Slashdot Mirror


Fifty Years of Color Television

peter303 writes "The Houston Chronicle notes that color TVs were first manufactured on March 25, 1954 at a price of $1000 (about $4000 in today's dollars). Some of the older folk here remember the excitement of your first neighbors acquiring one of these in the 1960s and as the TV series one-by-one switched to color. Ironically, for such a high tech nation, there hasn't been a major quality improvement in TV broadcast images for a half-century until the 2006 changeover to HDTV."

54 of 469 comments (clear)

  1. Yes, but... by smsp · · Score: 4, Funny

    Yea, but when will slashdot get some new colours too?

    1. Re:Yes, but... by Ann+Coulter · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here are some departments with different colors. Not new colors but still different is good, I think.

    2. Re:Yes, but... by boarder8925 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      that's "colors" you insensive clod!
      Not all Slashdotters are American, insensitive clod!
  2. "Fifty Years of Color Television!!" by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...and there's STILL nothing on!

    1. Re:"Fifty Years of Color Television!!" by eln · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yah, but at least now you get to pay for it.

    2. Re:"Fifty Years of Color Television!!" by BiggyP · · Score: 3, Interesting

      so,if we never got colour television would that have prevented the late 90's slew of home design/decoration/demolition programs, the inventors have a lot to answer for! ;)

    3. Re:"Fifty Years of Color Television!!" by Golias · · Score: 3, Funny

      Or as I like to call those shows, "furniture porn."

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  3. 1669 hours... a perspective by amyhughes · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Adults are projected to watch, on average, 1,669 hours of television in 2004, about 70 days worth, according to census figures.

    1669 hours... a perspective:

    If you are awake 16 hours per day 1669 hours is 104 days, not "just" 70. Apparently, on average, adults watch TV 29% of their waking hours. If you work/commute 45 hours per week, your "free time" is, if you do nothing else, about 9 1/2 hours per day, of which, on average, you watch TV 4 1/2 hours.

    So the average adult uses more than half of their available time watching TV.

    Pretty sad.

    Amy

    1. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by TimSee · · Score: 4, Informative

      According the US Labor Dept Inflation Calculator, a $1000 TV in 1954 would cost about $6900 in 2004 dollars - about the price of a nice High-Def Plasma...interesting.

    2. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by NotAnotherReboot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I concur, reading /. is much more productive.

    3. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by Jens_UK · · Score: 5, Insightful
      And years ago, the average American spent X amount of time listening to the radio, and before that, books. Years from now, it will be the internet, and then after that people will waste time on the holodeck.

      So your problem is with people, and not tv, right?

    4. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually the solution to too much Tv is a MythTV or for the incapable the Tivo or tivo types.

      Tv watching in my home has dropped by at least 90% cince we got the mythtv server and playback units running. My daughter watches her 2 shows within the timespan of one show and spends more time playing outside or with the dog, whatever.. Myself and the wife are spending more time together, the house is cleaner, we eat better as the evening entertainment is cooking, talking and other tasks.. we spend 1 hour to watch 3 TV shows we usually WANT to catch at the end of the night. skipping all the commercials and the boring parts makes it cool. the rare times we dont watch mythtv and watch live tv we all get annoyed as we cant skip commercials or pause.

      you can have your TV and a real life too.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    5. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by rhadamanthus · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Goddam dude, the aprent did not say:


      1) Anything about Americans

      2) Anything about not owning a TV

      3) Anything about being superior


      That was not a troll comment, it was a sad commentary on just how much TV people watch. I think you might be a troll however...

      --rhad

      --
      Slashdot needs to interview Natalie Portman.
    6. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Books aren't a waste of time. Well, unless they're vitriolic political commentaries about the evils of the left or the evils of the right.

      TV doesn't encourage you to think, it's just sitting there in front of you, a lot of it full of mind-numbing reality TV garbage. Now if PBS was winning the ratings war, I wouldn't be worried.

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    7. Re:1669 hours... a perspective by realdpk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree. Just as there are bad television programs, there are also bad books. _Lots_ of bad books. Most books are indeed a waste of time. I'm sure you can name a list that aren't, but that list would only encompass a small fraction of the number of books out there.

      The thing about the anti-TV elitists that I've noticed is that, unless you read the same list of books as they do, you are a "lesser" man. "Oh you haven't read ?" as they look down on you.

