![]() ![]() Visit the Teefax home page Teletext Page Designing Tools Peter Kwan’s online-driven, actually-on-your-TV teletext service is a easy way to get going if you’re a beginner with its step-by-step guide to installing it. The upshot is that if you output the Pi via composite, run this and press ‘Text’ on your TV you will see teletext on your actual television. Visit the VHS Teletext page Raspi-TeletextĪlistair does it again with this great tool for the Raspberry Pi – given a raw teletext data source it converts this to the digital data which is output on a domestic TV. It requires a card which outputs 2048 samples per line to work – not all do, and it’s hit-and-miss trying to find one. It runs in Linux and I use it with a Win-TV PCI card from around the year 2000. (For this, you need t42 files – examples coming soon)ĭownload TeletextPlayer Teletext Recovery Editorĭocumentation (in progress) From other teletext people: VHS TeletextĪlistair Buxton’s fantastic recovery tools which make all this possible. Not only can you browse recovered teletext services, you can fetch a current one too: Teefax – a British teletext service which is still updated (see below)! The pages flick by in exactly the order they were originally shown in you have to wait for pages to be ‘broadcast’ (unless you have turned the cache mode on!) and you can play Bamboozle! You can also make it totally immersive using the full-screen mode. This is a program for Windows which emulates a teletext television in a line-exact way – that is to say, you can experience teletext pages exactly as they were broadcast. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |