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#21
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Attached
Here is some interesting/additional information. 1) One reason that we have this oddball TV/VHS thing is that my wife knows how to program it (she does over half the programming and mostly drives TV watching in our house - thank God she is a golf fan). I recall about a month ago (second time that the oddball message appeared instead of video), absolutely believing that the show had been recorded in the 'no box path' on the combo TV/VHS. I questioned my wife very hard on this (again) and she now admits that she only "probably thinks" that was the case (as opposed to being recorded on a different VHS off the A/V outputs of our cable box). I honestly don't know if she said this to get me to leave her alone, or if that is what she really thinks. 2) I was messing around with the settop box to VHS (via A/V) path this morning. Twice (when viewing the TV screen on the signal being put out by the VHS, but not recording anything on VHS), I saw the offending message "flash" VERY briefly. Not long enough to be able to read it, but it certainly had the same 'black top and orange bottom' look that the message has. I can't reproduce this (and I had no trouble recording that channel on the VHS box that is attached to the settop box. FYI, but if this has only happened when connected via settop box it at least looks technically possible (and fixable by TimeWarner, in principle). But I still wonder if that error message isn't encoded somewhere in the digital signal and was accidently put into the analog stream and picked up by whatever copy protection mechanism exists in VHS (I think there are some - or at least were some). FYI. dave "Dave Lee" wrote in message m... I am assuming that I am having unintended HDCP issues when using my (VERY old) VHS recorder(s). We use our VHS (2 of them actually) to occasionally record shows (not HD, obviously) for viewing later. In one case we are recording directly off Time Warner cable to the "Cable In" input to a VHS recorder. In the other case it is an AV set-top box output to AV input to another (old) VHS box. I would guess that 10% of the time when we try to record something we get the audio and the video is just a screen with the (mostly not readable) error message number 65511 HDCP DLG and text saying that this program cannot be viewed through a DVI input, please use another input (or something like that). Of course the boxes that we are using were built before a DVI specification even existed. So I assume that we are being victimized with unintended consequences of HDCP protection and I also assume that there is nothing that can be done about this. But is there any way to know in advance which shows will present this problem? My wife enjoys the show "NUMBERS" and we regularly record it for later viewing. Last Friday's show suddenly presented the dreaded 6551 error message. Is this predictable? Thanks. dave |
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#22
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Attached
I should have added that the 'event' that seemed to trigger the 'message flash' (that I can't reproduce) was a channel change via the cable box. dave "Dave Lee" wrote in message m... Attached Here is some interesting/additional information. 1) One reason that we have this oddball TV/VHS thing is that my wife knows how to program it (she does over half the programming and mostly drives TV watching in our house - thank God she is a golf fan). I recall about a month ago (second time that the oddball message appeared instead of video), absolutely believing that the show had been recorded in the 'no box path' on the combo TV/VHS. I questioned my wife very hard on this (again) and she now admits that she only "probably thinks" that was the case (as opposed to being recorded on a different VHS off the A/V outputs of our cable box). I honestly don't know if she said this to get me to leave her alone, or if that is what she really thinks. 2) I was messing around with the settop box to VHS (via A/V) path this morning. Twice (when viewing the TV screen on the signal being put out by the VHS, but not recording anything on VHS), I saw the offending message "flash" VERY briefly. Not long enough to be able to read it, but it certainly had the same 'black top and orange bottom' look that the message has. I can't reproduce this (and I had no trouble recording that channel on the VHS box that is attached to the settop box. FYI, but if this has only happened when connected via settop box it at least looks technically possible (and fixable by TimeWarner, in principle). But I still wonder if that error message isn't encoded somewhere in the digital signal and was accidently put into the analog stream and picked up by whatever copy protection mechanism exists in VHS (I think there are some - or at least were some). FYI. dave "Dave Lee" wrote in message m... I am assuming that I am having unintended HDCP issues when using my (VERY old) VHS recorder(s). We use our VHS (2 of them actually) to occasionally record shows (not HD, obviously) for viewing later. In one case we are recording directly off Time Warner cable to the "Cable In" input to a VHS recorder. In the other case it is an AV set-top box output to AV input to another (old) VHS box. I would guess that 10% of the time when we try to record something we get the audio and the video is just a screen with the (mostly not readable) error message number 65511 HDCP DLG and text saying that this program cannot be viewed through a DVI input, please use another input (or something like that). Of course the boxes that we are using were built before a DVI specification even existed. So I assume that we are being victimized with unintended consequences of HDCP protection and I also assume that there is nothing that can be done about this. But is there any way to know in advance which shows will present this problem? My wife enjoys the show "NUMBERS" and we regularly record it for later viewing. Last Friday's show suddenly presented the dreaded 6551 error message. Is this predictable? Thanks. dave |
