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#1
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It's fairly well known that Freeview squeezes down the bit rates of
its MPEG-2 broadcasts, in order to fit as many digital channels as possible into the six available muxes. However, the BBC-exclusive mux was the exception to this rule: it only carried four channels (BBC1, BBC2, BBC3/CBBC, and News 24), at significantly higher bit rates. Recently this seems to have changed. I've noticed that, although BBC1 is still broadcast at 2.0GB/hour, BBC2 broadcasts have reduced from 1.7GB/hour to 1.3GB/hour. Does anyone know of any specific reason for this change? |
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#2
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On Sat, 2 Aug 2008 15:35:13 -0700 (PDT), "A. J. Moss"
wrote: It's fairly well known that Freeview squeezes down the bit rates of its MPEG-2 broadcasts, in order to fit as many digital channels as possible into the six available muxes. However, the BBC-exclusive mux was the exception to this rule: it only carried four channels (BBC1, BBC2, BBC3/CBBC, and News 24), at significantly higher bit rates. Recently this seems to have changed. I've noticed that, although BBC1 is still broadcast at 2.0GB/hour, BBC2 broadcasts have reduced from 1.7GB/hour to 1.3GB/hour. Does anyone know of any specific reason for this change? Greed? |
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#3
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"A. J. Moss" wrote in message ... It's fairly well known that Freeview squeezes down the bit rates of its MPEG-2 broadcasts, in order to fit as many digital channels as possible into the six available muxes. However, the BBC-exclusive mux was the exception to this rule: it only carried four channels (BBC1, BBC2, BBC3/CBBC, and News 24), at significantly higher bit rates. Recently this seems to have changed. I've noticed that, although BBC1 is still broadcast at 2.0GB/hour, BBC2 broadcasts have reduced from 1.7GB/hour to 1.3GB/hour. Does anyone know of any specific reason for this change? BBC2 is stat-muxed so the bitrate will vary depending on the content of the other channels on the same mux. BBC1 in England (except London) is a fixed bitrate. |
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#4
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A. J. Moss wrote:
It's fairly well known that Freeview squeezes down the bit rates of its MPEG-2 broadcasts, in order to fit as many digital channels as possible into the six available muxes. However, the BBC-exclusive mux was the exception to this rule: it only carried four channels (BBC1, BBC2, BBC3/CBBC, and News 24), at significantly higher bit rates. Recently this seems to have changed. I've noticed that, although BBC1 is still broadcast at 2.0GB/hour, BBC2 broadcasts have reduced from 1.7GB/hour to 1.3GB/hour. Where did you find this information? I'd be interested to know what it is for BBC4; I was watching the 2007 Arena programme on the London Underground last night, and the picture quality was awful. -- Jeff (cut "thetape" to reply) |
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#5
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On Sun, 3 Aug 2008 08:40:40 +0100, "dB" wrote:
"A. J. Moss" wrote in message ... It's fairly well known that Freeview squeezes down the bit rates of its MPEG-2 broadcasts, in order to fit as many digital channels as possible into the six available muxes. However, the BBC-exclusive mux was the exception to this rule: it only carried four channels (BBC1, BBC2, BBC3/CBBC, and News 24), at significantly higher bit rates. Recently this seems to have changed. I've noticed that, although BBC1 is still broadcast at 2.0GB/hour, BBC2 broadcasts have reduced from 1.7GB/hour to 1.3GB/hour. Does anyone know of any specific reason for this change? BBC2 is stat-muxed so the bitrate will vary depending on the content of the other channels on the same mux. BBC1 in England (except London) is a fixed bitrate. How does this work in Scotland? I assume BBC1 Scotland is a fixed bitrate. Is BBC2 Scotland also a fixed bitrate? |
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#6
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Scott wrote:
