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BBC HD critised in The Independent
Peter Duncanson wrote:
On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 11:52:02 +0000, Kay Robinson wrote: Remeber the 'millenium bug'? A good example of the lack of basic common sense in those that rule that they could be conned into spending billions of public money on something that, had they an ounce of common sense, they should know wasn't going to happen, but hey, they do know how to get their cut. There may have been some people with the snouts in the trough, but the Y2K problems in computer software and hardware were real. They had to be fixed to prevent computer chaos after midnight 1999/2000. Many computer people worked long and hard on the Y2K project. The result was that almost all the problems were found and fixed in advance. It was the most successful computer software modification project ever. I first became involved in about 1997. I realised at the time that the degree of publicity necessary to get things moving would result in a backlash if the problems were successfully cured, with people scoffing and saying that there never were any problems. The savings in hardware costs in not storing all those 19s all through the 60s, 70s, and 80s may well have exceeded the costs of inserting them later. Not however if you were a well known supermarket I won't name for fear of lawyers who threw out all their 10-year lifetime corned beef in 1990! It was widely believed that all hell would break loose when the calendar rolled over; the problem was of course when manipulating periods crossing the calendar change. And as for snouts - I am still mystified as to how it could have affected my wife's car, such that the insurance company saw fit to add a term to the insurance excluding the Y2K problem. Her car had points, and a carburettor. No clock. Anyway (back on topic) replying to Roderick Stewart wrote: That might be true, but it would be pointless because it would be recording vastly more detail than anyone would see in a typical viewing situation. 720 lines I make limit of visual acuity (a arc second) for a 68 inch screen at 4 metres - a not particularly large room, but a biggish screen. That's for 20:20 vision, and it is not uncommon for people, especially young people, to have much better resolution than that. At that level on a grid of alternate black and white pixels you could count every one; diagonals would look steppy. So more is still needed... Andy |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
In article , Peter Duncanson
writes On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 11:52:02 +0000, Kay Robinson wrote: Remeber the 'millenium bug'? A good example of the lack of basic common sense in those that rule that they could be conned into spending billions of public money on something that, had they an ounce of common sense, they should know wasn't going to happen, but hey, they do know how to get their cut. There may have been some people with the snouts in the trough, but the Y2K problems in computer software and hardware were real. Tosh! The only way that all the ails predicted to befall modern life due to Y2K would have been resolved would be if programmers were perfect. Apart from minor issues, that otherwise would have been lost in day to day noise, nothing happened! Well, they crucified the last guy that claimed he was perfect - and I have neither met a perfect programmer nor seen any nailed to trees, though most of those employed by the 'M' & 'A' companies, amongst others, probably deserve to be! Y2K was over-hyped from beginning to end, just like the "Commie" threat before it and the "hot" threat today. -- 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) |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
"Mike Henry" wrote in message
... In , Andy Champ wrote: 720 lines I make limit of visual acuity (a arc second) for a 68 inch screen at 4 metres - a not particularly large room, but a biggish screen. I think you'll find that it's one arc minute, which is equivalent to a pixel-width of 1.16 mm or 0.046 inch at a viewing distance of 4 metres. That's for 20:20 vision, and it is not uncommon for people, especially young people, to have much better resolution than that. The maximum human visual acuity is said to be around 30 seconds of arc or twice the 20/20 resolution At that level on a grid of alternate black and white pixels you could count every one; diagonals would look steppy. So more is still needed Is there some nice website which would do that calculation for me in reverse, ie if I input my viewing distance it can tell me what size 1080p panel I should buy? TIA. 20/20 vision works out at about 0.01 inch per metre. So for 1080 pixels at a viewing distance of 1 metre we get: 1080 x 0.01 x 1 = 10.8 inches I would simply multiply the above by your chosen viewing distance, but Andy seems to be putting in a factor of two? |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Mon, 14 Dec 2009 01:05:22 +0000, Kennedy McEwen
