|
BBC HD critised in The Independent
And I thought the computer industry was bad enough. Actually it was,
and probably still is. In the days of the first hard disks being in cabinets the size of a washing machine, one household name firm (don't ask, I no longer have the book and I can't remember which of the two most likely candidates it was) had a model that could be 'upgraded' to double the capacity. After it had paid for a couple of upgrades, a client firm got suspicious - IIRC they secretly watched or filmed the next one. The 'upgrade' procedure consisted of removing the lid, a furtive look around to make sure no one was watching, changing settings on a dip-switch, and replacing the lid! On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 12:43:01 -0000, "Graham." wrote: When I worked for Granada Rentals, it was received wisdom amongst all of the service (close your ears Paul) engineers, that Hitachi had knobbled the luminance bandwidth on standard play on the first dual speed model we offered, so long play didn't look as bad in comparison. You could pull out a diode and restore full SP quality. -- ================================================== ======= Please always reply to ng as the email in this post's header does not exist. Or use a contact addresses at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 15:58:22 +0000, Java Jive
wrote: And I thought the computer industry was bad enough. Actually it was, and probably still is. In the days of the first hard disks being in cabinets the size of a washing machine, one household name firm (don't ask, I no longer have the book and I can't remember which of the two most likely candidates it was) had a model that could be 'upgraded' to double the capacity. After it had paid for a couple of upgrades, a client firm got suspicious - IIRC they secretly watched or filmed the next one. The 'upgrade' procedure consisted of removing the lid, a furtive look around to make sure no one was watching, changing settings on a dip-switch, and replacing the lid! There was a mainframe computer (in the 1960s or 70s) that was capable of having its speed increased substantially. It took one or two engineers a full working day to make the necessary modifications. The contract required that they had the whole computer room to themselves. Eventually someone discovered that the modification was the removal of a single component. Or so I was told. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 16:57:31 +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote:
On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 15:58:22 +0000, Java Jive wrote: And I thought the computer industry was bad enough. Actually it was, and probably still is. In the days of the first hard disks being in cabinets the size of a washing machine, one household name firm (don't ask, I no longer have the book and I can't remember which of the two most likely candidates it was) had a model that could be 'upgraded' to double the capacity. After it had paid for a couple of upgrades, a client firm got suspicious - IIRC they secretly watched or filmed the next one. The 'upgrade' procedure consisted of removing the lid, a furtive look around to make sure no one was watching, changing settings on a dip-switch, and replacing the lid! There was a mainframe computer (in the 1960s or 70s) that was capable of having its speed increased substantially. It took one or two engineers a full working day to make the necessary modifications. The contract required that they had the whole computer room to themselves. Eventually someone discovered that the modification was the removal of a single component. Or so I was told. You're not thinking of the overclocking of Vaxen that was widespread in the early 80's are you. All that required was to replace the clock generator's crystal with a faster one. It voided your warranty (natch) but the outfit that did it would sell you a service contract. |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 20:32:36 GMT, pete wrote:
On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 16:57:31 +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote: On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 15:58:22 +0000, Java Jive wrote: And I thought the computer industry was bad enough. Actually it was, and probably still is. In the days of the first hard disks being in cabinets the size of a washing machine, one household name firm (don't ask, I no longer have the book and I can't remember which of the two most likely candidates it was) had a model that could be 'upgraded' to double the capacity. After it had paid for a couple of upgrades, a client firm got suspicious - IIRC they secretly watched or filmed the next one. The 'upgrade' procedure consisted of removing the lid, a furtive look around to make sure no one was watching, changing settings on a dip-switch, and replacing the lid! There was a mainframe computer (in the 1960s or 70s) that was capable of having its speed increased substantially. It took one or two engineers a full working day to make the necessary modifications. The contract required that they had the whole computer room to themselves. Eventually someone discovered that the modification was the removal of a single component. Or so I was told. You're not thinking of the overclocking of Vaxen that was widespread in the early 80's are you. All that required was to replace the clock generator's crystal with a faster one. It voided your warranty (natch) but the outfit that did it would sell you a service contract. No. That doesn't fit the story that I was told. The computer would be legitimately modified by its manufacturer's engineer(s) in exchange for money. I can't vouch for the accuracy of the story. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
"Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 20:32:36 GMT, pete wrote: On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 16:57:31 +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote: On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 15:58:22 +0000, Java Jive wrote: And I thought the computer industry was bad enough. Actually it was, and probably still is. In the days of the first hard disks being in cabinets the size of a washing machine, one household name firm (don't ask, I no longer have the book and I can't remember which of the two most likely candidates it was) had a model that could be 'upgraded' to double the capacity. After it had paid for a couple of upgrades, a client firm got suspicious - IIRC they secretly watched or filmed the next one. The 'upgrade' procedure consisted of removing the lid, a furtive look around to make sure no one was watching, changing settings on a dip-switch, and replacing the lid! There was a mainframe computer (in the 1960s or 70s) that was capable of having its speed increased substantially. It took one or two engineers a full working day to make the necessary modifications. The contract required that they had the whole computer room to themselves. Eventually someone discovered that the modification was the removal of a single component. Or so I was told. You're not thinking of the overclocking of Vaxen that was widespread in the early 80's are you. All that required was to replace the clock generator's crystal with a faster one. It voided your warranty (natch) but the outfit that did it would sell you a service contract. No. That doesn't fit the story that I was told. The computer would be legitimately modified by its manufacturer's engineer(s) in exchange for money. I can't vouch for the accuracy of the story. That certainly applied to ICL 2900 series mainframes. However in that case the 'concept' was that you were paying for computing power, not just buying some hardware, and the total package included hardware, software and on-site engineering support. ICL were selling several different power ranges of computer, and worked out that instead of manufacturing several different internals, they could just produce one set of boards and then set the power rating internally. I think IBM and Cray worked on similar principles - you paid to have the wick turned up. It does my head in sometimes working out if this is reasonable (buying a certain amount of power) or a con (hang on - I've already paid for this hardware). You will probably find the same principle applied to modern automobile engines. For example the 160 bhp and 180 bhp engines may well be identical apart from the programming of the ECU. |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Fri, 11 Dec 2009 08:44:53 -0000, David WE Roberts wrote:
"Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 20:32:36 GMT, pete wrote: On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 16:57:31 +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote: On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 15:58:22 +0000, Java Jive wrote: And I thought the computer industry was bad enough. Actually it was, and probably still is. In the days of the first hard disks being in cabinets the size of a washing machine, one household name firm (don't ask, I no longer have the book and I can't remember which of the two most likely candidates it was) had a model that could be 'upgraded' to double the capacity. After it had paid for a couple of upgrades, a client firm got suspicious - IIRC they secretly watched or filmed the next one. The 'upgrade' procedure consisted of removing the lid, a furtive look around to make sure no one was watching, changing settings on a dip-switch, and replacing the lid! There was a mainframe computer (in the 1960s or 70s) that was capable of having its speed increased substantially. It took one or two engineers a full working day to make the necessary modifications. The contract required that they had the whole computer room to themselves. Eventually someone discovered that the modification was the removal of a single component. Or so I was told. You're not thinking of the overclocking of Vaxen that was widespread in the early 80's are you. All that required was to replace the clock generator's crystal with a faster one. It voided your warranty (natch) but the outfit that did it would sell you a service contract. No. That doesn't fit the story that I was told. The computer would be legitimately modified by its manufacturer's engineer(s) in exchange for money. I can't vouch for the accuracy of the story. That certainly applied to ICL 2900 series mainframes. However in that case the 'concept' was that you were paying for computing power, not just buying some hardware, and the total package included hardware, software and on-site engineering support. ICL were selling several different power ranges of computer, and worked out that instead of manufacturing several different internals, they could just produce one set of boards and then set the power rating internally. I think IBM and Cray worked on similar principles - you paid to have the wick turned up. It does my head in sometimes working out if this is reasonable (buying a certain amount of power) or a con (hang on - I've already paid for this hardware). It is still widespread today. A lot of high-end suppliers provide CoD (capacity on demand) services. This entails a server having many more processors built in than are used / licensed by the client. If you want more, you just get the supplier in (or even do it over the 'net) to enable more and your account gets billed the requisite amount. The box doesn't change, just the amount of it you're permitted to use. Likewise some top-end software is licensed on a per-CPU basis. So the same binary and the same level of support will cost more, or less, depending on the power of the server it runs on. |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
