- published: 13 Jul 2010
- views: 15908
Teletext (or broadcast teletext) is a television information retrieval service created in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s by the Philips Lead Designer for VDUs, John Adams. Teletext is a means of sending pages of text and simple geometric shapes from mosaic blocks to a VBI decoder equipped television screen by use of a number of reserved vertical blanking interval lines that together form the dark band dividing pictures horizontally on the television screen. It offers a range of text-based information, typically including news, weather and TV schedules. Paged subtitle (or closed captioning) information is also transmitted within the television signal. The first test transmissions were made by the BBC in 1973, known as Ceefax ("see facts"). After adoption in the UK the standards became international as the European Teletext standards and as the World System Teletext (WST). The World Wide Web began to take over some of the functions of teletext from the late 1990s, and many broadcasters have ceased broadcast of teletext—CNN in 2006 and the BBC in 2012. The decline of teletext has been hastened by the introduction of digital television, though an aspect of teletext continues in closed captioning.
Here is a random selection of 'Oracle' teletext pages, saying goodbye on December 31st 1992. :-(
Have you ever heard of Teletext? It’s this amazing system where you can get text information using your TV’s antenna and a special decoder. The system is still being used across the globe, but it never caught on in the United States, although a form of it was used by a Chicago and L.A. TV station, and Superstation WTBS. This service is so amazing. Sending all of these text pages via the airwaves. Right now we’re looking at the BBC’s Ceefax. So here’s how it works. You have a main page, and then on that main page you can choose between various sections, like news headlines, sports or weather. You select what section you want to view by typing in the number. But everything isn’t just text. I love the blocky, old school graphics that you can bring up on things like weather maps. ...
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iraq soldier teletext
Ceefax, Oracle and 4-Tel all get a mention from approximately 1985. From Mort Smith's archives. Sorry about the sound glitches. Apparently the Channel 4 logo is a Mr Biffo style addition left over from a previous recording. See the comments for more details.
Ceefax and Keyfax, Nite-Owl and Cable Chuckles, oh my... We failed to save the stats from the original posting. The viewcount was somewhere around 15,000. Visit our website at http://www.oddityarchive.com Social Media: Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/oddityarchive Twitter: @oddityarchive
Just before the analogue switched off (from bluebell hill) I was surprised to find that teletext on BBC 1 was still being transmitted. Teletext is a very weird information service invented in the 70s. It is transmitted though the TV picture. The analogue signal is designed to be fed directly into a CRT (with no processing required by the TV). In-between TV frames there is some time while no picture is transmitted. This is where the teletext is transmitted. (there can be up to 25 lines of teletext transmitted on each frame). Some TVs display the teletext lines by mistake, When this happens you can see a flickery effect at the top of the TV picture. Teletext works by each pixel on the line being either white or black (White is 1 and black is 0). There are 360 pixels per teletext line. (ana...
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and that moment
you promised me would never come,
shot through the air so fast,
i couldn't even see it
and you said,
"and you will never
never
never
never
never
never
never
ever understand
how i feel."