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#1
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As a result of the threatened imminent innundation of my daughter's village
I was in their village pub last night. Everyone was very interested in the local news of course. There were two TV sets in the bar, one a 22" crt set of great antiquity and the other a newish IDTV LG plasma. The crt set had a terrible convergence fault and was displaying BBC1 analogue with correct aspect ratio but with huge coloured fringes. The sound boomed out. The plasma, which was all that most people could see, was displaying BBC1 from satellite. The picture was PAL via RF. It appeared that the satellite receiver was set to 4:3 and the screen was set to 16:9. The sound from the plasma set was audible but much less so than that from the crt set. The time lag seemed enormous, and it was really odd having both sets on at once. After the news the publican flicked through the channels on the plasma, eventually finding some old rubbish on ITV3 (via DTT). He then turned the sound up so that it competed with the BBC1 sound still coming from the crt set. Eventually the barmaid put the crt set onto ITV and turned the sound up even more. And so things remained until we left. Bill |
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#2
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On Tue, 26 Jun 2007 17:12:54 +0100, "Bill Wright"
wrote: As a result of the threatened imminent innundation of my daughter's village I was in their village pub last night. Everyone was very interested in the local news of course. There were two TV sets in the bar, one a 22" crt set of great antiquity and the other a newish IDTV LG plasma. The crt set had a terrible convergence fault and was displaying BBC1 analogue with correct aspect ratio but with huge coloured fringes. The sound boomed out. The plasma, which was all that most people could see, was displaying BBC1 from satellite. The picture was PAL via RF. It appeared that the satellite receiver was set to 4:3 and the screen was set to 16:9. The sound from the plasma set was audible but much less so than that from the crt set. The time lag seemed enormous, and it was really odd having both sets on at once. After the news the publican flicked through the channels on the plasma, eventually finding some old rubbish on ITV3 (via DTT). He then turned the sound up so that it competed with the BBC1 sound still coming from the crt set. Eventually the barmaid put the crt set onto ITV and turned the sound up even more. And so things remained until we left. And you didn't leap to your feet, cape streaming behind you? Charlie -- Remove NO-SPOO-PLEASE from my email address to reply Please send no unsolicited email or foodstuffs |
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#3
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"Bill Wright" wrote in message ... As a result of the threatened imminent innundation of my daughter's village I was in their village pub last night. Everyone was very interested in the local news of course. There were two TV sets in the bar, one a 22" crt set of great antiquity and the other a newish IDTV LG plasma. The crt set had a terrible convergence fault and was displaying BBC1 analogue with correct aspect ratio but with huge coloured fringes. The sound boomed out. The plasma, which was all that most people could see, was displaying BBC1 from satellite. The picture was PAL via RF. It appeared that the satellite receiver was set to 4:3 and the screen was set to 16:9. The sound from the plasma set was audible but much less so than that from the crt set. The time lag seemed enormous, and it was really odd having both sets on at once. After the news the publican flicked through the channels on the plasma, eventually finding some old rubbish on ITV3 (via DTT). He then turned the sound up so that it competed with the BBC1 sound still coming from the crt set. Eventually the barmaid put the crt set onto ITV and turned the sound up even more. And so things remained until we left. Bill DTS and DTT both lag noticeably from VHF. Aspect ratio issues are user error, poor cable, or a cheap set that wasn't switching properly. Interestingly one the cleverest sets I have seen was actually some el cheapo Korean set with a unheard of [and forgettable] name. In "auto" this rather cleverly worked out the aspect ratio from the black banding, so when a 16:9 picture appeared letterboxed within an ?MTV? 4:3 side barred image , it would zoom the picture up to fill the screen, albeit with rather poor resolution. |
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#4
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"R. Mark Clayton" wrote in message ... Interestingly one the cleverest sets I have seen was actually some el cheapo Korean set with a unheard of [and forgettable] name. In "auto" this rather cleverly worked out the aspect ratio from the black banding, so when a 16:9 picture appeared letterboxed within an ?MTV? 4:3 side barred image , it would zoom the picture up to fill the screen, albeit with rather poor resolution. my loewe aconda does that - and pretty clever about it too - and with a line doubler built in it really didnt look too bad, my lcd that replaced it doesnt do such a thing however -which is a shame. -- Gareth. That fly... is your magic wand. http://www.last.fm/user/dsbmusic/ |
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#5
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"R. Mark Clayton" wrote in message