wrote in message ... A terrible thought is that they've actually decided Freesat is a very bad idea and want to push people away from it, onto Freeview HD, ASAP. I regret to say that is quite possible that is what they have decided. I don't have any inside info, only going by what seems to be going on elsewhere, but IMO the 'rights holders' are pushing the BBC in this direction, as they appear to have pushed a number of European national satellite broadcasters away from FTA for all to FTV for registered nationals only. I have in mind the Italian, French and Belgian broadcasters who still operate FTA sat services but are introducing packages that need a specific decoder box and card available free to a national address. On Italian satellite (SD) television Mediaset Canale 5 is setting the trend, the previously FTA sat service has had the bit rate significantly reduced at the same time as a full bit rate encrypted version has started on an adjacent channel but needs their specific Tivu decoder box and a free viewing card. I suspect that the other services of RAI and Mediaset on these transponders will go the same way and the FTA services be terminated eventually. It is said that Germany will not go encrypted on satellite because their audience has traditionally been FTA via either cable or satellite with little terrestrial broadcasting. Stations that have tried going encrypted have had to reverse the move. However the Mediaset example calls this into question because the Italian audience was also equally split FTA satellite/terrestrial and yet (AIUT) following the digital switch over (just happening) terrestrial is encrypted and the full sat package requires a Tivu decoder. So if these changes are happening in Europe where transponder space doesn't seem to be a problem, but because of pressure from rights holders, then perhaps that will happen here too. Could the BBC re launch its services on satellite as an encrypted HD package, but with free viewing card with your TV licence to keep them happy ? Ch4 are announced as launching HD on the Sky platform, and though this may well be because Sky made the better commercial offer, and there may not be room on the FTA transponders, the issues with rights holders and FTA HD might well have come into the equation. As all Europe moves towards encrypted 'packages' is the BBC FTA HD model sustainable ? (Hope I have at least some of that right :-) Roger R |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On 11 Dec, 11:13, "Roger R"
wrote: wrote in message ... A terrible thought is that they've actually decided Freesat is a very bad idea and want to push people away from it, onto Freeview HD, ASAP. I regret to say that is quite possible that is what they have decided. I don't have any inside info, only going by what seems to be going on elsewhere, but IMO the 'rights holders' are pushing the BBC in this direction, as they appear to have pushed a number of European national satellite broadcasters away from FTA for all to FTV for registered nationals only. This is exactly what I've been hearing. *I have in mind the Italian, French and Belgian broadcasters who still operate FTA sat services but are introducing packages that need a specific decoder box and card available free to a national address. On Italian satellite (SD) television Mediaset Canale 5 *is setting the trend, the previously FTA sat service has had the bit rate significantly reduced at the same time as a full bit rate encrypted version has started on an adjacent channel but needs their specific Tivu decoder box and a free viewing card. * I suspect that the other services of RAI and Mediaset on these transponders will go the same way and the FTA services be terminated eventually. It is said that Germany will not go encrypted on satellite because their audience has traditionally been FTA via either cable or satellite with little terrestrial broadcasting. Stations that have tried going encrypted have had to reverse the move. HD+ (for Germany) launched properly at the start of November. It features rather strong encryption on HD versions of SD FTA channels. I have no idea how it's doing. What I've heard (no idea if it's true) is that this may start a migration of higher value content from the free- to-air/state television broadcasters to the freeish-to-view private/ commercial broadcasters. Things like recent movies and top-tier American shows will move out of the reach of FTA channels. * However the Mediaset example calls this into question because the Italian audience was also equally split FTA satellite/terrestrial and yet (AIUT) following the digital switch over (just happening) terrestrial is encrypted and the full sat package requires a Tivu decoder. So if these changes are happening in Europe where transponder space doesn't seem to be a problem, but because of pressure from rights holders, then perhaps that will happen here too. * Could the BBC *re launch its services on satellite