Good point! They must have swapped disks in between, I didn't even notice. The settings are also different after the reboot, but this could be because at that point they didn't have a curday.dat file.tin wrote:- the music is slower than I'm used to, how could that have happened?
- the disk between reboots is different %age full. Could it be that they were trying another disk - or maybe another Amiga?
I noticed the issue with the music as well, and it is very strange. Is it possible that the tape loop in Tulsa was just... not working properly? I can't see any other reason this would happen, as the music is not only lower, but slower, than the normal one. To me, it also sounds just... bad. This could just be because it's in another key, but I'm wondering if the music itself is fluctuating around different speeds/keys a bit.
Part of your theory is quite correct - and we've known this for a long time.nwgatwcfan wrote:DId you happen to notice after the 2nd reset and the listings were popping in, the top half kept on hitting Pay-Per-View Movies? The system must be reading by channel number because Viewer's Choice (the Pay-per-view channel in this case) was on channel 1. It's odd that on the 4th video, all of the promos were Pay-Per-View. with the exception of Prevue Tonight.
Angie posted on a Prevue emulation thread of her theory on how the top half was selected (albeit in more detail than I probably would have given.) But what struck me was during the time that the promos were changing, the software would very quickly pull from channel list (Possibly the QTable or maybe even curday.dat) and compare the control data telling the system what two channels were appearing next in the top half. The software could have been designed to find the first channel that matched one of the two promos and then show the top half with that channel. I didn't think it was a possiblity, until I watched these last videos and then her explanation kind of made sense.
angie2010 (who, by the way, is a guy)'s post was just an obnoxious edit of swest77's original post here: viewtopic.php?f=5&t=186&p=993#p993
swest77's theory about the control feed is incorrect - control is its own data stream, and all information relating to the top half of the screen goes over it. However, the thing he said about how the promos are selected is true.
While the thing about the pay-per-view movies is a bit odd, I'm fairly sure that it's not because they read the channel list by channel number. They tried to randomize things as much as possible, so if the system carried both programs, it would randomly pick one or the other.