Does anyone know of any specific reason for this change? BBC2 is stat-muxed so the bitrate will vary depending on the content of the other channels on the same mux. BBC1 in England (except London) is a fixed bitrate. How does this work in Scotland? I assume BBC1 Scotland is a fixed bitrate. Is BBC2 Scotland also a fixed bitrate? BBC 1 and 2 in Scotland (and Wales, and NI) are 'repackaged' into local versions. In other words the network programming is fed as clean feeds without the London announcer's voice over and all the squished up credits, so that this vandalism can be done locally. The result is, that opting in and out of the London networks is a more complex process, and therefore BBC 1 and 2 are locally coded and muxed. Therefore BBC 1, 2, 3,and News 24 are all in the same stat mux pool. The same applies in London. The English regions 'cut and paste' their local version of BBC 1 into an English-nationally assembled mux, this can only work if the gap for BBC 1 is a fixed size. So a 4.5 Mb/s 'hole' is provided for BBC 1. BBC 2, 3, and N24 all fight for bits in a stat-mux . -- Mark Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply. |
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#7
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On Sun, 03 Aug 2008 11:22:40 +0100, Mark Carver
wrote: Scott wrote: Does anyone know of any specific reason for this change? BBC2 is stat-muxed so the bitrate will vary depending on the content of the other channels on the same mux. BBC1 in England (except London) is a fixed bitrate. How does this work in Scotland? I assume BBC1 Scotland is a fixed bitrate. Is BBC2 Scotland also a fixed bitrate? BBC 1 and 2 in Scotland (and Wales, and NI) are 'repackaged' into local versions. In other words the network programming is fed as clean feeds without the London announcer's voice over and all the squished up credits, so that this vandalism can be done locally. The result is, that opting in and out of the London networks is a more complex process, and therefore BBC 1 and 2 are locally coded and muxed. Therefore BBC 1, 2, 3,and News 24 are all in the same stat mux pool. The same applies in London. The English regions 'cut and paste' their local version of BBC 1 into an English-nationally assembled mux, this can only work if the gap for BBC 1 is a fixed size. So a 4.5 Mb/s 'hole' is provided for BBC 1. BBC 2, 3, and N24 all fight for bits in a stat-mux . So BBC1 and BBC2 both have a variable bitrate? |
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#8
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Scott wrote:
On Sun, 03 Aug 2008 11:22:40 +0100, Mark Carver wrote: BBC 1 and 2 in Scotland (and Wales, and NI) are 'repackaged' into local versions. In other words the network programming is fed as clean feeds without the London announcer's voice over and all the squished up credits, so that this vandalism can be done locally. The result is, that opting in and out of the London networks is a more complex process, and therefore BBC 1 and 2 are locally coded and muxed. Therefore BBC 1, 2, 3,and News 24 are all in the same stat mux pool. The same applies in London. The English regions 'cut and paste' their local version of BBC 1 into an English-nationally assembled mux, this can only work if the gap for BBC 1 is a fixed size. So a 4.5 Mb/s 'hole' is provided for BBC 1. BBC 2, 3, and N24 all fight for bits in a stat-mux . So BBC1 and BBC2 both have a variable bitrate? On DTT, in Scotland, Wales, NI, and the London region, yes I believe they both do. -- Mark Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply. |
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#9
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In article , Jeff Layman
scribeth thus A. J. Moss wrote: It's fairly well known that Freeview squeezes down the bit rates of its MPEG-2 broadcasts, in order to fit as many digital channels as possible into the six available muxes. However, the BBC-exclusive mux was the exception to this rule: it only carried four channels (BBC1, BBC2, BBC3/CBBC, and News 24), at significantly higher bit rates. Recently this seems to have changed. I've noticed that, although BBC1 is still broadcast at 2.0GB/hour, BBC2 broadcasts have reduced from 1.7GB/hour to 1.3GB/hour. Where did you find this information? I'd be interested to know what it is for BBC4; I was watching the 2007 Arena programme on the London Underground last night, and the picture quality was awful. Yes wasn't it!, but the content in this instance:-) Tho the older stuff looked good for its age.. Excellent prog and just what BBC 4 is good at!. BBC 3 OTOH total waste of spectrum ....-- Tony Sayer |
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#10
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In article ,
Jeff Layman wrote: here did you find this information? I'd be interested to know what it is for BBC4; I was watching the 2007 Arena programme on the London Underground last night, and the picture quality was awful. I'm not surprised - reception in tunnels is always poor. -- *My dog can lick anyone Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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