Who is Online

We have 85 guests and no members online

TV 

 

Although my father worked for a company that had a division that made them, and could get a set at company prices, we were late TV adopters.  My parents thought it too distracting when we were students and it was generally referred to as the 'idiot box'.

When we finally got a set it wasn't supposed to be turned on until the ABC news at 7:00 pm. But once we had it my parents were like 'poker machine addicts'.  7:00 became 6:30; for 'Bellbird' then 6:00 at the weekend for 6 O'clock Rock.  Before we knew it we were watching commercial channels like 'The Gordon Chater Show'; 'Mavis Bramston'; and Bandstand;  just for the go-go dancers. 

If this sketch {youtube}PHvxgGfUcXk|600|450|0{/youtube} 

(I'm sorry but it's no longer here) from Mavis Bramston seems incomprehensible, have a look at this one (that it was a parody of): {youtube}KCcZyW-6-5o|600|450|0{/youtube}

That an ancient comedy sketch, that is no longer funny and is interesting only in its historical context, should be taken down for copyright reasons is indicative of what's wrong with ridiculously long copyright protection.  See also my comments here.

 

 

You see TV once had to be educational. Next time you are in a plane and consider the wings out of your window you will know how many thousands of tonnes of aircraft stays in the air.

Click, click, click, went the golden knob of the turret tuner on the front.  Three channels to choose from until 1965 when ITS (channel 10) made it four.  How could we decide?   

No remotes in those days; only 16 or so valves to do all the electronics.  Complicated but comprehensible.  Lots of scope for tuning it up with a non-magnetic screwdriver made from a plastic knitting needle.  No colour information processed through a delay line or colour burst information during the fly-back synchronisation then; PAL colour was not to come until 1975.

Colour increased the complexity enormously but with a little effort, mending a TV was still within the grasp of a real dad.  TVs, like Hi Fi amplifiers and tuners, still came with a circuit diagram in the manufacturer's instruction book so that a moderately skilled owner could repair them.  

But an oscilloscope now needed to be added to the tools required. Mine is still in a box under the house; I can't bear to throw it out; its beautiful.  I built it from a Heathkit, when I lived in New York, to replace an earlier home-made one left in Sydney. 

Today not even a real electronics engineer could explain the finer circuit details.  The processes take place incomprehensibly by means of thousands of transistors etched onto tiny  microchips surface-mounted robotically onto circuit boards that are so complex that only a computer can design them. 

The days of etching your own circuit designs onto copper laminated boards are long gone.

The signals are no longer analogue.  TV, digital radio, phones and almost all electronics employs computer technology, using programmed software and firmware, that is in turn designed and developed using a computer.  

Now its impossible to open the back of a TV; swing out the boards; and go to work with a multimeter and soldering iron.  

We just throw away the whole sub-assembly, or more often whole TV;  just like a computer.  Some of that fun is gone forever. 

Instead we have the fun of creating programs for computers; and websites.

 

 

No comments

Travel

Canada and the United States - Part2

 

 

In Part1, in July 2023, Wendy and I travelled north from Los Angeles to Seattle, Washington, and then Vancouver, in Canada, from where we made our way east to Montreal.

In Part2, in August 2023, we flew from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, down to Miami, Florida, then Ubered to Fort Lauderdale, where we joined a western Caribbean cruise.

At the end of the cruise, we flew all the way back up to Boston.

From Boston we hired another car to drive, down the coast, to New York.

After New York we flew to Salt Lake City, Nevada, then on to Los Angeles, California, before returning to Sydney.

Read more: Canada and the United States - Part2

Fiction, Recollections & News

On Point Counter Point

 

 

 

 

Recently I've been re-reading Point Counter Point by Aldus Huxley. 

Many commentators call it his masterpiece. Modern Library lists it as number 44 on its list of the 100 best 20th century novels in English yet there it ranks well below Brave New World (that's 5th), also by  Aldus Huxley. 

The book was an experimental novel and consists of a series of conversations, some internal to a character, the character's thoughts, in which a proposition is put and then a counterargument is presented, reflecting a musical contrapuntal motif.

Among his opposed characters are nihilists, communists, rationalists, social butterflies, transcendentalists, and the leader of the British Freemen (fascists cum Brexiteers, as we would now describe them).

Taken as a whole, it's an extended debate on 'the meaning of life'. And at one point, in my young-adult life, Point Counter Point was very influential.

Read more: On Point Counter Point

Opinions and Philosophy

The Chemistry of Life

 

 

What everyone should know

Most of us already know that an atom is the smallest division of matter that can take part in a chemical reaction; that a molecule is a structure of two or more atoms; and that life on Earth is based on organic molecules: defined as those molecules that contain carbon, often in combination with hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen as well as other elements like sodium, calcium, phosphorous and iron.  

Organic molecules can be very large indeed and come in all shapes and sizes. Like pieces in a jigsaw puzzle molecular shape is often important to an organic molecule's ability to bond to another to form elaborate and sometimes unique molecular structures.

All living things on Earth are comprised of cells and all cells are comprised of numerous molecular structures.

Read more: The Chemistry of Life

Terms of Use

Terms of Use                                                                    Copyright