04 May 2008
It must the technology breakdown season or something: after the amp blew a capacitor, both our ancient TV and the less ancient Freeview box started to go on the blink. The Freeview box was crashing and needed to be rebooted and retuned several times a week, always -- as luck would have it -- just as some programme we wanted to catch from the beginning was starting. When I was a kid, we used to have to turn our old black and white set on a few minutes early to let it 'warm up', so this didn't feel like great progress. The TV was also having picture and sound problems, which pretty much covers all the critical elements necessary for a satisfying TV-watching experience.
So we bit the bullet and joined the 21st Century by buying a widescreen LCD TV which was in a sale. After living with a 20 inch 4:3 format CRT screen for so many years, the 32 inch 16:9 TV seems gigantic. No more do we have to squint at the narrow strip of slightly fuzzy picture when sitting more than a couple of metres away. It has made the whole TV, DVD or EyeTV recording-watching process much more enjoyable now that we can actually see the visual details properly and hear the dialogue and sound effects clearly.
The radical change in the quality of our viewing experience (and the earlier improvement in our listening setup with the new amp) prompted me to rearrange the living room. The room isn't large, so rearranging the furniture is a bit like a slightly frustrating game of Tetris, but I think the new arrangement works better. We used to have the sofa at one side of the living room and quite close to the TV because of the size of the screen. This meant that we were at an awkward angle to it, and had the speakers on the other side of the room, at right angles to the TV. Now that we can sit a healthy distance from the screen and still see it, we could put the sofa across the end of the room, facing the TV. That also meant that I had space to move the speakers either side of the TV, so that we can supplement the TV's speakers with the floorstanders -- it's poor-man's surround sound, but it definitely adds to the experience. Also, since the speakers are firing down the long axis of the room instead of the short axis, it works better with the acoustics of the room.
The expression of Cleo (our cat) the first time she walked into the rearranged room was priceless. She looked at where the sofa used to be and did the closest thing I've ever seen to a double-take in a cat. Then she looked at me with a "What the hell's going on? Where's all my stuff?" look for a bit, before settling a bit grumpily on the sofa in its new position.
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tby Jonathan Briggs @ 04/05/2008 7:05 pm • Permalink
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Jonathan Briggs: The colour is pretty good on ours, particularly in 'theatre' mode -- certainly better than our old TV. I used to have problems with audio/video sync on the old digibox, but haven't noticed any issues with the new TV. Thanks so much for the heads up about the Transatlantic Sessions: I had no idea it was on, but I'm a massive fan of Capercaillie and Karen Mathews. Luckily, it looks as if she is on this coming Friday, so I've set the recording up ready.by bsag @ 06/05/2008 6:52 pm • Permalink
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You can retrieve old BBC programmes using the BBC iPlayer, but set the preferences to default to Kontiki "OFF" _ Oops, you may have to find a PC to do it on, something to do with Apple and DRM.by Jonathan Briggs @ 06/05/2008 9:04 pm • Permalink
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I to had an old analogue set go down and replaced it with a 26" LCD (which has a far bigger screen than the old steam powered 26") - Have issues; first the lack of subtlety in the colour, fiddle about with it hough I may. The leeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeength of time taken to switch between channels. But by far the biggest annoyance is lip-sync; am I particularly susceptible to errors in voice and mouth syncing? I threw out a Phillips digibox after I came home one evening and an episode of "Never the Twain" was on and Sinden was delivering the sentences in Welsh, and Windsor Davies the lines with a full complement of plums. And incidentally, on the subject of digital television, anybody who isn't watching the "Transatlantic Sessions" on BBC4 at 7:30 on Fridays is missing what I consider to be the best musical series I have ever listened to in my 63 years. In one programme, Karen Mathews of Capercaillie song a song in the Gaelic called, in English, The Burial Place of the Children which near broke my heart. I discovered it by chance, it having been hidden away in the schedules for years, and am hooked. The latest series, 3, is available on DVD, and the earlier ones on CD if/when you can find them.by Jonathan Briggs @ 04/05/2008 7:03 pm • Permalink