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What controls the time a program starts?
By which I mean this. Last night I decided to use the lazy persons way of
operating the box. I scanned the prog guide and set reminders for all the things I wanted to watch. although it more or less works, I find that in some cases the reminders tell me ahead of time, while the other show is running on aniother channel, even though its supposed to end, in others the front gets cut a bit due to the late reminder. I, being naive just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide even if this is slightly incorrect due to running issues or whatever. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active |
What controls the time a program starts?
Brian Gaff wrote:
By which I mean this. Last night I decided to use the lazy persons way of operating the box. I scanned the prog guide and set reminders for all the things I wanted to watch. although it more or less works, I find that in some cases the reminders tell me ahead of time, while the other show is running on aniother channel, even though its supposed to end, in others the front gets cut a bit due to the late reminder. I, being naive just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide even if this is slightly incorrect due to running issues or whatever. Brian It used to be a thing called Programme Delivery Control, or PDC, which consists of signals sent by the broadcaster as hidden codes in the teletext service, indicating when transmission of a programme starts and finishes. I'm sure it will be the same sort of thing now, though how it works exactly I'm not sure. |
What controls the time a program starts?
Norman Wells wrote:
Brian Gaff wrote: just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide It used to be a thing called Programme Delivery Control, or PDC Now it's called 'Accurate Recording' but not all Freeview+ branded recorder use it, let alone generic DVB-T recorders. |
What controls the time a program starts?
On 21/08/2012 08:28, Brian Gaff wrote:
By which I mean this. Last night I decided to use the lazy persons way of operating the box. I scanned the prog guide and set reminders for all the things I wanted to watch. although it more or less works, I find that in some cases the reminders tell me ahead of time, while the other show is running on aniother channel, even though its supposed to end, in others the front gets cut a bit due to the late reminder. I, being naive just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide even if this is slightly incorrect due to running issues or whatever. Brian Some of the problem may be due to delays in the way the PVR reacts to the OTA signals. I believe that my Humax 9200T can take several seconds (maybe up to 20?) before it starts recording. Which raises the point of when do the signals actually get sent? When the programme starts (as viewed live) or a few seconds before it appears live? And what about turning off at the end? It seems unnecessary, and very annoying, to miss a programme recording because the end signal for a programme which finishes at 2100 are delayed until 2101 while adverts or announcements take place, so overlapping with the start signals on another channel where they are sent accurately at 2100. -- Jeff |
What controls the time a program starts?
In article ,
Andy Burns wrote: Norman Wells wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide It used to be a thing called Programme Delivery Control, or PDC Now it's called 'Accurate Recording' but not all Freeview+ branded recorder use it, let alone generic DVB-T recorders. It depends on your PVR. For example, I have three Humax PVRs. The HDR-FOX-T2 reliably starts up during the run-in announcement. The older PVR-9200-T picks up the start cue but is slower to operate and clips the first few seconds of the programme. The much older PVR-8000-T which was their first PVR) doesn't have this facility and so starts and stops at the exact times given in the EPG - usually clipping one or other end in the process. As there is no auto-padding you have to go into the recording list an manually add padding on each end to be safe. |
What controls the time a program starts?
Jeff Layman wrote:
Which raises the point of when do the signals actually get sent? When the programme starts (as viewed live) or a few seconds before it appears live? And what about turning off at the end? It seems unnecessary, and very annoying, to miss a programme recording because the end signal for a programme which finishes at 2100 are delayed until 2101 while adverts or announcements take place, so overlapping with the start signals on another channel where they are sent accurately at 2100. Because of the way 'accurate recording' is implemented, there is always exactly one programme running on a channel; as one starts the previous one stops. BBC are very accurate with their signalling, the running status changes at the beginning of the station ident immediately before the programme. ITV and C4/5 rather less so, and the Freeview channels seem to rely on clock time. -- Dave |
What controls the time a program starts?
On Tue, 21 Aug 2012 11:45:23 +0100, Dave wrote:
Jeff Layman wrote: Which raises the point of when do the signals actually get sent? When the programme starts (as viewed live) or a few seconds before it appears live? And what about turning off at the end? It seems unnecessary, and very annoying, to miss a programme recording because the end signal for a programme which finishes at 2100 are delayed until 2101 while adverts or announcements take place, so overlapping with the start signals on another channel where they are sent accurately at 2100. Because of the way 'accurate recording' is implemented, there is always exactly one programme running on a channel; as one starts the previous one stops. BBC are very accurate with their signalling, the running status changes at the beginning of the station ident immediately before the programme. ITV and C4/5 rather less so, and the Freeview channels seem to rely on clock time. I find C5 start/stop very unreliable. I have stopped recording anything on C5. Steve -- Neural Network Software. http://www.npsl1.com EasyNN-plus. Neural Networks plus. http://www.easynn.com SwingNN. Forecast with Neural Networks. http://www.swingnn.com JustNN. Just Neural Networks. http://www.justnn.com |
What controls the time a program starts?
