Like many, I eagerly awaited the return of the TV series LOST to the air on Thursday night.
I queued up the DVD recorder and got all four hours of the programming on Wednesday and Thursday night recorded. I planned to watch the shows again to re-familiarize myself with the series and the new episode.
Last night I got out the DVD and tried to watch it.
A shocker. ABC has apparently decided it doesn't want people recording its digital broadcasts. The commerical came through just perfect - excellent picture, full sound. But the actual show was missing an important audio track - the dialog. The sound effects were still there, as was the full picture, just no dialog. Boy, was I disappointed.
I got by with just turning on closed captioning so at least I could figure out what people were saying. Kind of like being deaf, I suppose. In future I'll record the analog broadcast signal, but since that is going away in 2009 this does not portend well for future viewers who want to time shift TV programming onto digital media without having to subscribe to a service like TIVO (and I'm not sure that DVR's were able to record the sound on LOST either). I suppose I could use an external tuner to convert digital signals to analog and feed them back into the recorder, but that will be a hassle and won't allow for scheduled recording.
Brickbats to ABC for this attempt to limit what viewers can do with the broadcast signal. A big frown for Mickey.
I queued up the DVD recorder and got all four hours of the programming on Wednesday and Thursday night recorded. I planned to watch the shows again to re-familiarize myself with the series and the new episode.
Last night I got out the DVD and tried to watch it.
A shocker. ABC has apparently decided it doesn't want people recording its digital broadcasts. The commerical came through just perfect - excellent picture, full sound. But the actual show was missing an important audio track - the dialog. The sound effects were still there, as was the full picture, just no dialog. Boy, was I disappointed.
I got by with just turning on closed captioning so at least I could figure out what people were saying. Kind of like being deaf, I suppose. In future I'll record the analog broadcast signal, but since that is going away in 2009 this does not portend well for future viewers who want to time shift TV programming onto digital media without having to subscribe to a service like TIVO (and I'm not sure that DVR's were able to record the sound on LOST either). I suppose I could use an external tuner to convert digital signals to analog and feed them back into the recorder, but that will be a hassle and won't allow for scheduled recording.
Brickbats to ABC for this attempt to limit what viewers can do with the broadcast signal. A big frown for Mickey.