wrote: In article , Peter Duncanson writes On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 11:52:02 +0000, Kay Robinson wrote: Remeber the 'millenium bug'? A good example of the lack of basic common sense in those that rule that they could be conned into spending billions of public money on something that, had they an ounce of common sense, they should know wasn't going to happen, but hey, they do know how to get their cut. There may have been some people with the snouts in the trough, but the Y2K problems in computer software and hardware were real. Tosh! The only way that all the ails predicted to befall modern life due to Y2K would have been resolved would be if programmers were perfect. Apart from minor issues, that otherwise would have been lost in day to day noise, nothing happened! Well, they crucified the last guy that claimed he was perfect - and I have neither met a perfect programmer nor seen any nailed to trees, though most of those employed by the 'M' & 'A' companies, amongst others, probably deserve to be! Y2K was over-hyped from beginning to end, just like the "Commie" threat before it and the "hot" threat today. There certainly was some over-hyping. However, no knowledgeable person ever claimed that a single Y2K problem in one piece of software on one computer somewhere would cause the downfall of civilisation as we know it. The impact of individual problems would vary. The major concern was with the combined effect of a large number of individual problems occurring at the same time. In about 1998 I gave an analogy: "A few drops of rain will make you wet. A very large number of raindrops can cause a devastating flood." It took hundreds of thousands of programmers working over a period of many months to perform a detailed search through the inside of every piece of software looking for date-handling problems and fixing them. Some date-handling problems did slip through the net and were fixed in the first few days of 2000. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
John Legon wrote:
"Mike Henry" wrote in message ... In , Andy Champ wrote: 720 lines I make limit of visual acuity (a arc second) for a 68 inch screen at 4 metres - a not particularly large room, but a biggish screen. I think you'll find that it's one arc minute, which is equivalent to a pixel-width of 1.16 mm or 0.046 inch at a viewing distance of 4 metres. It was late. Of course I meant to type "an arc minute" not "an arc second" That's for 20:20 vision, and it is not uncommon for people, especially young people, to have much better resolution than that. The maximum human visual acuity is said to be around 30 seconds of arc or twice the 20/20 resolution At that level on a grid of alternate black and white pixels you could count every one; diagonals would look steppy. So more is still needed Is there some nice website which would do that calculation for me in reverse, ie if I input my viewing distance it can tell me what size 1080p panel I should buy? TIA. 20/20 vision works out at about 0.01 inch per metre. So for 1080 pixels at a viewing distance of 1 metre we get: 1080 x 0.01 x 1 = 10.8 inches I would simply multiply the above by your chosen viewing distance, but Andy seems to be putting in a factor of two? I _knew_ I should have kept that darnn spreadsheet. But you have alllowed for me quoting _diagonal_ not _height_ of screen? Mike you may want to look at test signals on the actual screen as broadcasts are usually 720 not 1080, and converting them well is a non-trivial exercise. AFAIK there are no 720 panels, only 768 or 1080. Andy |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
"Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... On Mon, 14 Dec 2009 01:05:22 +0000, Kennedy McEwen wrote: In article , Peter Duncanson writes On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 11:52:02 +0000, Kay Robinson wrote: Remeber the 'millenium bug'? A good example of the lack of basic common sense in those that rule that they could be conned into spending billions of public money on something that, had they an ounce of common sense, they should know wasn't going to happen, but hey, they do know how to get their cut. There may have been some people with the snouts in the trough, but the Y2K problems in computer software and hardware were real. Tosh! The only way that all the ails predicted to befall modern life due to Y2K would have been resolved would be if programmers were perfect. Apart from minor issues, that otherwise would have been lost in day to day noise, nothing happened! Well, they crucified the last guy that claimed he was perfect - and I have neither met a perfect programmer nor seen any nailed to trees, though most of those employed by the 'M' & 'A' companies, amongst others, probably deserve to be! Y2K was over-hyped from beginning to end, just like the "Commie" threat before it and the "hot" threat today. There certainly was some over-hyping. However, no knowledgeable person ever claimed that a single Y2K problem in one piece of software on one computer somewhere would cause the downfall of civilisation as we know it. The impact of individual problems would vary. The major concern was with the combined effect of a large number of individual problems occurring at the same time. In about 1998 I gave an analogy: "A few drops of rain will make you wet. A very large number of raindrops can cause a devastating flood." It took hundreds of thousands of programmers working over a period of many months to perform a detailed search through the inside of every piece of software looking for date-handling problems and fixing them. Some date-handling problems did slip through the net and were fixed in the first few days of 2000. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) I was involved with some of this stuff and the main reason it passed with a whimper in our organisation - and I suspect many others - is because of good corporate planning and execution of work to make sure it didn't. There were those that said it was just a huge gravy train for the coders and consultants but in truth the fact that the Y2K incident was a non-event is testament to the good work that was done by the software industry to make it so. Chas |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
