NATION

PASSWORD

Teletext, you're still using it?

For discussion and debate about anything. (Not a roleplay related forum; out-of-character commentary only.)

Do you use Teletext (Ceefax) ?

Yes
11
31%
No
5
14%
What's Teletext?
18
51%
I will do your laundry for food
1
3%
 
Total votes : 35

User avatar
Hairless Kitten II
Senator
 
Posts: 4198
Founded: Jun 30, 2009
Ex-Nation

Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Hairless Kitten II » Fri Sep 04, 2009 12:27 am

Image

Image

What's Teletext?

Teletext (or "broadcast Teletext") is a television information retrieval service developed in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s. It offers a range of text-based information, typically including national, international and sporting news, weather and TV schedules. Subtitle (or closed captioning) information is also transmitted in the teletext signal, typically on page 888 or 777.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teletext

I still use it a lot. In many countries the Teletext content is feed by the news department and often the earliest source of information.

But what about you?
Last edited by Hairless Kitten II on Fri Sep 04, 2009 12:45 am, edited 2 times in total.

• Vote for The NationStates Razzies 2009
• Any similarities with reality is a mere coincidence
• No mods were harmed during the making of this posting
• Protégez les enfants: ne leur faites pas respirer votre commentaires`
• Quand tous les dégoûtés seront partis, il ne restera plus que les dégoûtants
• Please report me at the Moderation Section because I'm spoiling your day

User avatar
Greater Oceanium
Bureaucrat
 
Posts: 53
Founded: Nov 30, 2004
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Greater Oceanium » Fri Sep 04, 2009 12:40 am

* snigger

User avatar
Risottia
Khan of Spam
 
Posts: 55257
Founded: Sep 05, 2006
Democratic Socialists

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Risottia » Fri Sep 04, 2009 12:50 am

I do. In Italy we call it "Televideo".
Statanist through and through.
Evilutionist Atheist Crusadjihadist. Egli/Lui.
"Darwinu Akhbar! Dawkins vult!"
Founder of the NSG Peace Prize Committee. Should I restart the bugger?
SUMMER, BLOODY SUMMER!

User avatar
Hairless Kitten II
Senator
 
Posts: 4198
Founded: Jun 30, 2009
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Hairless Kitten II » Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:01 am

Risottia wrote:I do. In Italy we call it "Televideo".


One day, my nephew (he's 17 years old) was around while I was watching Teletext.

Nephew: What's that? It's looks so old. It have to be boring.

:)
Last edited by Hairless Kitten II on Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:02 am, edited 1 time in total.

• Vote for The NationStates Razzies 2009
• Any similarities with reality is a mere coincidence
• No mods were harmed during the making of this posting
• Protégez les enfants: ne leur faites pas respirer votre commentaires`
• Quand tous les dégoûtés seront partis, il ne restera plus que les dégoûtants
• Please report me at the Moderation Section because I'm spoiling your day

User avatar
The Blaatschapen
Technical Moderator
 
Posts: 63226
Founded: Antiquity
Anarchy

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby The Blaatschapen » Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:04 am

Ah, teletext, a fine classic of 20th century technology.

I use it, mostly for checking the results of ongoing soccer matches.
The Blaatschapen should resign

User avatar
Allemande
Ambassador
 
Posts: 1082
Founded: Feb 20, 2005
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Allemande » Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:09 am

As the article indicated, this never caught on in the States. We've moved in different directions, with more closed captioning and web-TV integration (my AT&T U-verse service can function in something akin to a web-surfing mode using the TV controller instead of a mouse).
Last edited by Allemande on Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:09 am, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
Hairless Kitten II
Senator
 
Posts: 4198
Founded: Jun 30, 2009
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Hairless Kitten II » Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:09 am

The Blaatschapen wrote:Ah, teletext, a fine classic of 20th century technology.

I use it, mostly for checking the results of ongoing soccer matches.


Hey Blaatschapen, wat doe jij nou hier met een Belgiesche vlag, man? Doe zoals ik en kom nou hier gewoon even wonen. Is goed voor je belastingen ook. ;)

• Vote for The NationStates Razzies 2009
• Any similarities with reality is a mere coincidence
• No mods were harmed during the making of this posting
• Protégez les enfants: ne leur faites pas respirer votre commentaires`
• Quand tous les dégoûtés seront partis, il ne restera plus que les dégoûtants
• Please report me at the Moderation Section because I'm spoiling your day

User avatar
The Blaatschapen
Technical Moderator
 
Posts: 63226
Founded: Antiquity
Anarchy

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby The Blaatschapen » Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:42 am

@HK: I won't respond to that question, since all threads where I start speaking dutch end up in forum 7 :blush:
Last edited by The Blaatschapen on Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:43 am, edited 1 time in total.
The Blaatschapen should resign

User avatar
Rejistania
Senator
 
Posts: 3607
Founded: Antiquity
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Rejistania » Fri Sep 04, 2009 1:50 am

I used it last Sunday for election results at my parents. I have no TV at home, so normally, I don't use it. :ugeek:
Rejis sjiki, linux sjiki, alari sjiki, korona sjiki!
Forever united, forever free, forever in justice, forever prospering!


