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Television Goes Flying

Posted: 22 May 2009, 23:44
by delticbob
I was given a link to the BBC Archives this afternoon to the famous programme about 4472's 40th anniversary non-stop run from Kings Cross to Edinburgh.....and that got me wondering if the archive had anything about aircraft, & I found this jem http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/aerialjour ... =1&id=5347 Once again Raymond Baxter is there with his famous voice.

If this has been linked to before I do apologise. I like the comment about the Canberra being round for years to come....probably longer than they thought.

Bob

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 23 May 2009, 01:19
by FlyTexas
That's it - I'm moving to the UK. :-(

Brian
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Image

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 23 May 2009, 05:32
by Rich
I get the same here in the Philippines, maybe because I do'nt have a licence, I assume you still need a licence for BEEB

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 23 May 2009, 08:05
by Filonian
Good viewing Bob, many thanks for the link.

Graham

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 23 May 2009, 23:25
by markw
Rich wrote:I get the same here in the Philippines, maybe because I do'nt have a licence, I assume you still need a licence for BEEB
You do still need a licence to use any equipment capable of receiving television broadcasts including tv set, digital box, video or dvd recorder, computer with tv card capable of receiving tv signals or mobile phone capable of receiving TV broadcasts, but that isn't why the footage is blocked, it's to do with rights. If I recall correctly, all BBC content is blocked to ISPs with non-UK addresses because some of their programming only has broadcast rights in the UK. This ought not to apply to this piece but clearly it's easier to set up a "ban all non-UK isps from access" protocol than one which selectively blocks access only to those programmes where performance rights are only held for the UK, leaving others unblocked, and running the risk of a cock-up.

I had the same problem when I tried to watch some programming on the Irish broadcaster RTE's version of iPlayer (no, it's not called O'Player...) which wouldn't allow me in.

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 24 May 2009, 00:48
by basys
Hi Folks

Brian -
Most BBC website content is GeoIP locked.
i.e.
Its not available outside UK, or Crown dependencies.

It's not a licence-ownership issue as such.

If you live outside the UK
you will not be able to view that content,
whether or not you own a licence.



Just to clear up a common misconception, (BBC inferred) -

You do not need to have a licence to own reception-capable equipment,
or to play any BBC archived, or non-live, content.

You do however -
require a licence to receive, or record, any broadcast
concurrent to its public transmission, (i.e. at the same time as all other signal recipients).
This covers watching, or recording programmes, via any medium, including over IP.



Personally I disagree with their IP restriction.

If they wish to billboard publish their content on the internet,
then they've no right to apply licensing restrictions.



HTH
ATB
Paul

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 24 May 2009, 01:33
by FlyTexas
Thanks for the information Mark and Paul. :)

Brian

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 24 May 2009, 05:21
by Chris Trott
Thing is, some BBC stuff (especially the newscasts) will broadcast over the net, even here in the US.

Just out of curiosity though, can those of you in the UK watch the full episode streams on either of the following sites -

www.cbs.com

or

www.hulu.com

?

Just a test to see if US networks/groups do the same thing.

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 24 May 2009, 08:41
by Garry Russell
Hi Chris

I can't get either of those and in fact quite a few US sites denty me access in a similar manner.

Garry

Re: Television Goes Flying

Posted: 24 May 2009, 08:49
by speedbird591
Chris Trott wrote:Just out of curiosity though, can those of you in the UK watch the full episode streams on either of the following sites -
Thankfully not! Image

Image

Ian (just kidding!) ;-)