Monday, June 21, 2010

HDTV and closed caption

I went to Billy's house again last night and tried to turn on closed captioning. For some reason it doesn't work on his Toshiba HD-TV. I thought it might be the cable box. So I tried to turn it on while playing a DVD (Live Free or Die Hard) [not Blu-Ray] and that didn't work either. Of course the subtitles worked on the DVD. [Hmm. Looking up Live Free or Die Hard on amazon. Doesn't say it supports closed captioning, so maybe it doesn't. Will have to try another DVD that does.]

So that made me wonder if there's a problem with HD-TV and closed captioning. And apparently there is.

Here's an article from 2007.

As high-definition TV gains momentum in the United States, broadcasters, set-top box manufacturers and cable and satellite companies are struggling to provide closed captioning.

While most older analog sets provide captions with the touch of a remote control button or via a simple on-screen menu, it's more complicated to get closed captioning on the newest digital TVs that get their signal through cable and satellite boxes rather than antennas. That's because the signal is processed by the box and the caption settings must be matched to the resolution of the TV display.

In addition, most high-definition cable and satellite set-top boxes control the caption settings through often obscure and confusing menus.

"I learned that ... digital captioning options must be controlled from the cable box via a hidden menu that comes with no instructions," wrote Pamela Holmes, a deaf cable customer in Madison, Wis.

In an e-mail, Holmes said it took nearly 12 hours with installers, phone support and other resources to get her closed captioning operating.

Further complicating things, people are now discovering that if an HDTV set is hooked to the cable box through a connection called HDMI, captions won't be displayed at all.

***

From Amazon.com.

I bought this TV the other day and I'm waiting for comcast to come out and hook it up tomorrow. I was going through the manual and it says that closed caption is only available on the TV, AV, and S-Video mode. I'm hearing impaired so I use the CC all the time. Does this mean if I connect the cable box by HDMI or Component cables that the closed captions won't work? ANyone who could try this for me or knows a solution for this would be greatly appreciated!

I see what you saw in the manual so I tried in a HD station with my cable box over HDMI and I could not select caption from the menu. I think the reason for this is because the cable box has its own closed captioning. I went into the settings for the box and was able to use closed captioning that way.

***

From Wikipedia:

Many viewers find that when they switch to an HDTV they are unable to view closed caption (CC) information, even though the broadcaster is sending it and the TV is able to display it. Originally, CC information was included in the picture ("line 21"), but there is no equivalent capability in the HDTV 720p/1080i interconnects between the display and a "source". A "source", in this case, can be a DVD player or an HD tuner (a cable box is an HD tuner). When CC information is encoded in the MPEG-2 data stream, only the device that decodes the MPEG-2 data (a source) has access to the closed caption information; there is no standard for transmitting the CC information to an HD display separately. Thus, if there is CC information, the source device needs to overlay the CC information on the picture prior to transmitting to the display over the interconnect.

Many source devices do not have the ability to overlay CC information, or controlling the CC overlay is extremely complicated. For example, the Motorola DCT-5xxx and -6xxx cable set-top boxes have the ability to decode CC information located on the mpg stream and overlay it on the picture, but turning CC on and off requires turning off the unit and going into a special setup menu (it is not on the standard configuration menu and it cannot be controlled using the remote). Historically, DVD players and cable box tuners did not need to do this overlaying, they simply passed this information on to the TV, and they are not mandated to perform this overlaying.

[In other words, you got to turn it on from the cable box. Somehow.]

***

Here's how one user turned on closed captioning on his cable box.

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Here's Oceanic's solution

There are no graphics, closed captions or program guides appearing on the TV screen.

1. The DCT cannot generate graphics on all video outputs at all times. If the DCT is set to 1080i, 720p, or 480p output formats, graphics are only available on the high definition video outputs (DVI and component video). If the DCT is set to 480i, graphics are available on all video outputs.
2. If the DCT is connected to a standard definition TV, verify the DCT is configured to use the 480i output mode.
3. Verify closed captions on the DCT have been enabled in the User Settings menu.