  4. improvements by wmeyer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, there have been numerous quality improvements, though they have come in the receivers, rather than in the NTSC standard. The standard itself is rather elegant, and apart from the error that resulted in shifting to a non-integer frame rate (and the problems that has created for designers of hardware for decades), it has proved very robust.

    --
    --- Bill
    1. Re:improvements by wmeyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      what about the quality in video cameras

      Yes, the advent of CCD cameras has eliminated the hassles of registration that were such a headache in tubed cameras, and the availability of digital filtering has also helped to reduce artifacts in the encoded NTSC.

      --
      --- Bill
    2. Re:improvements by wmeyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      What is a non-integer frame rate?

      The frame rate in monochrome television was 30fps. In NTSC, it is 29.97fps. This leads to the need for "drop-frame" timecode, and other delights.

      Drop-frame attempts to correct for the time errors by dropping two frame addresses periodically. The algorithm is that the first frame of the first second of each minute not evenly divisible by ten is identified as frame 2, not frame 0. The 18 frames per 10 minutes thus dropped reduces the cumulative error to a little more than 2 frames per 24 hours.

      There are other techniques recommended for reducing the residual further.

      --
      --- Bill
    3. Re:improvements by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Actually, the problem is that the frame rate is not an exact integer multiple of the 60Hz AC power frequency, which is usually the largest source of electrical noise. It's off by a fraction of a percent; that's why you often see a distortion slowly creeping up the screen about once per minute as the frame rate beats against the power line sine wave. If the frame rate were exactly locked to the power line frequency, the distortion wouldn't move, so you wouldn't notice it.

      IIRC, the original B&W broadcast was at 60 frames/second, but there was some technical reason they had to slightly shift it in order to add the color subcarrier. Old B&W TVs were the worst with this noise distortion because they weren't designed to try to prevent it.

      (I think that color TVs only became truly usable in the 80s when they introduced decent automatic color correction. Before that, it seemed you could only watch in one of two colors: purple or green. No matter how much you fiddled with the knobs on old color TVs, it never looked quite right.)

    4. Re:improvements by Tuzanor · · Score: 4, Informative
      I wouldn't go so far as to call NTSC "elegent", though it is clever especially with regards to how it implemented colour. PAL is a much cleaner standard, as the europeans (as they often did) took what they saw as flaws in NTSC and implemented things differently. Though PAL has a lower frame rate (25 as apposed to 30), it has a higher resolution and doesn't requier a TINT or HUE control, and the colour is better. When there are problems in the signal, with PAL you will see weaker colour, but with NTSC you can see the wrong colour (ie "green faces"). SECAM (the french standard) is even better because it uses FM modulation for colour, so it eliminates both these problems, though it has its issues (you can't "mix" two SECAM signals together, which makes it a pain for some professionals).

      Check out this link to read more on it. Also this link has some interesting info.

    5. Re:improvements by hackstraw · · Score: 3, Funny

      it is clever especially with regards to how it implemented colour

      Many people in the TV production biz say that NTSC stands for Never The Same Color

    6. Re:improvements by wmeyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      That definition was declared by the Brits, and SECAM was also defined as Something Essentially Contrary to the American Method.

      I've worked in television for over 30 years, and although there are certainly shortcomings in the NTSC standard, they are dwarfed by the failings in the delivery systems (transmitters and cable systems), so that the resolution visible in the living room has typically been about 50% of that seen in production rooms.

      --
      --- Bill
  5. "older folk"? by Jules · · Score: 4, Funny

    Cheeky buggers.

    I remember when business desktop computers first went to color. First the IBM PC and then the Mac (technically I suppose the Apple ][ was a business machine). "Ah," I thought to myself, "this will never catch on..."

  6. Sad thing about HDTV. by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ironically, for such a high tech nation, there hasn't been a major quality improvement in TV broadcast images for a half-century until the 2006 changeover to HDTV.

    Was HDTV really even necessary? Our tax dollars were spent mandating its deployment, our money will be wasted purchasing the receivers (which are going to have to be in all TVs), and what does it do for us? Nothing.

    We worry about the effects of lack of exercise, overeating, diabetes, etc, yet we mandate better TV signals and are double paying for it.

    1. Re:Sad thing about HDTV. by Enry · · Score: 4, Funny

      Think of it this way.