At 21:24:56 Mon, 14 Dec 2009, Andy Champ wrote:
John Legon wrote: 20/20 vision works out at about 0.01 inch per metre. So for 1080 pixels at a viewing distance of 1 metre we get: 1080 x 0.01 x 1 = 10.8 inches I would simply multiply the above by your chosen viewing distance, but Andy seems to be putting in a factor of two? I _knew_ I should have kept that darnn spreadsheet. But you have alllowed for me quoting _diagonal_ not _height_ of screen? It wasn't clear to me which dimension you were quoting, but should have realised that it was the diagonal :). For 20/20 vision (resolution of one arc minute) I get the following diagonal screen sizes in inches, per metre of viewing distance: 1280 x 720 -- 17 inches/metre 1366 x 768 -- 18 " " 1920 x 1080 -- 25 " " So for a 720 line screen at a distance 4 metres, the diagonal would indeed be 68 inches as you said... Conversely, the pixels on a 720 line 32 inch screen would be at the limit of visual acuity at a distance of about 1.9 metres. -- John Legon |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
"Chas Gill" wrote in message ... "Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... On Mon, 14 Dec 2009 01:05:22 +0000, Kennedy McEwen wrote: In article , Peter Duncanson writes On Sun, 13 Dec 2009 11:52:02 +0000, Kay Robinson wrote: Remeber the 'millenium bug'? A good example of the lack of basic common sense in those that rule that they could be conned into spending billions of public money on something that, had they an ounce of common sense, they should know wasn't going to happen, but hey, they do know how to get their cut. There may have been some people with the snouts in the trough, but the Y2K problems in computer software and hardware were real. Tosh! The only way that all the ails predicted to befall modern life due to Y2K would have been resolved would be if programmers were perfect. Apart from minor issues, that otherwise would have been lost in day to day noise, nothing happened! Well, they crucified the last guy that claimed he was perfect - and I have neither met a perfect programmer nor seen any nailed to trees, though most of those employed by the 'M' & 'A' companies, amongst others, probably deserve to be! Y2K was over-hyped from beginning to end, just like the "Commie" threat before it and the "hot" threat today. There certainly was some over-hyping. However, no knowledgeable person ever claimed that a single Y2K problem in one piece of software on one computer somewhere would cause the downfall of civilisation as we know it. The impact of individual problems would vary. The major concern was with the combined effect of a large number of individual problems occurring at the same time. In about 1998 I gave an analogy: "A few drops of rain will make you wet. A very large number of raindrops can cause a devastating flood." It took hundreds of thousands of programmers working over a period of many months to perform a detailed search through the inside of every piece of software looking for date-handling problems and fixing them. Some date-handling problems did slip through the net and were fixed in the first few days of 2000. -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) I was involved with some of this stuff and the main reason it passed with a whimper in our organisation - and I suspect many others - is because of good corporate planning and execution of work to make sure it didn't. There were those that said it was just a huge gravy train for the coders and consultants but in truth the fact that the Y2K incident was a non-event is testament to the good work that was done by the software industry to make it so. Chas Having just re-read what I wrote yesterday I see that it didn't quite convey what I meant(!). It DID, of course, pass with a whimper and DIDN'T turn out to be the disaster everyone feared......... :-) |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
sent an e-mail to the BBC Trust
I received this reply. Thank you for your e-mail. I understand you are unhappy with picture quality on BBC HD. I can advise that you visit the following blog article posted by Danielle Nagler, the Head of BBC HD, in which she discusses the various issues raised by recent changes: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcintern..._a_respon.html I hope this helps to clarify the situation however I appreciate you may continue to hold a different view. I can assure you that I've registered all your points on our database, which is our daily record of all audience feedback. We use this to compile reports for BBC staff about issues such as those you've raised along with other feedback or comments we receive (we will not include your personal details in any such reports). This helps to inform future decisions, so I'd like to thank you for taking the time to contact us with your concerns regarding this matter. Thank you for taking the time to contact the BBC. Regards Robert BBC Information I doubt they are going to change Regards David |
BBC HD critised in The Independent
On Tue, 15 Dec 2009 10:41:25 -0000, "David"
wrote: I doubt they are going to change But it was her article that upset so many people in the first place!!! -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. Twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, overlooking Lochs Long and Goil in Argyll, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.gt-britain.co.uk/weather |
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