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So, did Matt Baker asked that in the scrutiny sense or the light-hearted sleeping banter sense? I watched thinking it was the former, and it makes his little grin seem hilariously evil, but watching it back it is the second one right? And Cameron obviously clicked as he does a nervous laugh as he answers the question. I didn't see the show, only the clip, so I don't know the context.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 13:26 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 23:03 |
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Paperhouse posted:tbh I bet even if you tell them you don't need one they will still eventually hassle you about it otherwise it'd be far too easy for people to evade it Yeah, even if you legitimately don't have a TV, they show up at strange hours demanding to search your house for one. Repeatedly. It's easier just to buy a TV and a licence.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 13:30 |
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And while I'm here, I would like to like Wonders of the Universe, because it is essentially good, it just has so much padding it is a little bit embarassing. Somehow I doubt Brian Cox, when he delievers his university lectures, walks slowly to a corner of the room with music playing, makes a point, then walks slowly across the room with music playing, makes another point, then walks slowly etc etc. He doesn't really need to go to four exotic places an episode.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 13:32 |
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Paperhouse posted:tbh I bet even if you tell them you don't need one they will still eventually hassle you about it otherwise it'd be far too easy for people to evade it I was followed for about four years by the tv licencing people in spite of the fact that i've not owned a television since moving out from my parent's home. I made the mistake of, after some years, deciding to inform the TV licence people that I did not, in fact, have a television. So they harassed me for years to get me to buy a licence for a television I didn't have, even when I got them to send their inspector round. Total nightmare.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 14:01 |
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Any detecting equipment TV licensing people have/had is almost certainly based on detecting CRTs, and even then that could be a CRT computer monitor. As far as I know there's no way of detecting any kind of flatscreen. TV licensing people are the scum of the earth who literally threaten little old ladies and other vulnerable people daily and repeatedly, they seem unable to imagine that some people just do not watch TV.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 14:09 |
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Is there an easy way to rip/save BBC iPlayer programs ? I want to save some of the music ones up now.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 16:38 |
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Yes, use get_iplayer: http://www.infradead.org/get_iplayer/html/get_iplayer.html Run the Web PVR Manager if you don't want to bother with command line stuff.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 16:52 |
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Fat Turkey posted:And while I'm here, I would like to like Wonders of the Universe, because it is essentially good, it just has so much padding it is a little bit embarassing. I completely agree - the segment with regard to corrosion and the diamond-mining village could've been at least 2/3rds shorter - and could've just as easily been represented by having Cox visit a cliff-face or beach. The ancient yearly sun-dial bit was impressive, as well as some of the visual space imagery, but essentially the show suffered from every cliché Charlie Brooker highlighted in his most recent "How TV ruined your life". Overall an interesting watch, if not a bit long. One thing I noticed was that every time he finishes his "bit" to camera - the camera always seems to linger a few seconds too long after each scene, so that we're essentially leering directly into Cox's eyes while he awkwardly waits for the director to yell cut. As if they're waiting for the now adored-by-millions nerdy heartthrob to bat at his ears or scratch his tummy to the collecting "awww"-ing of every student and housewife everywhere.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 17:36 |
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Kin posted:It always baffled me that they claimed to have methods of detecting which households were receiving a signal. I mean, even if they could (how the hell do you detect something that's only receiving signals, not sending any), that's some extremely sensitive technology the BBC has, to be able to pinpoint a single arial in what must, in most cases, be a small area with at least another 50. It's something to with how the TV generates it's own signal as part of decoding the one it receives. It's pretty clever stuff, but as Paperhouse said, it's all a bluff. Just because they could do it, doesn't mean they are. The bullying that they go through to make you pay is absurd though. One of the letters they sent me included a load of information about how many students take their laptops to University, and how most of them use iPlayer. Which is irrelevant as most of them aren't watching live. And, hilariously, even if you DO watch live you'll be covered by your home's license provided the laptop isn't plugged in. Gotta love loopholes.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 17:50 |
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Strom Cuzewon posted:And, hilariously, even if you DO watch live you'll be covered by your home's license provided the laptop isn't plugged in. Gotta love loopholes. When you say "plugged in" do you mean to mains electricity or to a wired internet connection (or both)?