So what does DCT mean?

Digital Cable Terminal, the generic term for the set-top box required to receive digital cable.

***

HDMI.org verifies all of the above (or just read this first without reading everything above :)

Q. Does HDMI support Closed Captioning?
Close Captioning

The evolution from analog to digital TV has added some complexity to Close Captioning (CC). With one standard way of broadcasting/transmitting, decoding and displaying content NTSC or PAL, depending on region, analog TV made enabling CC fairly easy across CE devices since the TV was able to do all the CC decoding.

With the advent of digital TV and the introduction of digital HDTV services (cable, satellite, etc.) the responsibility of decoding CC has been taken away from the TVs and put into the various Set Top Boxes (STB) that are required for the majority of the digital HDTV services. Additionally, these STBs now have different ways of enabling CC making it complicated and creating confusion for consumers. All set-top boxes are required to support CC, however the implementation of CC can vary from one product to another. Enabling CC on a specific set-top box can be simple, or more difficult, depending on the implementation.

HDMI, LLC recommends contacting your TV service provider (cable, satellite, etc.) for the correct way to switch on its CC feature as a first step to resolve this issue. The second step is to contact the manufacturers directly for the correct way to enable the CC feature within your product.

How CC works in HDMI and other digital connections:
The TV remote's CC button does not enable/disable CC on HDMI sources. To enable CC, the user must enable it at the source either through a source remote control key (i.e. CC button) or by going through the setup menu of the source. The source will then combine the video content with the CC information and output that (video + CC) via HDMI to the TV.

***

Hmm. Never noticed if closed captioning worked on my digital channels (on my SD-TV). Let me see...

OK, it works on both 5 and 85. So evidently it's not a digital problem but a hi-def problem. Well I should say it's not the digital signal, but the digital TV.

***

Well, I guess I'll have to wait to get my hi-def TV first to know for sure, I guess.

***

On a related note, does Blu-Ray support closed-captioning?

Since Blu-ray is now accepted (for the most part) as the new HD disc format standard, many questions have come up about closed-captioning and subtitling for Blu-ray Disc (also referred to as BD).

First off, to get the record straight, Blu-ray does not support closed captioning. This is for a very logical reason: Subtitles can be turned on and off through the disc’s menu (just like an SD DVD), therefore there is no need to add the closed captioning option. Consequently, BD does not carry Line 21 due to its High-Definition Multimedia Interface specs (HDMI). These specs were designed to displace the older digital and analog standards.

[so does that mean every Blu-Ray disc has subtitles?]

[yes, according to reply #8]

From Wikipedia:

HD DVD and Blu-ray disc media cannot carry Line 21 closed captioning due to the design of High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) specifications that were designed to replace older analog and digital standards, such as VGA, S-Video, and DVI.

***

To make it even clearer, apparently the HDMI cable does not support closed captions. And closed captions appear on an interlaced signal, so it's not supported by progressive mode either.

OK, that sucks. That means I would have to hook up my DVD/Blu-Ray player via composite cable to view closed captions on DVDs.

But apparently some DVRs support closed captioning with HDMI (see replies #5,6,8). I wonder if my Toshiba has it? [9/1/10 - don't see that option]

***

[9/1/10] Finally got my HD DVR and found (looked it up) that I can turn on closed caption as one of the options when I press the setting button on the remote. Cool.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Martin Gardner

Martin Gardner, 95, a journalist whose omnivorous curiosity gave rise to wide-ranging writings that popularized mathematics, explored theology and philosophy, debunked pseudoscience and dug into Lewis Carroll's beloved children's books with the gusto of an investigative reporter, died May 22 at a hospital in Norman, Okla.

His son, James Gardner, said the cause of death was not known.

A native of Tulsa, Mr. Gardner was writing stories and poems for a children's magazine in the 1950s when he submitted an article about hexaflexagons -- pieces of paper folded intricately to resemble, Mr. Gardner once said, "a budding flower" -- to Scientific American. The editor, Dennis Flanagan, was so taken with the piece that he hired Mr. Gardner to produce a regular column on recreational mathematics.