      You have to work harder to pay the increased cable bill as channels have to pay to buy new equipment. Then you have to work harder still to afford the new TV to receive the signals. Then you have to get a car big enough to carry said new TV from the store to your house. Then you have to haul it around and get it in a place where your wife (or SO) approves so it follows the flow of the room. By this point, all the overtime/additional work and physical exercise has caused your heart to explode. You die, your spouse/SO gets your life insurance, your company gets to hire a younger replacement worker and pay 2/3 of what they paid you.

      Lower unemployment, more money flowing in the economy, and all the fat unhealthy people are gone! All because the FCC wanted HDTV.

      (just kidding....or am I?)

  7. A story... by pcmanjon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My dad recalls (born in 1952) when his neighbors got color TV and he remembers everyone on the street tried to get in the house to watch it.

    He remembers one time when it broke and the whole neighborhood pitched in to fix it...

    1. Re:A story... by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My grandpa worked as an RCA repairman for many years (I've been told stories about how every time a new computer was invented, he had to go to night school to learn how to fix it.)

      Anyway, one day he brought home a box of parts and a picture tube from RCA and built their family a color television. My father remembers how every week neighbors would come over to watch the Wonderful World of Disney because it was one of the few color programs each week.

      My childhood's claim to fame is a 386 Packard Bell and Prodigy.... sigh.

  8. Yep... by ERJ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They did it right back then. Good technology (lasted 50 years), allowed the market, not the government, to push adaptation. Somehow I doubt we will still be using HDTV (at least what the current incarnation is) in 50 years.

  9. Wide-format, taking long enough! by addie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Last time I was in Britain, I made some comment to a cousin of mine about their wide-format TV and all the shows that are shown in that format. She responded "Yeah, we just go that last year, we're so far behind North America". Boy was she surprised to hear that we're still years away from that change over here!

    And of course the fact that PAL is higher resolution that NTSC, and we realize how little has changed in this past 50 years. Why exactly has it taken North America so long to change to a better format? I'd imagine the HDTV change will happen almost overnight, much like the DVD revolution, but it sure took a while for the quality of TV to step up a notch.

    Now if they could only do something about what's actually ON the tube.... or, um.. the flat panel?

    1. Re:Wide-format, taking long enough! by Zerbey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wide format is slowly coming along, about 40% of the shows I watch are broadcast in widescreen right now. My biggest beef at the moment is the number of broadcasters who slap a watermark right in the middle of the black lines thus confusing my TV so it can't stretch the image properly. Yes, I can use one of the manual presets but then it chops off the edges.

      My Phillips TV does a really good job of automatically stretching the screen when it detects widescreen.

  10. Smell-o-vision?! by pixelbend · · Score: 3, Funny

    Forget HDTV, where is our Smell-o-vision?

    --
    Prospective station wagon buyer: "I know what you say is true...but...er...I don't know how to maintain a tank!"
  11. quality hasn't changed since ~1939. by millia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    actually, the quality hasn't changed, back even further than that. since color tv was to be able to be forwards and backwards compatible with black and white, the color signal was hacked into the black and white standard.
    this was not the case in britain, where a new, but incompatible, standard was created, that used bandwidth more effectively, and had better color.
    so hdtv is the first new standard since about 1939. it's about damn time.
    this proves, once again, that standards are a double-edged sword. use and choose carefully...

    --
    stored on computers from birth to the grave
  12. Cable TV by DeepDarkSky · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know about the TV image qualities where you are, but Cable TV certainly improved image qualities. Ok, ok, this is not an improvement on image quality, but on transmission, but to the people sitting at home, it didn't make a difference. Why do I bring it up? Because Cable TV allowed for additional channels and offered image quality good enough that people are willing to pay to subscribe to it. And quite frankly, no matter how good the pictures, if you don't have good transmission/reception, it's still pretty crappy.

  13. Make big bird yellow! by dwhittington · · Score: 3, Funny

    Black and white wasn't enough for me, I guess...

    My mom recalls me, as a toddler, telling my dad to "make Big Bird yellow".

    In more recent years, Tivo is my second most favorite enhancemenet to television.

  14. And TV still sucks! by CharAznable · · Score: 4, Funny

    I find no confort in being able to watch "My Big Fat Obnoxious Fiance" in HDTV...

    --
    The perfect sig is a lot like silence, only louder
  15. um.... television?? by theMerovingian · · Score: 3, Funny


    Are you referring to my Gamecube monitor?

