Very wonderful air-check of KLIN, thank you. If you have any further time please do ahare it. This is Bonneville Broadcast Consultants syndication at the time open reel to reel matched flow hours. It sounds like a Schafer Automation system with carrousel NAB carts with likely 4 hours of BV tapes running quarter hour segments. First cut is You Belong To Me by John Fox Orchestra a Bonneville exclusive arrangement. Good stuff! Thank you!
I use to love this channel as a kid relaxed me hey I was wondering if you can find public Access television between 1997 in 1998 Ocean county New Jersey
Many cable companies often had a channel like this in their line-up, and systems used to create these pages often varied from place to place, depending on where they got them from. My cable company used a Telidon-like system for it's news/weather/classified ads channels during the mid 80's into the 90's.
Any ideas of other systems used for these? During the late 90s I was in the room where one was broadcast out of and the computer powering it looked like a Commodore 128 or maybe an early Amiga. Been trying to find more info on them. I know the Prevue channel software was for Amiga.
@@MikeDest It could vary whether they use a consumer-grade PC or one specially made for that purpose, like the "Weatherstar" units used by The Weather Channel.
@@josephtisdale5262 It probably didn't have a name since it was generic for these systems. The computer probably used numbers for font size and simple commands for types like "bold" or "stretch".
Very wonderful air-check of KLIN, thank you. If you have any further time please do ahare it. This is Bonneville Broadcast Consultants syndication at the time open reel to reel matched flow hours. It sounds like a Schafer Automation system with carrousel NAB carts with likely 4 hours of BV tapes running quarter hour segments. First cut is You Belong To Me by John Fox Orchestra a Bonneville exclusive arrangement. Good stuff! Thank you!
I wouldn't mind if Verizon Fios/Comcast etc still had a channel like this. It is often more interesting than the excessive reality tv programming.
I miss this background and font. Full Channel had these graphics on their boards.
I use to love this channel as a kid relaxed me hey I was wondering if you can find public Access television between 1997 in 1998 Ocean county New Jersey
Many cable companies often had a channel like this in their line-up, and systems used to create these pages often varied from place to place, depending on where they got them from. My cable company used a Telidon-like system for it's news/weather/classified ads channels during the mid 80's into the 90's.
Any ideas of other systems used for these? During the late 90s I was in the room where one was broadcast out of and the computer powering it looked like a Commodore 128 or maybe an early Amiga. Been trying to find more info on them. I know the Prevue channel software was for Amiga.
@@MikeDest It could vary whether they use a consumer-grade PC or one specially made for that purpose, like the "Weatherstar" units used by The Weather Channel.
What font is this.,
@@josephtisdale5262 It probably didn't have a name since it was generic for these systems. The computer probably used numbers for font size and simple commands for types like "bold" or "stretch".
@@ChristopherSobieniak How could someone create a board like this now? Is there software that could simulate it?
Cablevision of Lincoln is now Spectrum
The software is the same as what was used by FNI Cable TV (now Spectrum) in Cookeville, TN. I posted an example some time ago.
If you could go back in time and record this again, how long would you record it for?
A couple hours if old rDio shows were heard