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Ceefax Turns 30

VirtualUK writes "Ceefax, the text information service from the BBC turns 30 today (just 3 days after myself)!! For those not lucky enough to have seen what Ceefax is about, it is text information pages sent in out-of-band data space of TV transmissions in Great Britain. What started off as a subtitling project evolved into a service still used by over 20 million viewers a week even in the face of the Internet revolution. It just goes to show that for a lot of people, the best source of sport results, last minute holiday bargains and horoscopes is still just a click away on their TV remote."

2 of 375 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Pretty cool stuff by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 5, Insightful
    That's pretty cool! Here in the U.S., we had to pay per minute for contemporary services on Compuserve. With prices as high as $0.20 per minute, it's no wonder that Compu$erve was primarily reserved for businesses! But to have hundreds of pages of text information pushed to your television set at no (excluding television tax) cost? That's amazing!

    You see, public entreprises (that belong to the State) aren't always bad... Public service is exactly what it says: service for the public, and not a sinister plot by the Government to enslave the population, as you yankees seem to be happy to believe so easily...

    And where is Compu$erve, nowadays????
  2. Re:Information non-overload by rishistar · · Score: 5, Informative

    And here's how the money goes

    How your licence is spent
    Each household's colour TV licence cost £9.67 every month in 2003/2004. On average each month, this was how the BBC spent your money:
    Average monthly licence fee spend

    BBC One £3.37
    BBC Two £1.45
    Digital television channels £0.98
    Transmission and collection costs £0.98
    BBC Radio 1, 2, 3, 4 and Five Live £0.99
    Digital radio stations £0.08
    Nations & English Regions television £0.90
    Local radio £0.61
    bbc.co.uk £0.31

    --
    Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science