    --
    "If you think you have things under control, you're not going fast enough." --Mario Andretti
  16. Improvements in TV broadcasting by Phantom69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But what about digital TV broadcasts, we've had these for a few years, and they've certainly made a big difference to the old analogue signal. Plus there's also audio improvements including Mono -> Nicam Stereo, and Doly Digital 5.1 broadcasts through digital satellite transmissions (using Sky+ for example). AND we also have receiver improvements, including CVBS -> S/Video -> RGB -> Component, and 100Hz TVs, widescreen TVs...

  17. The real improvements... by deman1985 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    To say that there have been no major quality improvements in color television isn't entirely correct. The televisions themselves have implemented better and better filtering algorithms and can better lock onto signals than they used to. Color realism has gotten better with newer TV's to project more fleshy tones and more accurate color temperatures.

    Then there have been improvements in the means of broadcasting signals. Cable TV was introduced, and not too long after was followed by satellite reception (with their appropriate receivers), both of which improved the strength of the signal and integrity of the image. In more recent years, digital cable and satellite hit it big, and allow for near-perfect signal quality and picture integrity.

    The only thing that hasn't really changed up to this point has been the resolution, and this has partly been a result of how well the TV market took off after its introduction. It's hard to change a standard once it has been in place and is used by everyone. Optimally, it would be nice if there was a way to allow HDTV signals to continue to be received by regular definition TVs so that broadcasters wouldn't have to maintain separate equipment, but the technology is so much different that it would be impractical. This is why the introduction of HDTV has taken so long.

    1. Re:The real improvements... by ratboy666 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Interesting - I just want to expand on your "fleshy" point:

      Modern TVs use a colour gamut designed to improved flesh tones, yet they have a smaller gamut than the original colour specification. In other words, an antique original colour TV is able to represent MORE colours than your current set.. It just won't do hiqh quality pr0n as well.

      As to "near-perfect" signal quality and picture integrity... I would argue that "digital" mpeg encoding reduces quality. The mpeg encode of course relies on "picture integrity" (actually, no, everything is bundled up into 188 byte packets, with the assumption that there will be lossage, and no retransmission).

      As to resolution - 480i has been "good enough". Indeed, DVDs are 480i/p as well. Generally, few complaints.

      1080i (etc.) HD formats. ARE a major step. Roughly, an order of magnitude improvement. But, for many, 480i/p is "good enough" (please note that HD has 6 times the datarate of a current DVD - and DVD *is not* an HDTV format. The only source of HD will be broadcast (possibly cable or sat..). And, you won't actually be able to *record* an HD signal using normal consumer gear).

      And, I find that 480i/p is good enough for me. I do have a largish set, and still don't really have the urge for HDTV. If we had "super-DVD" out there, with 1080i format movies, THEN I would for it. But, I honestly don't care for broadcast formats.

      That's probably just me, though...

      Ratboy.

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
  18. Inflation by Hungus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    According to The Inflation Calculator What cost $1000 in 1954 would cost $6468.58 in 2002 and I know teh US hasn't been dropping prices of late.

    --
    Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
  19. Actually there were two other revolutions by cryptochrome · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ironically, for such a high tech nation, there hasn't been a major quality improvement in TV broadcast images for a half-century until the 2006 changeover to HDTV.

    Assuming HDTV actually switches over in 2006...

    I would argue that there were two major quality improvements in TV with the advents of video tape and digital compression. The first was a revolution of time, since people could now watch what they wanted when they wanted regardless of when the stations/theaters were showing it. The second enabled a revolution in distribution, as it allows cleaner transmission in smaller channels and arbitrary additional content. This is mainly manifested in DVD but is equally applicable to digital cable, video on demand, and online distribution (legal or otherwise, with anime fansubs and other non-domestic shows being the most striking application). Thanks to digital tech you can bundle on a ton of extras, edit with ease, and lower the cost of distribution and replication to inconsequential levels.

    HDTV is a nice improvement in video quality to theater-grade levels. But the video and digital revolutions are far more significant, and will continue to trump HD where both can not be accomodated. After all, what matters the most is not the presentation but content.

    --

    ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

  20. Color TV in 1928 by MrIrwin · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Baird system, 3 mechanically spinning (Nipkov) disks with different coulered gelatines.

    BTW, they even did 3D TV around the same period.