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 17:52 |
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I think it's both. While it's not wired in it comes under the same cover as a handheld telly.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 18:03 |
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Strom Cuzewon posted:It's something to with how the TV generates it's own signal as part of decoding the one it receives. It's pretty clever stuff, but as Paperhouse said, it's all a bluff. Just because they could do it, doesn't mean they are. Yeah, what do you mean by that? My girlfriends at Uni just now, and in a communal flat. She keeps getting letters saying that the common living area is covered by a TV licence, but that each individual bedroom counts as a seperate living area that requires its own licence. She's just ignoring them anyways because shoe deosn't even have a TV in her room, but the whole thing seems rather ridiculous.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 18:03 |
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That one is due to the way rent law works. If you rent a room (that has a lockable door) rather than a house/flat it counts as a separate domicile, so it needs a separate license.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 18:05 |
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Has anyone been watching Civilization - Is the West History? It's interest but pretty gimmicky. The whole series is based around there are 7 'killer apps' to make a successful civilization. The guy presenting sometimes talks about 'uploading' them or something and says CHI-na instead of China. It's worth watching though.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 20:01 |
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DaWolfey posted:Here's our Eurovision song Sounds like a rejected t.a.t.u B-side from whatever year they were famous. So could do well in Europe, I hear they like that kind of thing.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 20:29 |
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I was really pissed off with TV Licensing when I was at uni. I paid for a tv licence the whole time I was a student. I let my first licence expire (because I moved into a house with someone else and they had a licence which they transferred). I kept receiving letters through my department threatening me with regards to my old halls. It took several phonecalls to get the message through to them that students generally only stay in a room for one year, and now someone else was there - so hassle them instead; not me. When I went back into halls for about 6 months, I bought a new licence and then moved it to my next halls of residence for the following year. The guy seemed to be struggling to find my new halls, but then insisted it was all totally ok. I rang to renew my licence when it was about to expire, and they told me that I hadn't been covered at all because it was still at the old halls...and that they could fine me because I'd just admitted that I hadn't been covered in the room I was actually in. Madness. It turned out that they had the postcode for my entire block of halls completely wrong (which is why they hadn't found my new halls when I called, and the guy gave up and just pretended that he had). So nobody in that halls of residence could've been licensed properly. I don't understand why they don't do a student licence for students in halls, which they could sell at Fresher's Fayre. It seems much fairer to run a 9 month discounted licence that's solely for halls of residences, and you'd think that would lead into an increased uptake. From the people I talked to, there were only a couple of us who'd bothered to get licences - so surely that's a huge area they're missing out on?
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 21:24 |
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DaWolfey posted:Here's our Eurovision song Im just glad Blue are back together
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:01 |
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Testro posted:I don't understand why they don't do a student licence for students in halls, which they could sell at Fresher's Fayre. It seems much fairer to run a 9 month discounted licence that's solely for halls of residences, and you'd think that would lead into an increased uptake. From the people I talked to, there were only a couple of us who'd bothered to get licences - so surely that's a huge area they're missing out on? Because of the hassle of creating a whole new license just for students? the majority of students in halls dont even own tv's anyway, the ones that i knew that did (very few) didnt even bother paying. It was only in second year in our house did we bother.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:04 |
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Some Strange Flea posted:Seriously? That's excellent! Well the rules on their website say as long as it hasn't been plugged in. So I think if you ever charge the batteries you need a new licence. It's not really worth quibbling over the details. They cannot come in and check. Even if they wanted to, it's too much hassle for the money they'd get. All they have is intimidation. I'm not feeling too optimistic about that Eurovision song. The base sounds terribly out of place. I had to keep pausing the video to check I hadn't somehow got music playing in another window.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:10 |
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I used to hate having to pay the TV License but when I think of everything the BBC provides I'm not bothered about it now. As well as traditional TV there's also iPlayer, the BBC News website, the Bitesize website for a study aid, kids websites to tie in with cbeebies and cbbc, radio channels and probably a load of other stuff I can't think of because I don't use. The BBC is awesome
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:16 |
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LE0N posted:Because of the hassle of creating a whole new license just for students? the majority of students in halls dont even own tv's anyway, the ones that i knew that did (very few) didnt even bother paying. It's not actually a product, so it's not as if it's going to take a heap of effort, planning and design to make a 'new' licence. I lived in halls for 3 years, and everyone except the international students had their own tv. I agree that most didn't bother paying - which was my point. At the moment, sticking to the rigid 12 month system means that most people don't bother getting a licence. If they altered it to a 9 month one, perhaps at half the price of the current licence, maybe they'd get much more uptake.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:24 |
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I seem to be the only one who has never had any hassle with TV licenses. I have had two separate addresses with different licences when I was at uni and living in shared houses. Since moving out and getting my own place I just filled out a form on their website to say that I don't need a license (I genuinely don't, I don't have a TV) and that was it, never any hassle. Stories of detection vans are complete crap. They can only get you in trouble if they see a TV from outside or your doorstep, you admit to having a TV (for watching live broadcasts on, not just games) or you let them in and they see your TV.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:27 |
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The Supreme Court posted:Yeah, even if you legitimately don't have a TV, they show up at strange hours demanding to search your house for one. Repeatedly. Then you send them a letter revoking their right to approach your property or whatever the term is. Works absolute wonders.
