available on BBC1, BBC2 (and others?) and Channel 5 but not ITV1 or Channel 4 (This is not definitive!). Only works on analogue transmissions doesn't it? There's an equivalent available on Freeview as part of the Freeview+ recorder spec (e.g. Humax PVR-9200T with up to date software). It works reasonably well, though it misses out the first and/or last 30 seconds or so of programmes sometimes. I doesn't seem to miss programmes altogether like PDC (mainly BBC). |
BBC News report: extra second of time
"Peter Duncanson" wrote in message
... On Wed, 31 Dec 2008 13:20:48 +0000, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote: We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "Jay" saying something like: I see the BBC has got hold of the fact that to bring UK time in line with global timing, we are to have an extra second added to the end of the year tonight (New Years Eve). What a pity the BBC cannot seem to get its own ship in order when it comes to timing?. I must admit my ears perked up when I heard the Sky News bimbo announce that "... the Earth has been turning slower than usual this year." Followed at this end by gales of laughter. Yes! As the Wikipedia article says: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_second the rotation of Earth slows down continually, though at a slightly variable rate. Whether or not 2008 was a particularly slow (or less slow) year that is not the reason for the leap second. The BBC have got it rather wrong here http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7797818.stm by muddling solar and sidereal days up: "For thousands of years the definition of a day was easy enough: the length of time it takes for a full rotation of the Earth around its axis. "Since ancient times, clocks of various descriptions have helped us keep track. "But recently, clocks have become so accurate that it has emerged that the Earth's rotation can take slightly longer or shorter than 24 hours." Well the time taken for a full rotation of the earth on its axis is about 23 hours 56 minutes, never 24 hours. -- Max Demian |
BBC News report: extra second of time
Ian Jackson wrote:
For those bringing in the New Year when watching digital TV or radio, the magic stroke of midnight will already be around a second too late. Should they start Ould Lang Syne on the 6th pip of the time signal? This, of course, is normally the last, long pip. However, on this occasion, it will be short, being the penultimate of 7 pips. Which radio station broadcasts the pips and Old Lang Syne at the beginning of a new year? |
BBC News report: extra second of time
In article , tony sayer
writes Perhaps they ought to alter the rotational speed of old mutter earth;!.. "On the third stroke - JUMP" Well it works for 1Bn Chinese! ;-) -- Kennedy Yes, Socrates himself is particularly missed; A lovely little thinker, but a bugger when he's ****ed. Python Philosophers (replace 'nospam' with 'kennedym' when replying) |
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