D
David L. Jones
Guest
On Aug 22, 3:36 pm, cth <a...@b.c> wrote:
regular basis.
Often much easier to download the show you want, were some geek has
already removed the ads for you ;-)
Dave.
Until they change the logo position, which they tend to do on aTerry Given wrote:
Trevor Wilson wrote:
"Terry Given" <my_n...@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:1219351635.964271@ftpsrv1...
Moi wrote:
"Terry Given" <my_n...@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:1219315811.254342@ftpsrv1...
SNIP
I love my digital video recorder. I shall never watch another ad.
Can you set that up so that it omits all adverts then? And does it
work 100% (in the face of all the efforts of the advertisers?) How
does it work?
I press the FF button, and with practice can go *very* fast and not
overshoot (well at least not too often).
it would be lovely to have it eat the ads automagically, but I doubt
we'll see commercial products that do that anytime soon.
**I looked at doing just that a dozen or so years back. Back then, TV
stations used to send a 200mS of black level, before and after ads.
Trouble was, the system was not infallible, since some programmes go
to black.
you could almost do it looking solely at volume levels. ads are *always*
louder, some channels more so than others. Still, 8x or 20x FF works
pretty well, and requires little or no effort on my part.
Cheers
Terry
Elektor published a design a few years ago that identified the
station/broadcaster watermark in the video stream and output start/pause
codes via IR to the recorder at the appropriate time. The recorder IR
codes were entered using a learning mode like the universal remotes.
http://www.elektor.com/magazines/2004/july/tv-commercials-killer.5701...
Never built it but it seemed a sound concept.
regular basis.
Often much easier to download the show you want, were some geek has
already removed the ads for you ;-)
Dave.