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# ? Mar 12, 2011 22:55 |
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I stopped direct debit on my license. Then I went to the website and registered as a watching i-player on PC, no license from the drop down box. I have now recieved a mildly threatening your aren't licensed letter. If they come round I will waste their time by asking for a search warrant.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 00:51 |
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FelchTragedy posted:I stopped direct debit on my license. Then I went to the website and registered as a watching i-player on PC, no license from the drop down box. I have now recieved a mildly threatening your aren't licensed letter. You should reply with a mildly threatening letter asking for an itemised breakdown of where your payment goes so that you can analyse it and then refuse to pay for certain services you don't use and have never used or ask for an outright refund for services you have never used in the past. It would carry about as much weight and bullshit as any letter they send you.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 02:05 |
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As Wootcannon said, reply to them by registered post informing them that you revoke their implied right of access to your property (as mentioned above)*, and that you consider their communications to be harassing you. Tell them that any future communication/visits from them will be dealt with as harassment. Apparently they'll take you off their list for a few years. It's not so much the revocation of access that bothers them as it is the fact that by having a record of telling them that they are harassing you, any further repetition of their actions is considered harassment. Which is legally problematic for them because of the Protection from Harassment Act. *There's an implied right of access to properties so that deliveries can be made and friends can visit etc.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 02:22 |
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Metrication posted:Has anyone been watching Civilization - Is the West History? It's interest but pretty gimmicky. The whole series is based around there are 7 'killer apps' to make a successful civilization. The guy presenting sometimes talks about 'uploading' them or something and says CHI-na instead of China. It's worth watching though. Niall Ferguson is a poo poo. And the show's gimmick of six "killer apps" is on the face if it so absurd the entire thing ahold be taken out and shot.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 11:10 |
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DaWolfey posted:Here's our Eurovision song It won't win us the league but it could definitely get us a place in Europe.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 11:27 |
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Cerv posted:Niall Ferguson is a poo poo. Yeah. I heard an interview with him on Radio 4 about it and he seemed to be actively talking down all the negative and appalling things the west did to dominate the world. Metrication fucked around with this message at 12:08 on Mar 13, 2011 |
# ? Mar 13, 2011 11:52 |
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Tim Lovejoy probing Brian Cox about the mysteries of the universe while they're trying to do a muffin making cookery segment on Something For The Weekend has to be one of the most surreal thing's I've seen on TV in a while.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 12:07 |
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N3RDSTER posted:Tim Lovejoy probing Brian Cox about the mysteries of the universe while they're trying to do a muffin making cookery segment on Something For The Weekend has to be one of the most surreal thing's I've seen on TV in a while. It's worse if you remove this section.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 13:50 |
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At my halls everybody just uses iPlayer and 4OD. I can see the licence fee model getting dropped though. As people become more tech savvy iPlayer will dominate viewing, but you can't charge subscription fees while the licence is in place. Its also illogical: $10 per month for TV licence Vs $10 per month for Internet and iPlayer.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 15:04 |
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Daimo posted:At my halls everybody just uses iPlayer and 4OD.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 15:45 |
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There are stories of TV licensing getting warrants and forcing access, but they need reason enough to convince a magistrate, so it's only in cases where they have people outright admitting to not paying when they need one. Just refuse to talk to them and there's nothing they can really do. But get a license if you need one because the castle is still pretty awesome all considered.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 15:48 |
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I've had friends recommend Misfits to me for absolutely ages. But after being horribly burned with Heroes (and every other superpower show) I just wasn't feeling it. Now I've powered through the entire first season and am halfway through the second. Bloody brilliant show. I'm amazed that characters that I thought I would really despise have come to grow on me so much. Especially Kelly, the chav girl.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 16:26 |
Metrication posted:Yeah. I heard an interview with him on Radio 4 about it and he seemed to be actively talking down all the negative and appalling things the west did to dominate the world. Sounds like a biased prick to me. I'll stick with Rory McGrath and Starkey for my History programming in the mean time. Also, I agree with Cerv. The abbreviation of applications isn't even a proper word drat it.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 16:44 |
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I've just complained to the BBC about their news coverage of Japan. 10,000+ people dead and much of a country destroyed isn't sexy enough for them, so they have been fearmongering about atoms instead. Pricks.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 17:00 |
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Every history student I've known has thought that Starkey is a bit of a oval office, but acceptable because he's not Schama.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 17:01 |
goatface posted:Every history student I've known has thought that Starkey is a bit of a oval office, but acceptable because he's not Schama. I'm still saddened Brian Blessed never took an interest in history after doing Blackadder, that would have been incredible.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 17:08 |
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# ? Jun 3, 2024 23:03 |
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Rapey Joe Stalin posted:I've just complained to the BBC about their news coverage of Japan. 10,000+ people dead and much of a country destroyed isn't sexy enough for them, so they have been fearmongering about atoms instead. Why? They're reporting developing news.
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# ? Mar 13, 2011 17:24 |