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#1
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We have the on-screen TV Guide feature on our new Sharp TV. Something a
little odd, and I can't find anything in the manual that addresses this....we're getting our picture, both analog and digital, from a set top antenna (fancy rabbit ears, basically). Now, we don't watch the analog channels much, so we cut them out of the scan of stations. In other words, although one can still access an analog station by typing its number directly into the remote, if we scan through stations we have the TV programmed to skip most analog stations and just scan through the digital ones. Now, we've found that since we did this, we aren't getting the TV Guide downloads anymore. We tried reverting back to having all channels in the scan, and we get TV Guide again. We also never get any TV Guide info for digital or HD stations, only analog. Is this supposed to work this way or is there a way to get TV Guide to download without having analog stations in the scan? Thx. John -- Von Herzen, moge es wieder zu Herzen gehen. --Beethoven |
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#2
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Now, we've found that since we did this, we aren't getting the TV Guide
downloads anymore. We tried reverting back to having all channels in the scan, and we get TV Guide again. We also never get any TV Guide info for digital or HD stations, only analog. I can't help but wonder if there is *ONE* specific channel you need to leave in the scan, probably PBS, the one transmitting the guide. Or maybe there's two sources of the guide and you lose it if you lock out both of them. You might try locking out the analog channels, one or a few at a time, until the guide quits. Then bring them back in reverse order until it comes back. Then try locking out everything you want to lock out except that one station. Gordon L. Burditt |
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#3
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The Man Behind The Curtain wrote:
We have the on-screen TV Guide feature on our new Sharp TV. Something a little odd, and I can't find anything in the manual that addresses this....we're getting our picture, both analog and digital, from a set top antenna (fancy rabbit ears, basically). Now, we don't watch the analog channels much, so we cut them out of the scan of stations. In other words, although one can still access an analog station by typing its number directly into the remote, if we scan through stations we have the TV programmed to skip most analog stations and just scan through the digital ones. Now, we've found that since we did this, we aren't getting the TV Guide downloads anymore. We tried reverting back to having all channels in the scan, and we get TV Guide again. We also never get any TV Guide info for digital or HD stations, only analog. Is this supposed to work this way or is there a way to get TV Guide to download without having analog stations in the scan? Thx. John Yes John, that is the way it is suppose to work. The TV guide information is transmitted via an analog TV station for ALL analog channels (usually it is a PBS station but it is also transmitted on cable channels like MSN). It is received ONLY when your TV (or set top box for those that have them) is off (some PBS stations only transmit the data during the night). If you lock those channels out you will get zero TV Guide EPG data for ALL analog channels. The digital channels work quite differently concerning the guide data. The guide data is transmitted by EACH station using PSIP (Program and System Information Protocol). PSIP also contains the mapping information (the digital stations transmit on a different frequency than the analog one but PSIP allows them to be mapped to the same channel number as the analog station). PSIP is (or should be) available at all times and since it comes from EACH channel your guide for each station may vary a LOT depending on how much guide information the station puts into the data stream. Most TVs (and ATSC set top boxes) can store up to 16 days of data but I have yet to see a digital channel that provides more than 15 hours worth of guide data. -- Bill R Remove "not_for_spam_" to reply by e-mail |
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#4
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Bill R wrote:
Yes John, that is the way it is suppose to work. The TV guide information is transmitted via an analog TV station for ALL analog channels (usually it is a PBS station but it is also transmitted on cable channels like MSN). So does this mean I can keep just the analog PBS station on to get all the data? It is received ONLY when your TV (or set top box for those that have them) is off (some PBS stations only transmit the data during the night). Yes, that's how it's done here. The digital channels work quite differently concerning the guide data. The guide data is transmitted by EACH station using PSIP (Program and System Information Protocol). PSIP also contains the mapping information (the digital stations transmit on a different frequency than the analog one but PSIP allows them to be mapped to the same channel number as the analog station). PSIP is (or should be) available at all times and since it comes from EACH channel your guide for each station may vary a LOT depending on how much guide information the station puts into the data stream. Most TVs (and ATSC set top boxes) can store up to 16 days of data but I have yet to see a digital channel that provides more than 15 hours worth of guide data. So how come we're not getting digital information at all? John -- Von Herzen, moge es wieder zu Herzen gehen. --Beethoven |
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#5
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The Man Behind The Curtain wrote:
Bill R wrote: Yes John, that is the way it is suppose to work. The TV guide information is transmitted via an analog TV station for ALL analog channels (usually it is a PBS station but it is also transmitted on cable channels like MSN). So does this mean I can keep just the analog PBS station on to get all the data? It is received ONLY when your TV (or set top box for those that have them) is off (some PBS stations only transmit the data during the night). Yes, that's how it's done here. The digital channels work quite differently concerning the guide data. The guide data is transmitted by EACH station using PSIP (Program and System Information Protocol). PSIP also contains the mapping information (the digital stations transmit on a different frequency than the analog one but PSIP allows them to be mapped to the same channel number as the analog station). PSIP is (or should be) available at all times and since it comes from EACH channel your guide for each station may vary a LOT depending on how much guide information the station puts into the data stream. Most TVs (and ATSC set top boxes) can store up to 16 days of data but I have yet to see a digital channel that provides more than 15 hours worth of guide data. So how come we're not getting digital information at all? John John, It is likely that it is the PBS station that is transmitting the TV guide data but it could be another station. I would un-block the analog PBS station and see if you get the data. If not, it is transmitted on another station. You will have to try them one by one. As to why you are not getting the information for your digital stations that could be the way you have your TV setup OR it could be a limitation of your TV OR it could be a different button on your remote (it is on mine). Some TVs (mostly older models) do not use the PSIP data and therefore do not have EPG information for the digital channels (I seriously doubt that your new TV is that way but I will do a little research). What is the model number of your Sharp TV? -- Bill R Remove "notforspam" to reply by e-mail |