    Needless to say few people ever purchased Baird televisors, the picture quality was even worse than NTSC.

    --

    And if you thought that was boring you obviously havn't read my Journal ;-)

  21. wow by Jahf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nothing highlights the amazing cost that has been aquiring HDTV like this.

    $1000 then / $4000 now for the first round of color TVs?

    It was something like $10000-20000 for the first round of HDTVs. In the last year they were just now coming down to the $4000 range, especially if you count the cost of the HDTV tuner as part of the TV cost.

    Today you can get them for sub-$1000 but not with a tuner so far, which puts it at a minimum of $1200 for full HDTV.

    How long did it take before the broadcast networks considered color to be "it"? I know in the early 80's I was still watching on a B&W tv about 1/2 the time. -Good- color quality didn't really happen until the late 80's.

    That is 30 years for a full transition.

    Makes the time it has taken to get HDTV adopted (2 years before it is considered defacto, probably 10 more before you get rid of the majority of old color boxes that are using downscan converters) to be alot less painful than people usually make it sound.

    --
    It is more productive to voice thoughtful opinions (reply) than to judge (moderate) others.
  22. Re:...non-integer frame rate? by wmeyer · · Score: 4, Informative

    Can you provide a link to this "non-integer frame rate" please?

    Look here:
    http://www.poynton.com/notes/video/Four-fie ld_NTSC _sequence/index.html

    --
    --- Bill
  23. HDTV won't just affect couch potatos by k_killmore · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As someone who is extremely interested in DV production, HDTV and more specifically HD DV are going to be a boon to the industry.

    Consumer and pro-sumer cameras are going to get a whole lot better in terms of color sampling and resolution. The ability for the start-up movie maker or videographer to turn in a superior product will prove to be much better with this technology, also.

    I don't know how much different the standard is for HDTV between different countries, but I'm sure if pros and the like don't have to choose between NTSC, PAL, and SECAM, there will also be quite a few happy people out there.

  24. This Onion is for you by aliens · · Score: 5, Funny
    --
    -- taking over the world, we are.
  25. "In Living Color" by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I am not old enough to remember the 50s, but I can remember catching all the familiar 60s sitcoms and that was the time when they were making the transition to color. Early Gilligan's Island episodes and I Dream of Jeannie episodes were in B&W, as you can verify on Nick at Nite. Yup, it sure was different seeing Jeannie's costume in black & white. And I had no idea Gilligan wore a red shirt in the early episodes.

    Anyway, like all new technology, first they trumpt the technology itself. I remember NBC shows beginning with the colorful peacock logo and the voiceover saying, "The following program is brought to you in living color," a sentiment that today makes you think, "Duh!" but back then meant something new about the tech. That's the typical arc for technology. First they talk about the tech, and then the tech just melts into the background and nobody thinks about how it happens, they just enjoy that it happens.

  26. Quality was LOUSY until the 1970s... by dpbsmith · · Score: 5, Informative

    In theory, the quality should have been OK, and perhaps it was in a studio, on a high-quality monitor, via closed circuit.

    In practice, the home receivers of the late 1950s and 1960s were lousy. They were very temperamental beasts. They had no built-in degaussers and if you moved them or turned them you'd get color changes due to the earth's magnetic field.

    The tube circuits were unstable and drifted. They had no ability to compensate for any signal variation, so colors shifted from program to commercial, from program to station break, from program to program, and sometimes from camera to camera within a program. You were constantly leaping up to fiddle with the contrast, brightness, saturation, and hue adjustments.

    The tubes were never properly converged (and had about seventeen tweaks needed to converge them).

    The picture tubes were circular rather than rectangular and cut off significant parts of the picture. The phosphors couldn't deliver much brightness, so they couldn't put the usual neutral tint in the CRT face; a set when turned off looked pale grey rather than dark. When turned on, room light washed out the colors (and if you turned the brightness up the picture looked even worse).

    They were trophies and icons of conspicuous consumption, but it wasn't much fun watching them. I've often suspect that at least part of the reason for the popularity of the Disney show is that animated cartoons were relatively unharmed by slight color distortions.

    In the 1970s, solid-state circuits and the introduction of various AGC and other automatic-adjustment features finally brought home receivers to the point where they were worth watching.

