Clock

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Revision as of 15:46, 30 December 2010 by Mikechislett (talk | contribs) (update and jiggle. ~~~~)
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The current look of clock, 2009-date
The look of clock, 2000-2009
The original YSTV clock, 1999-2000

The YSTV clock was introduced in 1999 as a way of identifying the station before live programmes begin, and making it easier for the director to count down a production to its on air point. The software was written by Matt Hammond to run on an Acorn A3010 computer. Later modifications were made to the software to keep the machine in sync with the correct time. The software has been rewritten by Michael Cullen with help from Nathan Lasseter to run on a significantly more modern machine.

YSTV has rarely used conventional short idents before live programmes - before the days of the clock, live programmes would usually be cut straight from Grapevine or a continuous spinning YSTV graphic (examples of which can be seen in the YSTV Gold ident).

The original design featured various elements such as the cube logo of the time and stills from Bona Dicta and Cooking With. The same design was used on the website at the time (finally dropped in early 2003), in publicity posters for 1999-2000, and in Nony nony nah.

This design of the clock lasted until Autumn 2000 when the YSTV logo was changed, resulting in a new clock face. This version has even appeared in a number of shows itself (as opposed to introducing them) including Solipsism (in some sort of in-joke or spoof), Small Screen (in a behind-the-scenes segment) and Good Morning Campus (as an on-screen time-piece).

On occasions when Grapevine is down for maintenance the clock has been used as the on-air sustainer. There was also brief glimpses of it when playing out programmes, originally to hide the Sky info bar when changing channels in the digibox. This useage has on occasions given rise to YSTV being named "clock soc", implying that it is all we ever show. It also had a reputation for a while for being inaccurate by a few minutes.

Now S4C, BBC One, C4 and all ITV regions have dropped their on-screen clocks(even on technical failures!), YSTV may be the only UK broadcaster left to use one.

At the start of the 2009/2010 academic year, the Clock was re-written by Michael Cullen, and now runs on PC hardware, with anamorphic widescreen enabled. One thing to notice with the existing clock, is that the hands only move when there unit of time is up - i.e the seconds move after the second, the minute hand moves after that minute, and the hour hand moves only once every hour! - This has lead on many occasions to watchless techies missing lectures!


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