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#23
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On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 07:26:42 -0500, Dave Lee wrote:
The only good news here is that it is not repeatable. WHile that makes it hard to explore it also means it doesn't happen often (my original concern was that this was going to become more common and unavoidable). Since I have experienced it on both CBS and USA, I am going to start 'sampling' those channels periodically to see if I can find a pattern or something else to go on here. And note that it has happened on two different VHS recording devices, so this issue isn't unique to a single manufacturer. There is an analog broadcast flag to disallow recordings. Don't recall what it is called, but if it's set and your recorder supports it, it won't record. I had this happen with an S1 Tivo many years back. At the time, no one was supposed to be using it either. And this was an OTA NTSC broadcast, not cable. Here it is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CGMS-A -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org My Tivo Experience http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/tivo.htm Tivo HD/S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm AMD cpu help http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php |
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#24
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Attached
THANKS! dave "Wes Newell" wrote in message ... On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 07:26:42 -0500, Dave Lee wrote: The only good news here is that it is not repeatable. WHile that makes it hard to explore it also means it doesn't happen often (my original concern was that this was going to become more common and unavoidable). Since I have experienced it on both CBS and USA, I am going to start 'sampling' those channels periodically to see if I can find a pattern or something else to go on here. And note that it has happened on two different VHS recording devices, so this issue isn't unique to a single manufacturer. There is an analog broadcast flag to disallow recordings. Don't recall what it is called, but if it's set and your recorder supports it, it won't record. I had this happen with an S1 Tivo many years back. At the time, no one was supposed to be using it either. And this was an OTA NTSC broadcast, not cable. Here it is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CGMS-A -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org My Tivo Experience http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/tivo.htm Tivo HD/S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm AMD cpu help http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php |
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#25
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Wes Newell wrote:
There is an analog broadcast flag to disallow recordings. Don't recall what it is called, but if it's set and your recorder supports it, it won't record. I had this happen with an S1 Tivo many years back. At the time, no one was supposed to be using it either. And this was an OTA NTSC broadcast, not cable. Here it is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CGMS-A I've never seen or heard of a standard analog VHS VCR affected by CGMS-A. Plus, the OP stated that his warning message was a 65511 HDCP DLG message. |
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#26
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RickMerrill wrote:
G-squared wrote: On Jan 11, 6:50 am, "Dave wrote: ... I believe it to be a cable company problem as your analog VCR has no way to generate HDCP messages. It can only capture what is on the analog carrier. Call the cable company and show them the tape if they ask. G² Big G, did you notice that the VCR is built-into the TV? That means the message could come from the TV. cable==TV==VCR No, it means the TV is as old as the VCR and is equally ignorant of HDCP. G-squared is right: there's no way an analog-only device can know anything about HDCP since that form of copy protection is limited to digital over HDMI and some DVI connections. Also, the OP stated the TV/VCR combo predates HDCP. I only see two ways that a message about HDCP could appear. If the TV/VCR was connected directly to the cable and tuned to an analog cable channel, then the image must have come from the cable switching center and everyone on that drop that was watching that channel at that time would have seen it. If the TV/VCR was looking at the output of a cable box then the box could have produced the message. It might have done so if the program was flagged to output only to HDMI and no HDMI device was connected, the HDCP handshake was unsuccessful or perhaps it always outputs that message to all non-HDMI ports during protected shows. I don't think that's the way a cable box should work, and broadcast content should not be protected (IIRC, CBS was one channel affected) but it could happen. Del Mibbler |
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#27
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Del Mibbler wrote:
