Quote:
Originally Posted by DrHitch
The difficulty in comprehending the dialog on TV is multi-faceted
Start with hardware. New flat LCD TVs have poor speakers facing backwards. Get a sound bar.
Some shows have actors that mumble or accents making it tough to understand. Use closed captions or write to the producers
Commercials have higher volume. This was supposed to be FCC regulated years ago, but nothing has been done.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DrHitch
The difficulty in comprehending the dialog on TV is multi-faceted
Start with hardware. New flat LCD TVs have poor speakers facing backwards. Get a sound bar.
Some shows have actors that mumble or accents making it tough to understand. Use closed captions or write to the producers
Commercials have higher volume. This was supposed to be FCC regulated years ago, but nothing has been done.
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by DrHitch
The difficulty in comprehending the dialog on TV is multi-faceted
Start with hardware. New flat LCD TVs have poor speakers facing backwards. Get a sound bar.
Some shows have actors that mumble or accents making it tough to understand. Use closed captions or write to the producers
Commercials have higher volume. This was supposed to be FCC regulated years ago, but nothing has been done.
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by DrHitch
The difficulty in comprehending the dialog on TV is multi-faceted
Start with hardware. New flat LCD TVs have poor speakers facing backwards. Get a sound bar.
Some shows have actors that mumble or accents making it tough to understand. Use closed captions or write to the producers
Commercials have higher volume. This was supposed to be FCC regulated years ago, but nothing has been done.
|
So, you're saying the problem is multi-faceted?