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#6
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I have a slightly different problem with the "Guide Plus" on my Philips
TV. The local PBS channel (zip code 32819) now only broadcasts the ad for the TV Guide magazine. I do not receive any channel listings anymore. Try locking out all but the PBS analog channels. Gordon Burditt wrote: Now, we've found that since we did this, we aren't getting the TV Guide downloads anymore. We tried reverting back to having all channels in the scan, and we get TV Guide again. We also never get any TV Guide info for digital or HD stations, only analog. I can't help but wonder if there is *ONE* specific channel you need to leave in the scan, probably PBS, the one transmitting the guide. Or maybe there's two sources of the guide and you lose it if you lock out both of them. You might try locking out the analog channels, one or a few at a time, until the guide quits. Then bring them back in reverse order until it comes back. Then try locking out everything you want to lock out except that one station. Gordon L. Burditt |
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#7
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The Man Behind The Curtain wrote:
We have the on-screen TV Guide feature on our new Sharp TV. Something a little odd, and I can't find anything in the manual that addresses this....we're getting our picture, both analog and digital, from a set top antenna (fancy rabbit ears, basically). Now, we don't watch the analog channels much, so we cut them out of the scan of stations. In other words, although one can still access an analog station by typing its number directly into the remote, if we scan through stations we have the TV programmed to skip most analog stations and just scan through the digital ones. Now, we've found that since we did this, we aren't getting the TV Guide downloads anymore. We tried reverting back to having all channels in the scan, and we get TV Guide again. We also never get any TV Guide info for digital or HD stations, only analog. Is this supposed to work this way or is there a way to get TV Guide to download without having analog stations in the scan? Thx. John Is there something good about TVGuide? If your TV has source-PIP, you can watch TV-OTA, TV-Cable, DVR, DVD, or PC and have one other source in the PIP window. TVGuide doesn't hold a candle to the average on-line guide - unless of course you have TiVo - the best guide of all IMNSVFHO;-0) If you can switch between PC guide sources and TV programming, even without PIP, then who cares what channels you do or don't block? A remote mouse is way better than a remote TV clicker, if you've set up your PC well. |
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#8
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Bill's News wrote:
Is there something good about TVGuide? If your TV has source-PIP, you can watch TV-OTA, TV-Cable, DVR, DVD, or PC and have one other source in the PIP window. TVGuide doesn't hold a candle to the average on-line guide - unless of course you have TiVo - the best guide of all IMNSVFHO;-0) If you can switch between PC guide sources and TV programming, even without PIP, then who cares what channels you do or don't block? A remote mouse is way better than a remote TV clicker, if you've set up your PC well. I have a DirecTV TiVo and I agree that the TiVO guide is great but, on the other hand, the Interactive TV Guide that comes on newer TV and DVD recorders isn't bad. You can very easily schedule programs to record and it is a heck a lot quicker than the on-line guides. For a lot of us the on-line guides are not an option while we are watching our HDTVs since our computers aren't in the same room. -- Bill R Remove "notforspam" to reply by e-mail |
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#9
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Bill R wrote:
Bill's News wrote: Is there something good about TVGuide? If your TV has source-PIP, you can watch TV-OTA, TV-Cable, DVR, DVD, or PC and have one other source in the PIP window. TVGuide doesn't hold a candle to the average on-line guide - unless of course you have TiVo - the best guide of all IMNSVFHO;-0) If you can switch between PC guide sources and TV programming, even without PIP, then who cares what channels you do or don't block? A remote mouse is way better than a remote TV clicker, if you've set up your PC well. I have a DirecTV TiVo and I agree that the TiVO guide is great but, on the other hand, the Interactive TV Guide that comes on newer TV and DVD recorders isn't bad. You can very easily schedule programs to record and it is a heck a lot quicker than the on-line guides. For a lot of us the on-line guides are not an option while we are watching our HDTVs since our computers aren't in the same room. You raise some excellent issues, Bill. Having been disappointed in the past by on-screen TV Guides certainly does not mean that they continue to be useless. And yes, a PC in every TV room may not be the norm today - but it will be ;-) We subscribe here to the cable company's DVR, which has a far inferior guide to TiVo, but a far superior capability - it works with all channels - I understand that this is also true of TiVo with DirectTV, just not us cable users? So here, the web based viewer guides provide the source for look up and search, while we give up one-click scheduling of recordings (as if the cable box ever offered that!!!;-). Perhaps a feature of TVs for years, but new to me, is the PIP by source. So I can now have a PC window open within a TV or DVD program or vice-versa. And DVI on a 1920x1080 screen makes for very readable displays. Never-the-less, the OP seems to have a problem with merely watching preferred TV channels and getting access to the guide. And my comment was directed to that. In his case, the feature is apparently useless - or at least poorly implemented. |
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#10
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Bill R wrote:
John, It is likely that it is the PBS station that is transmitting the TV guide data but it could be another station. I would un-block the analog PBS station and see if you get the data. If not, it is transmitted on another station. You will have to try them one by one. As to why you are not getting the information for your digital stations that could be the way you have your TV setup OR it could be a limitation of your TV OR it could be a different button on your remote (it is on mine). Some TVs (mostly older models) do not use the PSIP data and therefore do not have EPG information for the digital channels (I seriously doubt that your new TV is that way but I will do a little research). What is the model number of your Sharp TV? It's a Sharp Aquos LC-45GD5U. One other thing I don't get is why it takes so long for the TV Guide feature to update. How long does it take to transmit some text and the correct day and time? Sometimes the red light on my set is on for 3-4 hours! John -- Von Herzen, moge es wieder zu Herzen gehen. --Beethoven |
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