12th birthday: six improvements to UK Free TV
Brian Butterworth published on UK Free TV
I must apologise for not having the time to write that many "above the line" articles for UK Free TV in the last few months.
I have been on a full-time personal development training course, and this had left without the time it takes to research and create articles for you here.
Reading ease and grade score
I have added a little feature to the system that shows a simple little graphic to indicate how suitable the language used is for general readership. Using the Flesch-Kincaid readability tests as well as the "Grade" average of the Flesch-Kincaid, Gunning-Fog, Coleman-Liau, SMOG and Automated Readability Indexes.The general idea is to try and make sure that posts here on UK Free TV are not too technical - or too basic.
The code has been provided by Readability-Score.com - Free Online Readability Calculator - Flesch Kincaid, Gunning Fog and more ....
Faster pages
I have, however, found the time to do quite a lot of bug fixing. Using tools such as New Relic Insights, Google PageSpeed and the Pingdom Website Speed Test I have attempted to make the site as fast to use as possible.Clearer navigation
I have rearranged the navigation to make it much eaiser to find the maps that UK Free TV can draw of radio stations, TV transmitter coverage areas, radio masts and regional split information.
Improved features
You can now, on the All channels page, click on the Freeview, Sky No Card or Freesat logos to sort and filter the list of channels by that service.This page now has updated channel icons and new icons to indicate daytime, night-time and local TV channels:
British Isles: Digital TV transmitters: There is now a "master list" of TV transmitters, rather than just the map (see maps section now). This now shows the list of all TV transmitters, ordered by County (or other area), as per this example:
Freeview: Find a Freeview transmitter by frequency now looks much better and has the country and location of each mast.
Extra: reading scores graphs
You might be interested to see these graphs. They show the reading scores for all of the comments posting on UK Free TV.90-100 easily understood by an average 11-year-old student,
60-70 easily understood by 13- to 15-year-old students (good for UK Free TV)
0-30 best understood by university graduates.
(Note that the top graphics on the site have the scale going from 100 down to 0).
Please aim for 7.8 to 9.0 to get a green bar.
All questions
In this section
Tuesday, 8 July 2014
P
Peter9:21 PM
Monty Python's Great Big Massivist-ever Quest for the HOLY Dish Cloth.
or
How to make subtle comments about a management courses, and not get away with it.
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Stuart Owens
10:15 PM
Wrexham
10:15 PM
Wrexham
Just looked at the British Isles: Digital TV transmitters link and noticed under WR Wrexham it says this: Kilkeaveragh 2, Wrexham Rhos aka Wrexham-Rhos.
Kilkeaveragh is in Republic of Ireland, just like in its own link, not in Wrexham.
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Stuart's: mapS's Freeview map terrainS's terrain plot wavesS's frequency data S's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Stuart Owens: Thanks for that. It seems to be an "artefact" of the system that works out the location description from the location. I'll look into it tomorrow.
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Peter: Ah, yes, the delicious irony that is Video for learning | Video Arts .
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Wednesday, 9 July 2014
P
Peter10:56 AM
Thanks for that Brianist!!
I really, truly mean that.
Little Green men: watch out for the newer tribe.
PS easy to forget, but worth occasional mention:
ukfree.tv is ...... really not a half bad site ......
Thanks a lot .
PB
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Tuesday, 12 August 2014
N
Nick Anderson4:48 PM
I wonder if it is the intention of Ofcom and Freeview to eventually fill in all the available numbered digital channels with available services and over what period of time before the digital TV services are completely full?
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Sunday, 7 September 2014
Brian Wright
4:19 PM
4:19 PM
Nick Anderson, wrote . I wonder if it is the intention of Ofcom and Freeview to eventually fill in all the available numbered digital channels with available services and over what period of time before the digital TV services are completely full?
The law of Parkinson, If there is space then it will be filled!!. Not necessarily with everything that is worthwhile viewing though.
When the spectrum is full then more space will be found by "compressing the HD channels even more. What happens then, well you will be pressed to buy into the latest 4K equipment. The only problem is that we will only appreciate this new format if we view via BlueRay disk. I cannot see how wide bandwidth can be accommodated by the terrestrial network but by Fibre optic broadband or Satellite.
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