wrote: G-squared wrote: On Jan 11, 6:50 am, "Dave wrote: ... I believe it to be a cable company problem as your analog VCR has no way to generate HDCP messages. It can only capture what is on the analog carrier. Call the cable company and show them the tape if they ask. G² Big G, did you notice that the VCR is built-into the TV? That means the message could come from the TV. cable==TV==VCR No, it means the TV is as old as the VCR and is equally ignorant of HDCP. G-squared is right: there's no way an analog-only device can know anything about HDCP since that form of copy protection is limited to digital over HDMI and some DVI connections. Also, the OP stated the TV/VCR combo predates HDCP. I only see two ways that a message about HDCP could appear. If the TV/VCR was connected directly to the cable and tuned to an analog cable channel, then the image must have come from the cable switching center and everyone on that drop that was watching that channel at that time would have seen it. Yes, that's certainly possible - I wonder if he was connected to a local origination station! If the TV/VCR was looking at the output of a cable box then the box could have produced the message. But it seemed certain that that was not the case for the OP. It might have done so if the program was flagged to output only to HDMI and no HDMI device was connected, Is that possible for Cable systems? the HDCP handshake was unsuccessful or perhaps it always outputs that message to all non-HDMI ports during protected shows. I don't think that's the way a cable box should work, and broadcast content should not be protected (IIRC, CBS was one channel affected) but it could happen. Del Mibbler Maybe you know why my ch 4-1 has vanished? :-) |
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#28
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On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 11:04:38 -0800, UCLAN wrote:
Wes Newell wrote: There is an analog broadcast flag to disallow recordings. Don't recall what it is called, but if it's set and your recorder supports it, it won't record. I had this happen with an S1 Tivo many years back. At the time, no one was supposed to be using it either. And this was an OTA NTSC broadcast, not cable. Here it is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CGMS-A I've never seen or heard of a standard analog VHS VCR affected by CGMS-A. Plus, the OP stated that his warning message was a 65511 HDCP DLG message. In the many years I recorded OTA NTSC, I only saw it a few times during a short period of time (a couple of weeks) around the 2001-2003 time frame. I don't think the flag was ever used much. It only happened on one program iirc. And while he might not have seen this, it's still a possibility that it could be used. IIRC, he wasn't sure of the message he got, or if it was from the cable box VCR or the one connected directly to the cable coax. At least he now knows of this and can use the info. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org My Tivo Experience http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/tivo.htm Tivo HD/S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm AMD cpu help http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php |
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#29
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"UCLAN" wrote in message
... Wes Newell wrote: There is an analog broadcast flag to disallow recordings. Don't recall what it is called, but if it's set and your recorder supports it, it won't record. I had this happen with an S1 Tivo many years back. At the time, no one was supposed to be using it either. And this was an OTA NTSC broadcast, not cable. Here it is: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CGMS-A I've never seen or heard of a standard analog VHS VCR affected by CGMS-A. Plus, the OP stated that his warning message was a 65511 HDCP DLG message. Analog VCR's are, however, affected by Macrovision, and it appears that Macrovision can be used to inhibit analog copying of digital signals. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrovision "A DVD recorder receiving a data stream encoded with Macrovision's legacy analog copy protection (ACP) signal will simply display a message saying the source is "copy-protected", and will pause the recording. This is achieved through a signal implanted within the offscreen range (vertical blanking interval) of the video signal—either physically recorded directly on the tape (as with VHS) or created on playback by a chip in the player (as with DVDs) or the digital cable/satellite box (as with all HDTV programs being down-converted to standard definition)." It's Wikipedia, so I'll try to find a more concrete/less subject to change source. If the Wikipedia source is correct, then it would seem that the cable box may support ACP, and if it does, then it could be generating the error message screen to send as video to the recording device (in this case, an analog VCR). |
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#30
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Daniel W. Rouse Jr. wrote:
I've never seen or heard of a standard analog VHS VCR affected by CGMS-A. Plus, the OP stated that his warning message was a 65511 HDCP DLG message. Analog VCR's are, however, affected by Macrovision, and it appears that Macrovision can be used to inhibit analog copying of digital signals. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrovision "A DVD recorder receiving a data stream encoded with Macrovision's legacy analog copy protection (ACP) signal will simply display a message saying the source is "copy-protected", and will pause the recording. This is achieved through a signal implanted within the offscreen range (vertical blanking interval) of the video signal—either physically recorded directly on the tape (as with VHS) or created on playback by a chip in the player (as with DVDs) or the digital cable/satellite box (as with all HDTV programs being down-converted to standard definition)." Pause the DVD recorder. You left out the effects on VHS: "Macrovision inserts pulses into this non-displayed area. These signals cause the automatic gain control on the recording VCR to compensate for the varying strength. This makes the recorded picture wildly change brightness, rendering it unwatchable." Hardly what the OP related. It's Wikipedia, so I'll try to find a more concrete/less subject to change source. If the Wikipedia source is correct, then it would seem that the cable box may support ACP, and if it does, then it could be generating the error message screen to send as video to the recording device (in this case, an analog VCR). The OP related that there was *no* cable box - just the cable plugged directly into the TV/VCR. |
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