  27. Re:YUV color by spaceyhackerlady · · Score: 3, Interesting
    One interesting part of the development of color tv relates to the YUV color space used. This color space calculates color by the difference between two of the channels, the third channel is the detail.

    There are infinitely-many sets of primary colours you could use to represent RGB colour. In an RGB colour space any set of three linearly-independent vectors will do for the primary colours. The YUV model was designed for compatibility (Y = black and white) and realism, since the U and V primaries are closely related to important colours like human skin tones. Can't have people looking like Vulcans, now can we? :-)

    We never had a colour TV when I was growing up. Always black and white. When we moved out to the country colour was irrelevant anyway (snowy pictures look much worse in colour), until we got a satellite system.

    Historical tidbit: the Apollo video from the Moon used a frame-sequential colour system, which was converted once it got back to Earth.

    Technical tidbit: some ham radio folks use a system called Slow Scan TV ( SSTV), which transmits still images over the radio. They usually use a line-sequential colour system, which gives the signals a distinctive waltz-like sound. Your best bet for such signals is around 14230 kHz. People used to use all kinds of weird and wonderful dedicated hardware, but now a computer with a sound card is the usual setup.

    ...laura

  28. Another story on the power of TV... by Embedded+Geek · · Score: 3, Funny
    Growing up in the 70's, my family was like most lower-middle clans. We had one TV in the living room and we all zombied out to it. Once it broke and it took two weeks to get the parts (remember when you repaired TVs?). With nothing to do, we did a lot of reading and played a few board games. Mostly, though, we played with the cat.

    Maybe six hours a night, we'd drag string around the living room, goof around with the fether duster, throw things back and forth, etc. The beast, very aloof even for a feline, got more attention in two weeks than she probably had in the previous six months.

    Man, was she pissed when we got that TV back.

    --

    "Prepare for the worst - hope for the best."

  29. Why, yes he was mexican by Mex · · Score: 3, Informative

    Never mind, I found an article detailing the story of the inventor:

    http://www.lomcximo.com/english/people/camarena/ co ntent.html

    WITHOUT MONEY
    He claimed not to have a penny from his inventions, as he had invested all of his money in new research.


    Can the inventor of the first color television be Latin American?

    In 1940 at the age of 22, Guillermo Gonzalez Camarena obtained US Patent
    No. 2,296,022, which protected his "Trichromatic" system used for color television transmissions.

    Gonzalez Camarena was born in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, in 1917.

    In 1932, after two years of studies, he left the mechanical-electrical engineering program at the National Polytechnic Institute to work as an operator at the radio station of his country?s Department of Public Education.
    HIS OTHER SELF
    Besides being an inventor, Gonzalez Camarena liked astronomy, he was a connoisseur of archeology and mexican history, played several musical instruments and composed beautiful songs.

    In 1934 he built his first monochromatic television camera from scrap materials he got from flea markets.

    After his US patent for the color television on August 19, 1940, he registered his invention at the Mexican Office of Patents and Trademarks, No. 10,235, thus protecting himself against plagiarism and prohibited use of his invention in his country.

    He immediately went to work, as chief operator, to the radio stations XEW and XEQ in the Mexican capital.

    In 1942 he began experimenting with television transmissions from his home, and in 1946 he founded XEGC, the first experimental television station in Mexico, with only two receptors built and installed by himself; one in XEW and the other in the Mexican League of Radio Experimenters.

    My ideal is to build economical receptors so that everyone can have one.

    In 1948 he established Gon-Com Laboratories to manufacture TV transmission equipment, which he succeeded in exporting to the US two years later.

    That same year he invented the first remote control in Mexico, showcased at the Presidential Objective Exposition that took place in the center of the city.

    Of specific importance is the first black and white transmission of a surgical procedure by closed circuit television during the 7th Assembly of Surgeons, an experience that was repeated the following year during the same Assembly, but this time in full color.

    In 1950, he obtained the right to commercialize Channel 5 in Mexico with the acronym XHGC, where two years later he began operations on May 10th with a Mother?s Day festival; but it wasn?t until August 18th that he began regular broadcasts.
    In 1960, Gonzalez Camarena obtained in Mexico and in the US patents for his ?Kaleidoscope?, an innovative color television system that was later improved and protected under a new patent in 1962 as the ?simplified bi-color.?

    In 1963, XHGC began the first commercial color transmissions, broadcast to televisions in ten shopping centers in Mexico City, where the general public could enjoy them for free.