"Tekneluru mi'aru mi aji, il'sidekhir'ra mi, lajistas. Mi'ki'vasu kynha'het kijitax." Hank͜hila Sede, first lentine (translation: A dream is only a dream until it is reached. After that, it becomes something trivial)

Headlines from the Na~ovi Nanti: Hetkali election ended in no candidate over 2% hurdle - Syku I Jai fired as coach of Aetaila Seli, youth coach Hea I Juien takes over reins of club - Rising number of fairy penguins in Sumumusumu and neighboring islands


This person is pro-EU and proud of it! They are also a Eurofederalist and want the Federated States of Europe!

User avatar
EvilDarkMagicians
Postmaster-General
 
Posts: 13456
Founded: Jul 05, 2009
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby EvilDarkMagicians » Fri Sep 04, 2009 2:13 am

So sad it is being scrapped.

User avatar
Charlotte Ryberg
The Muse of the Westcountry
 
Posts: 15007
Founded: Mar 14, 2007
Civil Rights Lovefest

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Charlotte Ryberg » Fri Sep 04, 2009 3:06 am

Glad you brought this up, Hairless Kitten II: I have loads of memories.

The use of Ceefax has been very very influential since it's like a early form of the internet on your TV. The travel news on Page 162 (ITV) used to have a simplified map of the M25 motorway with the type of problems coloured into it. 888 must be the most memorable number because that was where the subtitles were, and very helpful for the hearing impaired. Pages 700-799 only got used for the General Election results back in '05 since there were too many constituencies to fit into the news service between 101-199. Channel 4 used to run a game called Bamboozle which used pages with letters (such as 14A). In 2002 there were also a few test pages I came across on ITV pages 699, 704, 705 and 799.

User avatar
Pure Metal
Envoy
 
Posts: 279
Founded: Apr 07, 2004
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Pure Metal » Fri Sep 04, 2009 3:08 am

bubblegun comedy pages were the only thing i ever used teletext for. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digitiser


other than that, no... grew up with the internets instead. my dad's going to miss it though
+19,376ish posts
Economic Left/Right: -9.13 :: Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.82
Moral Order: -5 :: Moral Rules: +6.5
www.hljphotography.co.uk :: www.planetrock.com

User avatar
Rhursbourg
Chargé d'Affaires
 
Posts: 478
Founded: Jun 24, 2005
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Rhursbourg » Fri Sep 04, 2009 4:46 am

yeah use it just for the footy letters page there a good laugh sometimes
Economic Left/Right: -9.5
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -7.9

User avatar
German Nightmare
Diplomat
 
Posts: 630
Founded: Dec 06, 2004
Democratic Socialists

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby German Nightmare » Fri Sep 04, 2009 4:49 am

Oh yeah, Videotext is very nice to have.
Greetings from Europe!

Whatever you do, we did it first - and better!

GNM - Master of a gazillion smileys and ever-changing avatars. +9118 posts.

User avatar
Nerushimi Rus
Attaché
 
Posts: 88
Founded: Aug 30, 2009
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Nerushimi Rus » Fri Sep 04, 2009 4:50 am

To be absolutely honest, it looks like MS Paint.

User avatar
Rejistania
Senator
 
Posts: 3607
Founded: Antiquity
Ex-Nation

Re: Teletext, you're still using it?

Postby Rejistania » Fri Sep 04, 2009 5:16 am

Charlotte Ryberg wrote:Glad you brought this up, Hairless Kitten II: I have loads of memories.

The use of Ceefax has been very very influential since it's like a early form of the internet on your TV. The travel news on Page 162 (ITV) used to have a simplified map of the M25 motorway with the type of problems coloured into it. 888 must be the most memorable number because that was where the subtitles were, and very helpful for the hearing impaired. Pages 700-799 only got used for the General Election results back in '05 since there were too many constituencies to fit into the news service between 101-199. Channel 4 used to run a game called Bamboozle which used pages with letters (such as 14A). In 2002 there were also a few test pages I came across on ITV pages 699, 704, 705 and 799.

Oh... teletext memories... I can contrubute as well. Did anyone else love to find out the text pages on the last pages? I liked to do that as a child. Or read the subtitles on 150 in the state owned stations and noticed how they differed from what was actually said. :ugeek:
Rejis sjiki, linux sjiki, alari sjiki, korona sjiki!
Forever united, forever free, forever in justice, forever prospering!