... "Bill Wright" wrote in message ... As a result of the threatened imminent innundation of my daughter's village I was in their village pub last night. Everyone was very interested in the local news of course. There were two TV sets in the bar, one a 22" crt set of great antiquity and the other a newish IDTV LG plasma. The crt set had a terrible convergence fault and was displaying BBC1 analogue with correct aspect ratio but with huge coloured fringes. The sound boomed out. The plasma, which was all that most people could see, was displaying BBC1 from satellite. The picture was PAL via RF. It appeared that the satellite receiver was set to 4:3 and the screen was set to 16:9. The sound from the plasma set was audible but much less so than that from the crt set. The time lag seemed enormous, and it was really odd having both sets on at once. After the news the publican flicked through the channels on the plasma, eventually finding some old rubbish on ITV3 (via DTT). He then turned the sound up so that it competed with the BBC1 sound still coming from the crt set. Eventually the barmaid put the crt set onto ITV and turned the sound up even more. And so things remained until we left. Bill DTS and DTT both lag noticeably from VHF. Aspect ratio issues are user error, poor cable, or a cheap set that wasn't switching properly. I am sure that Bill will be grateful for your technical explanation. And they are still transmitting on VHF in Yorkshire? -- JohnT |
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#6
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DTS and DTT both lag noticeably from VHF. Aspect ratio issues are user error, poor cable, or a cheap set that wasn't switching properly. I am sure that Bill will be grateful for your technical explanation. And they are still transmitting on VHF in Yorkshire? -- JohnT Perhaps he is comparing the relative latency of radio programs on FM and DTT. Not sure where DTS fits in. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
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#7
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Bill Wright wrote:
As a result of the threatened imminent innundation of my daughter's village I was in their village pub last night. Everyone was very interested in the local news of course. There were two TV sets in the bar, one a 22" crt set of great antiquity and the other a newish IDTV LG plasma. The crt set had a terrible convergence fault and was displaying BBC1 analogue with correct aspect ratio but with huge coloured fringes. The sound boomed out. The plasma, which was all that most people could see, was displaying BBC1 from satellite. The picture was PAL via RF. It appeared that the satellite receiver was set to 4:3 and the screen was set to 16:9. The sound from the plasma set was audible but much less so than that from the crt set. The time lag seemed enormous, and it was really odd having both sets on at once. After the news the publican flicked through the channels on the plasma, eventually finding some old rubbish on ITV3 (via DTT). He then turned the sound up so that it competed with the BBC1 sound still coming from the crt set. Eventually the barmaid put the crt set onto ITV and turned the sound up even more. And so things remained until we left. Bill As a result of minor hunger pangs, I've just had a bacon butty. No one else in the house was interested in one. There were two rashers left in the fridge, one a 4" piece of decent freshness and the other just a bit shorter. The microwave had a terrible splodge of pizza on the back wall and the magnetron boomed out. The bread was Tesco's plain white and was bought on the way home. It appears the bread is pretty much square (aspect ratio close to 1:1) even though the plate was round. The sound from the microwave beeper was soon audible, but less so that the whistle from the kettle. The time lag from wanting the butty to eating it was about 4 mins. After eating the butty, I flicked through a copy of Culture from last week's Sunday Times, eventually finding some rubbish about a play that just been on ITV. Eventually, I put on BBC News 24 and so things remained until I had seen the latest news. Nope, sorry, can't make the original post interesting! Cheers Bill. |
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#8
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"JohnT" wrote in message ... "R. Mark Clayton" wrote in message ... DTS and DTT both lag noticeably from VHF. Aspect ratio issues are user error, poor cable, or a cheap set that wasn't switching properly. I am sure that Bill will be grateful for your technical explanation. I was, I was. Andthey are still transmitting on VHF in Yorkshire? Must be if he says so. Bill |
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#9
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Linker3000 wrote:
Nope, sorry, can't make the original post interesting! It isn't supposed to be interesting in and of itself. It is entertaining because it is an anecdote which resonates with a reader that has a modicum of TV sense and a familiarity with those that don't. ESB |
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#10
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....snip...
Many have been disparaging about JD Weatherspoon pubs, and I've not been in one for years so I won't argue. But when they first started out, one of their great benefits was a "no music" policy. There was no jukebox etc and you could actually hear the rubbish that your drinking companions were spouting. Fortunately, at the time, the beer was of sufficient quality that they forgot the rubbish that I said too. Paul DS. |
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