as an encrypted HD package, but with free viewing card with your TV licence to keep them happy ? Do all Freesat boxes have CI slots? My Humax HDR does - and I can't imagine who uses them now because it's a pain in non-Freesat mode. So maybe they're there ready for a BBC/PSB CAM! Even so, CI modules are out of date because the output is in-the-clear; it would probably need to be CI+ now (as with HD+ going forward) - but hopefully (again, like HD+) there'd be a first generation of CI modules available for people with existing kit. Ch4 are announced as launching HD on the Sky platform, and though this may well be because Sky made the better commercial offer, and there may not be room on the FTA transponders, the issues with rights holders and FTA HD might well have come into the equation. As all Europe moves towards encrypted 'packages' is the BBC FTA HD model sustainable ? Well, it's fine for the BBC if it's only showing its "own" content - but if CH4, five, and others never join them on the platform, it's a bit pointless. We might end up with a worse case scenario - the rest of Europe uses a competitive non-proprietary FTV model, while our "free" broadcasters are stuck behind Sky's system and on the piecemeal roll out of Freeview HD with inadequate bandwidth. (Hope I have at least some of that right :-) I hope we've both got it all wrong! :-) Cheers, David. |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Fri, 11 Dec 2009 11:26:52 +0000, Kay Robinson
wrote: On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 11:05:01 GMT, Chris J Dixon sharpened a new quill and scratched: Grappler wrote: Danielle Nagler, the BBC's head of HD, admitted there had been "some issues" with picture quality on certain shows but she did not believe this "had anything" to do with the lower bitrate. What was also quite interesting, in the extended interview for "Points of View", was her take on picture sharpness. She believes that "HD is not simply about sharpness, it is about picture depth". I have no idea how that parameter is quantified, nor, I imagine, does she. Depth of field was probably what she was referring to. An SD image may have total pin sharpness of the subject but that sharpness will deterioate in the rest of the image whereas HD will give an equal sharpness over the entire image. Often, when it's a 'busy' image it's better to have only the subject in sharp focus. I have a copy of the BBC film 'Galapogas' in both HD and SD and the SD version is better to watch because the fussy background has less definition, whereas the HD version makes the background as sharp as the subject. The position there seems to be that the background is more detailed than the subject so that a lower resolution representation has more effect, from the viewer's POV, on the background than on the subject. A higher resolution will give an image that is closer to the original as seen through the camera lens. HD will give a more accurate representation than will SD. You have described a case in which a film 'Galapogas' looks better to you personally in a lower resolution version. Fair enough. As our eyes naturally focus onto the sharper part of the image (where there is a difference) our brains process the main content and are not distracted for whatever goes on in the background. This is a basic technique in photography and has the advantage that less light is needed because the apeture is open wider. Depth of Field is described he http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tut...h-of-field.htm http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography...mls/depth.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth_of_field Depth of Field can be small (subject in focus, everything else blurred) or large (everthing equally sharp). Chris J Dixon (above) quotes the BBC's head of HD who believes that "HD is not simply about sharpness, it is about picture depth". Assuming proportionately equal compression in transmission the only difference between SD and HD is picture sharpness[1]. Any differences in visual apearance are related directly to sharpness, aka definition or resolution. [1] I'm assuming that HD TV transmissions have the same number of bits per pixel as SD. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
"Kay Robinson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 10 Dec 2009 11:05:01 GMT, Chris J Dixon sharpened a new quill and scratched: Grappler wrote: Danielle Nagler, the BBC's head of HD, admitted there had been "some issues" with picture quality on certain shows but she did not believe this "had anything" to do with the lower bitrate. What was also quite interesting, in the extended interview for "Points of View", was her take on picture sharpness. She believes that "HD is not simply about sharpness, it is about picture depth". I have no idea how that parameter is quantified, nor, I imagine, does she. Depth of field was probably what she was referring to. An SD image may have total pin sharpness of the subject but that sharpness will deterioate in the rest of the image whereas HD will give an equal sharpness over the entire image. I thought depth of field was dependent on the lens on the camera (so smaller aperture = more depth). Assuming the content was recorded just once (presumably on HD equipment), how can HD and SD have different background depth? If the HD image has a background equally as sharp as the subject, that must be the case on SD too? -- Bartc |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:45 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com