"Tekneluru mi'aru mi aji, il'sidekhir'ra mi, lajistas. Mi'ki'vasu kynha'het kijitax." Hank͜hila Sede, first lentine (translation: A dream is only a dream until it is reached. After that, it becomes something trivial)

Headlines from the Na~ovi Nanti: Hetkali election ended in no candidate over 2% hurdle - Syku I Jai fired as coach of Aetaila Seli, youth coach Hea I Juien takes over reins of club - Rising number of fairy penguins in Sumumusumu and neighboring islands


This person is pro-EU and proud of it! They are also a Eurofederalist and want the Federated States of Europe!

User avatar
Burnsantium
Lobbyist
 
Posts: 12
Founded: Apr 11, 2009
Ex-Nation

Postby Burnsantium » Thu Sep 10, 2009 9:54 pm

My girlfriend is originally from Germany, and I remember her mentioning teletext a couple of times when we would talk about tv related stuff. I never had any idea what the hell she was talking about until we went to visit her family for Christmas in Germany, and I finally saw it. I guess it gets the job done, but I couldn't believe how ancient it looked. It reminded me of our first computer, an Apple II I think, but with a little more color variety. Good times.

User avatar
Maurepas
Post Czar
 
Posts: 36403
Founded: Apr 17, 2009
Ex-Nation

Postby Maurepas » Thu Sep 10, 2009 9:59 pm

Meh, I has the Interwebs, and I dont think its available in the United States, besides, as your nephew so eloquently put, it looks boring, :lol2:

User avatar
Barzan
Minister
 
Posts: 3487
Founded: May 12, 2009
Ex-Nation

Postby Barzan » Thu Sep 10, 2009 10:06 pm

They don't have it in Canada, to my knowledge. I did use those telephone information services, though, where you dial codes for weather, election results, sports scores, exchange rates, etc. Environment Canada also used to have a weather line where you could get the temperature, current conditions, short- and long-term forecasts, etc. Now they've scrapped it along with the free "dial a live meteorologist" line, which you now have to pay for.
NOT affiliated with the Free Masons -- Barzan's flag does not incorporate masonic imagery
Political Compass: Economic Left/Right: -4.75 | Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: +1.03
"I have considerably less respect for people who nod and drool as talking heads in a box feed them pre-digested spoonfuls of opinutainment than someone that listens to and discusses with a variety of sources and opinions and then forms their own; regardless of whether I agree with them." - Lunatic Goofballs

User avatar
Fartsniffage
Post Czar
 
Posts: 42050
Founded: Dec 19, 2005
Liberal Democratic Socialists

Postby Fartsniffage » Thu Sep 10, 2009 10:08 pm

I still have a look for cheap holidays but other than that it's been wholly superseeded by the internet.

User avatar
The Blaatschapen
Technical Moderator
 
Posts: 63226
Founded: Antiquity
Anarchy

Postby The Blaatschapen » Thu Sep 10, 2009 10:10 pm

Rejistania wrote:
Charlotte Ryberg wrote:Glad you brought this up, Hairless Kitten II: I have loads of memories.

The use of Ceefax has been very very influential since it's like a early form of the internet on your TV. The travel news on Page 162 (ITV) used to have a simplified map of the M25 motorway with the type of problems coloured into it. 888 must be the most memorable number because that was where the subtitles were, and very helpful for the hearing impaired. Pages 700-799 only got used for the General Election results back in '05 since there were too many constituencies to fit into the news service between 101-199. Channel 4 used to run a game called Bamboozle which used pages with letters (such as 14A). In 2002 there were also a few test pages I came across on ITV pages 699, 704, 705 and 799.

Oh... teletext memories... I can contrubute as well. Did anyone else love to find out the text pages on the last pages? I liked to do that as a child. Or read the subtitles on 150 in the state owned stations and noticed how they differed from what was actually said. :ugeek:


Well, over here 888 was the subtitles. Allthough I find out that the commercial channels didn't have subtitling in the beginning. And yes, I loved to scan through all pages to see if something weird pops up... And that also sums up my addiction to NSG :p
The Blaatschapen should resign

User avatar
Charlotte Ryberg
The Muse of the Westcountry
 
Posts: 15007
Founded: Mar 14, 2007
Civil Rights Lovefest

Postby Charlotte Ryberg » Sat Sep 12, 2009 3:26 pm

The Blaatschapen wrote:Well, over here 888 was the subtitles. Allthough I find out that the commercial channels didn't have subtitling in the beginning. And yes, I loved to scan through all pages to see if something weird pops up... And that also sums up my addiction to NSG :p


It is indeed very regretful that such a useful feature has been replaced by "refer to your manufacturer's instructions", which can vary between brands.


Advertisement

Remove ads

Return to General

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot], Page, Tillania

Advertisement

Remove ads