The resulting monthly feature, "Mathematical Games," ran from 1956 to 1981. It became one of Scientific American's most popular items, capturing the imagination of amateur and professional mathematicians and introducing a generation of young readers to the pleasures of problem-solving.

Hackers Wanted

Delicious irony is always fun to discover, and the surfacing of an unreleased documentary from 2003 about the exploits of infamous computer hacker Adrian Lamo is just such a case. As reported by wired.com's Threat Level, the film was brought to the public eye and posted Thursday on the Swedish website The Pirate Bay through the efforts of hackers.

Lamo, shown at left earlier this month at the home of his parents in Carmichael, Calif., denied any involvement with the hackers, but such suspicion is not unwarranted since, as Threat Level put it, Lamo "made his mark in the early 2000s with a string of brazen but mostly harmless hacks against large companies," including The New York Times. He was later imprisoned briefly. The 90-minute documentary of his hacking exploits is called "Hackers Wanted" and is narrated by Kevin Spacey and includes interviews with Kevin Rose and Steve Wozniak. It was never released, until now, because of conflicts among the producers and crew, according to Threat Level.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

National Research Council calls for greenhouse gas limits

In its most comprehensive study so far, the nation’s leading scientific body declared on Wednesday that climate change is a reality and is driven mostly by human activity, chiefly the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation.

The group, the National Research Council, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, issued three reports describing the case for a harmful human influence on the global climate as overwhelming and arguing for strong immediate action to limit emissions of climate-altering gases in the United States and around the world — including the creation of a carbon pricing system.

Predictably, advocates of climate and energy legislation embraced the reports.

“These studies clearly demonstrate the urgency for Senate action,” said Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts and a sponsor of a climate bill introduced in the Senate this month.

Peter Frumhoff, director of science and policy for the Union of Concerned Scientists said: “This report should light a fire under Congress. Lawmakers should stop dragging their feet, pay attention to the science and pass a bill this session.”

Sunday, June 13, 2010

trade in your bulbs

Sometimes, making a difference can be as simple as changing a light bulb -- literally -- as in switching from an old, incandescent light bulb to a compact fluorescent light.

Though there are clearly far larger issues to tackle, from a global-warming standpoint, the Blue Planet Foundation is encouraging people to take that one simple step by offering free CFLs to every resident on Molokai.

An average family in Hawaii can save $80 to $240 a year in energy costs with CFLs, according to the Hawaii Energy Program. A CFL requires 75 percent less energy than ordinary bulbs and has a life span 10 times longer than a regular, incandescent bulb.

What you need to know is that CFLs shouldn't be thrown into the trash because they contain small traces of mercury that can leak if broken.

Retailers like Home Depot now accept used CFLs for recycling, while Lowe's is rolling out a program soon. Local retailers like City Mill and Hardware Hawaii, however, do not. Maui County is working on a recycling program for Molokai residents.

Molokai is ahead of the times, given that incandescent bulbs will be phased out across the U.S. starting in 2012 (as approved by Congress).

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

DirGraph

DirGraph provides a graphical view of the space used by your files and directories. It allows you to navigate around this view - zooming in to see greater detail and zooming out to see the bigger picture.

It also supports colour coding its display by file dates, so you can see at a glance how much of the space used is occupied by files that haven't been accessed for an age [and that should therefore have been committed to back-up storage long ago].

It can be quite interesting to look at your system in this way: for instance did you know your games and mp3 directories was taking that much of you over-all drive space?!! No wonder there wasn't room to install the latest version of PaceMaker...

[via frwr_news]

When I ran it, I discovered that Microsoft Encarta was taking up a half a GB of space on my hard drive. I didn't even realize Encarta was even installed. And sure enough, Encarta runs. Though I don't know if I would use it with wikipedia around..

Wondering whether Encarta is now available on the net, apparently not the encyclopdedia. However a dictionary, thesaurus, and translator are available online.

Encarta as a retail product has been discontinued.

Read all about it on wikipedia. (Where else?)