www.nettime.org Nettime mailing list archives
| gebseng {AT} vinylvideo.com on Tue, 21 Mar 2006 20:03:39 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| <nettime-ann> [ann] VSSTV - VERY SLOW SCAN TELEVISION |
.
VSSTV - VERY SLOW SCAN TELEVISION
a new installation by Gebhard Sengm=FCller, in collaboration with Jakob
Edlbacher (technical design), Johannes Obermayr (control
engineering), Ludwig Ertl (programming), Gerhard Proksch-Weilguni
(additional mechanics) and Andreas Konecky (additional programming)
Very Slow Scan Television (VSSTV) is a new television format that we
have developed building upon Slow Scan Television (SSTV), an almost
50-year-old image transmission system used by Ham Radio amateurs. In
contrast to regular TV, SSTV runs on a dramatically reduced frame rate.
Developed in 1957 by Copthorne Macdonald, Slow Scan Television uses
the shortwave radio band (Ham Radio) to transmit television images.
Ham Radio not only broadcasts information (as is the case with
conventional radio), but also uses the radio spectrum for personal
communications, usually on a point-to-point basis over a previously
negotiated frequency. In contrast to telephone conversations, this
communication is open and can be listened to by anyone who happens to
be tuned into the same frequency. The Ham Radio band was reserved for
the purpose of voice transmission, and therefore uses only a small
amount of bandwidth. Broadcasting images within this narrow bandwidth
requires reducing their quality and rules out transmitting moving
images. Furthermore, the visual information has to be converted into
an audio signal.
According to British Ham Radio operator Guy Clark (N4BM), =93The
original idea was to find a method of transmitting a television
picture over a single speech channel. This meant that a typical (at
that time) 3MHz wide television picture had to be reduced to around
3kHz (1000:1 reduction). It was decided at the outset that the
scanning rates must be very slow, which precludes the use of moving
pictures. The choice of time base for synchronizing was the readily
available domestic power supply at 50 or 60 Hz (depending on the
country of origin). This gave a line speed of 16.6Hz and 120 or 128
lines per frame (against the then UK standard of 405 lines (now 625)
per frame), giving a new picture frame every 7.2 or 8 seconds. =85 The
original SSTV systems were based on ex-government radar screens and
cathode ray tubes with very long persistence (=93P7=94) phosphors. This
allowed an image to be painted on the screen over a period of a few
seconds.=94 The modulation technique often transmits defective images,
evident in trapezoid distortions in the image caused by time
synchronisation problems.=94
SSTV may suggest a parallel TV universe, one that developed during an
era in which television monopolies were consolidating their hold over
mass media culture. But it also shows similarities to current
streaming and netcasting technologies where personal flair and taste
determine the range of images broadcast.
Texts and pictures refer to the location of the sender and his or her
identifier. Self-referential features dominate. Guy Clark writes:
=93What kinds of pictures are sent? Reviewing pictures saved during the
last few weeks I found: Hams in their shacks, lots of pet dogs, a
frog, kangaroo, astronauts in the Space Shuttle (SSTV has been
transmitted from some missions!!!), bridges, birds, Elvis Presley,
rock formations, an old fashioned microphone, antique cars, flowers,
children, Jupiter, a cow, someone playing bagpipes, a UFO, many
colorful butterflies, boats, and cartoon characters with personalized
messages. Even the Russian Space Station MIR has been transmitting
SSTV pictures recently!=94
VSSTV uses broadcasts from this historic public domain television
system =97available anytime over freely accessible frequencies=97and
regular bubble wrap to construct an analogous system in which the
packing material functions as the aperture mask. Just as a Cathode
Ray Tube mixes the three primary colors to create various hues, V
_______________________________________________
nettime-ann mailing list
nettime-ann {AT} nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ann