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 Posted by Rick Merrill on 12/01/06 22:51 
Roy W. Rising wrote: 
> "Brian" <brian.english@sas.com> wrote: 
>  
>  
>>I think it's impossible to tell looking at a TV broadcast anyway. Half 
>>the time the audio and video aren't synched up right in the broadcast to 
>>begin with. I was watching a football game the other day and the 
>>announcer's mouth moved a good 3 tenths of a second before the sound came 
>>out of the TV, and he wasn't lip-synching :) 
>  
>  
> It was far from "impossible to tell looking at a TV broadcast".  I found it 
> quite easy.  Further, sometimes she was in sync, so it could not have been 
> the kind of transmission problem that sometimes causes what was seen on the 
> football game.  More often in that case, there is a video effects device 
> that slows the picture by a frame or more.  The rule for sync perception is 
> "plus or minus one frame" is OK.  More than that, it's noticeable. 
>  
 
Isn't it likely that those transitory sync problems are due to MPEG 
transmission compression?
 
  
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