On 21/08/2012 11:45, Dave wrote:
Jeff Layman wrote: Which raises the point of when do the signals actually get sent? When the programme starts (as viewed live) or a few seconds before it appears live? And what about turning off at the end? It seems unnecessary, and very annoying, to miss a programme recording because the end signal for a programme which finishes at 2100 are delayed until 2101 while adverts or announcements take place, so overlapping with the start signals on another channel where they are sent accurately at 2100. Because of the way 'accurate recording' is implemented, there is always exactly one programme running on a channel; as one starts the previous one stops. BBC are very accurate with their signalling, the running status changes at the beginning of the station ident immediately before the programme. ITV and C4/5 rather less so, and the Freeview channels seem to rely on clock time. The BBC seem to spend more and more time on announcements shown between programmes about forthcoming programmes (interminably so with the recent Olympics), so if they signal just before a programme starts, then almost invariably there will be maybe a minute or more of dross at the end of a programme showing these announcements. That would perhaps not be a problem if the other channels' programmes were late, but if they are on time and the BBC "off" signal does not appear until their now late programme (because of the announcements) is due to start - just after the start signal according to your post - then that could mean missing recording of the other channel's programme. But why should the BBC care about that? -- Jeff |
What controls the time a program starts?
On Tue, 21 Aug 2012 11:45:23 +0100, Dave wrote:
Jeff Layman wrote: Which raises the point of when do the signals actually get sent? When the programme starts (as viewed live) or a few seconds before it appears live? And what about turning off at the end? It seems unnecessary, and very annoying, to miss a programme recording because the end signal for a programme which finishes at 2100 are delayed until 2101 while adverts or announcements take place, so overlapping with the start signals on another channel where they are sent accurately at 2100. Because of the way 'accurate recording' is implemented, there is always exactly one programme running on a channel; as one starts the previous one stops. BBC are very accurate with their signalling, the running status changes at the beginning of the station ident immediately before the programme. ITV and C4/5 rather less so, and the Freeview channels seem to rely on clock time. I find my PVR (Humax PVR9300T) often misses the beginning of programmes on the BBC, but other channels are worse. -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) If a man stands in a forest and no woman is around (")_(") is he still wrong? |
What controls the time a program starts?
"Dave" wrote in message
... Jeff Layman wrote: Which raises the point of when do the signals actually get sent? When the programme starts (as viewed live) or a few seconds before it appears live? And what about turning off at the end? It seems unnecessary, and very annoying, to miss a programme recording because the end signal for a programme which finishes at 2100 are delayed until 2101 while adverts or announcements take place, so overlapping with the start signals on another channel where they are sent accurately at 2100. Because of the way 'accurate recording' is implemented, there is always exactly one programme running on a channel; as one starts the previous one stops. BBC are very accurate with their signalling, the running status changes at the beginning of the station ident immediately before the programme. ITV and C4/5 rather less so, and the Freeview channels seem to rely on clock time. ITV1 sometimes starts recording a minute or so before the programme, and stops when the programme starts. -- Max Demian |
What controls the time a program starts?
On 21/08/2012 11:39, Roger Wilmut wrote:
In article , Andy Burns wrote: Norman Wells wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide It used to be a thing called Programme Delivery Control, or PDC Now it's called 'Accurate Recording' but not all Freeview+ branded recorder use it, let alone generic DVB-T recorders. It depends on your PVR. For example, I have three Humax PVRs. The HDR-FOX-T2 reliably starts up during the run-in announcement. The older PVR-9200-T picks up the start cue but is slower to operate and clips the first few seconds of the programme. The much older PVR-8000-T which was their first PVR) doesn't have this facility and so starts and stops at the exact times given in the EPG - usually clipping one or other end in the process. As there is no auto-padding you have to go into the recording list an manually add padding on each end to be safe. When we first got our HDR-FOX-T2, we used accurate record, but gave up after six weeks as we were often missing the start of programmes - sometimes starting up to 20 minutes late and mainly on BBC channels. Now set at 5 mins pre and 10 mins post padding, which works 99.9% of the time. And series record still works. Phil M |
What controls the time a program starts?
This is not a recorder just a box with reminders that ask you to hit ok to
change or something else to cancel. Brian -- -- From the sofa of Brian Gaff - Blind user, so no pictures please! "Andy Burns" wrote in message o.uk... Norman Wells wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: just wondered what controls the switching, is it the actual time a show is started, or just the preset guide It used to be a thing called Programme Delivery Control, or PDC Now it's called 'Accurate Recording' but not all Freeview+ branded recorder use it, let alone generic DVB-T recorders. |
What controls the time a program starts?
On Aug 21, 7:42*pm, phil m wrote:
When we first got our HDR-FOX-T2, we used accurate record, but gave up after six weeks as we were often missing the start of programmes - sometimes starting up to 20 minutes late and mainly on BBC channels. We always use Accurate Recording on our HDR-Fox-T2 and I don't think there's been a single failure on BBC programmes. Richard. http://www.rtrussell.co.uk/ |
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