(01-02-2015 14:56 )steviebaby Wrote: (29-01-2015 21:38 )ShandyHand Wrote: ...Does anyone know if the guy on the trigger works on a delayed feed? ...
I've been wondering about this. Wouldn't such a delay be immediately apparent to someone on the phone? How could you have a proper conversation if you were watching a delayed feed?
Also there are lots of occasions where you see air trigger responses that are simply false alarms; the feed is only lost for a split second or so and no infraction occours. If they were operating on a delay, then in theory, you wouldn't see these poxy false alarms.
I worded my original question poorly sorry.
What the guy on the trigger sees he sees seconds before us. (Up to 15 seconds according to the OSG - thanks Mellow.) He
can rewind back and blank out any bits he sees as dodgy with the logo; but mostly he would just press for it to go up it 'as live' if he thinks some thing's about to be shown that he thinks is a problem 'cause he's got to be quick about it. He can, obviously, still get it wrong and put the logo up incorrectly if he's a bit jumpy. What he does goes out regardless of whether he put the logo up for good reason or not. He hasn't got the time or inclination to be correcting his mistakes.
As for callers well they just have to put up with the slight delay between what they are hearing and what they are seeing.
As Bronco says it's a system that's used for the broadcast of many live events on TV. Helps bleep out certain edgy concert artists' swearing for one!
(01-02-2015 16:50 )RESPONSIBLE ADULT Wrote: I don't know the rules on what can be showed on tv as opposed to watching as it is streamed on the internet. If you watch the stream then why is this censored? Or technically is there no way they can show uncensored, meaning if the logo goes up on the tv screen, then it goes up on the stream also.
I should imagine that if the webstream differed from the TV stream it would come under Ofcom's ATVOD arm these days as it's not behind a paywall and s66 are a UK-based company. Ofcom have them all ways, so the webstream has to be the same as the TV feed.
Doesn't stop them sticking a second camera in the studio for a web-only angle though I don't think. Any such stream would have to be behind a paywall to placate our friendly neighbourhood quango if it was to show anything stronger than the regular feed.
This would probably be too challenging technically for their type of operation (ie. a cheap one!) at the moment and prone to very dangerous cock-up possibilities. "Ooops I've just put the wrong feed out on Freeview."