    Unfortunately, in 1965 Gonzalez Camarena died in a tragic automobile accident.

    This brilliant Latin American, without even reaching the age of 50 and working entirely in his own country of Mexico, managed to excel in a field traditionally reserved for scientists in first world countries.

  30. No improvements? What about Vert. hold! by helix_r · · Score: 4, Informative
    "...Ironically, for such a high tech nation, there hasn't been a major quality improvement in TV broadcast images for a half-century until the 2006 changeover to HDTV..."

    No improvements??!! Don't you remember "vert. hold" and having to adjust that up until sometime in the 80's. IC-based PLL circuitry has really improved TV since the transistor and tube days.

  31. Frame Rates, etc. by BigBlockMopar · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually, the problem is that the frame rate is not an exact integer multiple of the 60Hz AC power frequency, which is usually the largest source of electrical noise. It's off by a fraction of a percent; that's why you often see a distortion slowly creeping up the screen about once per minute as the frame rate beats against the power line sine wave. If the frame rate were exactly locked to the power line frequency, the distortion wouldn't move, so you wouldn't notice it.

    Uhhh... Okay. Credentials: Former professional video technician (at the SkyDome in Toronto) before being hired to design radar video systems for Litton. Also an avid collector and restorer of early television sets.

    In the 1950s, AC power was not universal, especially in rural areas (note the sustained popularity of the "All American Five" AC/DC table radio at that time). Lots of places had DC, and lots of cities had 25Hz power well into the late 1950s. Nor was it necessarily going to be in sync from one town to the next, so you couldn't guarantee that the 60Hz powerline hum could be synchronized with the TV station's 60Hz vertical signal. In other words, you couldn't be guaranteed that the hum was going to happen in the vertical blanking interval (that black bar you see rolling when the vertical hold control is set wrong).

    I suspect that the vertical was chosen to be at 60Hz more because the large current draw of the vertical output tube driving the deflection yoke would then be more likely to occur during the charge cycle of the set's filter capacitors, allowing smaller capacitors to be used (cheaper). This of course being a time when electrolytic filter capacitors (in fact, all small parts) were still hand made.

    Even more importantly, you should remember that most early TV sets (until the advent of selenium rectifiers in about 1955) had full-wave rectifiers, generally using a 5U4 or similar tube. A full-wave rectifier folds the negative half of the sinewave up to the positive side, which effectively doubles the frequency to 120Hz.

    Either way, if the set is operating correctly, regardless of color standard, you will not see any powerline artifacts or ripple. It's when the horizontal system starts to come out of resonance that the biggest current draw happens in the set. Your horizontal output tube (transistor) consumes the most power of any part of the set; if a typical 1950s DuMont or Admiral has a cathode current of 120mA (at ~300V) and you misadjust the horizontal hold, that current will spike to over double that. That will load down the set's power supply, discharge the filter capacitors more, and you might start to hear 120Hz (full wave rectifier at 60Hz) hum in the set's speaker.

    IIRC, the original B&W broadcast was at 60 frames/second, but there was some technical reason they had to slightly shift it in order to add the color subcarrier.

    Yup. The original NTSC standard was 30FPS; when the 3.58MHz sinewave which carries color was added, the bandwidth of the signal had to be increased. (The original was 3.5MHz bandwidth for the image; reducing the frame rate slightly was sufficient to keep the bandwidth inside the original spectrum and didn't screw up many of the existing TV sets.)

    Old B&W TVs were the worst with this noise distortion because they weren't designed to try to prevent it.

    Note that the NTSC color TV standard was adopted in 1953, though not implemented until 50 years ago today. Every TV set built since then has known about the new frame rate the sets would have to handle. I actively collect and restore early TV sets, and I only have a few which predate this - they're rate.

    Again, you don't get powerline beat in the picture unless something is wrong with the set's filter capacitors.

    If you're getting a beat in the picture which, on a blank raster, moves in time with the vertical hold control, then you've got a problem where the vertical is either consuming too much current, or a

    --
    Fire and Meat. Yummy.
  32. Not true. by geekoid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is nothing on TV that makes you not think.
    The Simpsons brought up all kinds of ideas, thoughts, ans stuff to think about. Many people may have chose not to take the opportunity to discuss some issues, but thats not TV's fault.

    I challenge you to pick a TV show that there is no opportunity to think.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect