Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Used Hearing Aids: Helping Each Other

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by David Faulkner

Hearing Aids are not very easily affordable equipments. One has to often spend considerable amount of money for purchasing hearing aids. Most of the health insurances available in the country do not allow the purchase of hearing aids. Very rarely one needs customized hearing aids tailored specifically keeping in view the loss of one's hearing ability and one's other needs and requirements. But oftenly the hearing aids used by one person can be of the same utility to some other person like eyeglasses etc. This is quite recommendable in certain cases when one does not have the enough resources to buy a very important need. But before doing so it is very important that you must take care of certain very important points.

Some Important Considerations Before Going For Used Hearing Aids.

The loss of hearing ability is the consequence of different type of the causes and hence there are different types of hearing aids to help these different types of problems. So it is highly advisable that you consult your physician or any specialist before buying the used hearing aids. Your loss of audibility may be due to the age, some disease or some other abnormal development and accordingly you may have very sharp sensation for one type of voices while not for the others; your physician will hence guide you that whether you should go for used hearing aids and if so which type of hearing aids.

From Where I Can Buy Used Hearing Aids.

You can buy your hearing aids from different types of the organizations and auction centres. In certain big cities there are some public auction centres or marts which offer healthy and sterilized used hearing aids at quite affordable prices. The other important option may be online or Internet auction websites such as eBay where you can bid for different type of the used hearing aids put for sale. But before buying such used hearing aids you should confirm about their utility and suitability for you.

Is There Any Other Means Of Having Used Hearing Aids?

Yes! There are also some charity or philanthropic non-profit organizations which provide used hearing aids in very good conditions. Do not hesitate to contact them for used hearing aids if you need them for there is nothing embarrassing in contacting them if your physician has prescribed you the use of hearing aids and momentarily you do not have enough resources, remember nothing is more important than health and it is better to use the used hearing aids than to loose your hearing ability further.

You can also find more info on buy battery tester and hearing aid cleaners. FirstHearingAids.com is a comprehensive resource for people suffering from hearing loss to get information on hearing aid options, prices and maintenance.

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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

History, Growth and Development Of Modern Microphones

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by Victor Epand

The word microphone comes from the Greek words micro meaning small, and phone meaning voice. It first appeared in a dictionary in 1683 as an instrument by which small sounds are intensified.

This was in reference to the acoustical hearing devices such as the ear trumpets and megaphones of that era. Microphones were introduced with the first articulated telephone transmitters, developed almost simultaneously by Elisha Gray and Alexander Graham Bell. Then it was used as a liquid transmitter, which was a variable resistance device. But the poor quality of these liquid transmitters prompted a number of inventors to pursue alternative avenues of design.

Western Union entered the telephone business late in 1877. Now with two companies trying to develop a better transmitter, other experimenters began to appear and offer their devices. David Edward Hughes was one such man who designed a new kind of microphone, using carbon granules loosely packed in an enclosed space.In response to the varying pressure from a sound diaphragm, the electrical resistance through the carbon granules changed proportionally.

Another notable scientist Thomas Alva Edison refined the carbon granule microphone, resulting in the carbon button transmitter in 1886. Edison transmitter was simple and cheap to manufacture, but also very efficient and durable. It has become the basis for the telephone transmitters used in millions of telephones around the world.

The next important step in transmitter design was by Henry Hunnings of England. He used granules of coke between the diaphragm and a metal back plate. This design originated in 1878 and was patented in 1879. This transmitter was very efficient and could carry more current than its competitors. Its one drawback was that it had a tendency to pack and lose its sensitivity.

The advent of electrical disc recording and radio broadcasting in the early 1920s stimulated the development of better quality carbon microphones. The year 1920 ushered in the commercial broadcast era. Some of the knowledgeable amateurs and singers started playing records and using microphones with their programs. The early radio station used the candlestick telephone for a microphone.

The typical transmitter element at this time was the Western Electric No 323. At first it was used as talking into it as one would use a telephone. The next step was to provide the entertainers with a microphone that would allow them to stand and perform. For this application the constructor took the transmitter of the candlestick telephone, replaced the short mouthpiece with the megaphone and slid this combination into a felt lined Bakelite sleeve about eight inches long and put small eyebolts on each end to suspend it from above.

The first microphone, which made for the movie industry was the PB17. It was a sandblasted aluminum cylinder, 17 inches long and 6 inches diameter .The bottom was rounded with a yoke to hold the ribbon element, which had a protective perforated screen. The magnetic structure used an electromagnet requiring six volt at one ampere.

In recent years, some of the more radical approaches to microphone model design have included detecting the movement, in response to sound pressure variations, of charged particles, a system analogous to the ionic loudspeaker. Miniature optical interfaces and related devices developed for the telecommunications industries, such as miniature laser diodes, polarizing beam splitters and photodiodes, are now helping in the construction of the high quality optical microphones.

Victor Epand is an expert consultant for music gear, speakers, and microphones. You can find the best marketplace for music gear, speakers, and microphones at these 3 sites: music gear, music equipment, speakers, and latest microphone models.

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Monday, April 28, 2008

Review-Jemma7729

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by plappen

Jemma7729, Phoebe Wray, 2008, ISBN 1894063406


Around the year 2200, everyone in North America lives in domes. They have been told by AGNA (Administrative Government of North America), who controls North America with an iron fist, that the atmosphere is toxic and deadly. Women have had all rights taken away from them, under the guise of protecting them.

Jemma7729 (everyone's name is a group of letters and numbers) is someone who does not act "appropriately." When she is five years old, Jemma gets into a fight with a boy at school. Jemma is the one who must publicly apologize to the whole school. Females are not allowed to show aggression, or express an opinion. While her mother is away for a few days, Jemma's father takes her Outside (there is nothing wrong with the air) and shows her the stars on a clear night. For Jemma, there is no going back.

At ten years old, everyone must go through Choosing Day, where they must choose what they want to do for the rest of their lives. Jemma has few available options, the least awful of which is Woman Who Marries. She is very uninterested in spending the rest of her life pleasing her husband, arranging flowers and being an AGNA spy (like her mother). Jemma refuses to choose, and is immediately hauled to "rehab" (prison), where, after a year of harsh techniques to break her spirit, bordering on torture, she escapes to the outside world. Jemma is eleven years old.

Jemma quickly learns to live on her own and spends her time sabotaging the factories that make the chemicals to keep women "altered" (docile and compliant). After a couple of years, the "underground" catches up to Jemma, and convinces her to join them. She spends the next several years traveling to this small town or that isolated hamlet, letting the people know that they are not alone. Meantime, AGNA has described Jemma as some sort of horrible terrorist who likes killing innocent people, which is totally untrue.

This near future, one person against the system, story, might seem a little basic, but the author does a fine job with it. It's interesting, plausible and it's well worth reading.

Paul Lappen is a freelance book reviewer whose website, www.deadtreesreview.com has over 600 reviews on all subjects, with an emphasis on small press books.

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Friday, April 25, 2008

Types Of Hearing Aids: Making The Best Choice

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by David Faulkner

Why I Need To Know Different Types Of Hearing Aids:

The loss of hearing ability has been regarded as a very serious impairment just a few years ago but the modern age has developed a very efficient solution to this issue, you can very easily over come the minor or moderate hearing loss problem using different types of hearing aids. If your physician has prescribed you using a hearing aid, you should have already enough information enabling you to select a suitable instrument from different types of hearing aids? Your audiologist would usually help you in making this important decision; which kind of hearing aid equipment will be suitable for you; however, it is only you who will make the final choice that out of different types of hearing aids which one would best match your requirement. So the knowledge of different types of is very important before actually buying any hearing instrument.

Different Types Of Hearing Aids

Exploiting the advances in technology and research, different companies have been producing different types of hearings aids; there are however, three basic types of hearing aids. These include
1. In the canal (ITC)
2. In the ear (ITE) &
3. Behind the ear (BTE) types of hearing aids.

These different types of hearing aids primarily vary in terms of various methodologies of production but also in terms of different sizes, shapes and quality. Let us discuss about each type one by one.

Behind The Ear Hearing Devices (BTE)

The BTE are the oldest types of the hearing aids. The BTE as the name indicates are employed behind the ear with a wire that connects to an earmold, which is worn inside the outer part of the ear. A hard plastic case embodies the electronic equipment, and sound is transmitted through the wire into the earmold. BTE is usually prescribed for hearing impaired people of all ages, and can be used at all levels of hearing loss; from minor hearing defect to very serious hearing losses.

An other sort of BTE has been introduced quite recently, usually known as the open fit hearing aid. In these types of hearing aids the plastic case still rests behind the ear; but instead of an earmold like in older types of BTE, a small tubule is introduced inside the ear canal. The open fit aids have been red by many users as it is observed that open fit aids have bettered considerably the sound quality.
In the ear types of hearing aids (ITE)

Now we shall discuss about ITE's. These hearing devices fit into the outer ear but are usually not appropriate for children because they have be replaced oftenly as the child grows. The electronic components of these devices are completely enclosed in a hard plastic casing which rests in the outer part of the ear. An other salient feature of these devices is that they can als be coupled with telecoil which enables for the user very comfortable use of the telephone.

In The Canal Hearing Devices (ITC) And CIC's

The third types of hearing aids are the ITE devices. ITC's are customized devices specially manufactured to suite the exact size and shape of the user's ear canal. A very recent type ITC is a CIC usually known as completely in canal device. These hearing instruments are apparently hidden inside the ear canal. These types of hearing aids are not however prescribed for very serious hearing impairment, because though, these devices are aesthetically quite preferable but owing to their small size their amplification power is not very high . ITC's are also not advisable for children. There are many types of hearing aids tailored specifically for your needs to enable you to hear the sounds you would never like to miss no matter your hearing loss is severe or mild.

You can also find more info on old digital hearing and digital sound processing. FirstHearingAids.com is a comprehensive resource for people suffering from hearing loss to get information on hearing aid options, prices and maintenance.

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Guide in Buying HDTV

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by Jeff de Lara

I wrote this article originally for the HDTVetc magazine for the August 2003 issue, and it was later published on the HDTV Magazine in 2006. Consumers still go through the same struggle at national-chain stores today. I updated the article to include current HD equipment and technologies. Its tutorial substance and analysis are still applicable today, and are intended to help consumers in making the right purchasing decisions. Enjoy the reading.

The following topics are covered in this segment:

H/DTV and NTSC TV Systems, What are they?

The First Effort of the DTV Transition

Quality HDTV, or Quantity DTV, or Both?

Backward Compatibility with Legacy Analog TV for Digital Broadcast

Satellite/Cable, and the DTV Transition

Tuner Integration

The Effect DVD had for DTV

The Rush for Knowledge





You have been hearing about HDTV and decided to start looking for one. A friend of yours reminds you that the general knowledge about buying regular TVs from the CRT analog era is not sufficient to select a digital product today, so you quickly review what you read about widescreen, black bars, digital tuners and resolution, and hope things would clear out at the store.

You get into the typical nationwide consumer electronic store most people go to, and suddenly see several dozens of HDTV demo sets staring back at you. A salesperson is approaching you, the person's face is familiar; the salesperson is the one that sold you the new dishwasher two weeks ago; now the person is selling HDTVs with authority. At that point you start feeling worried, but you hang in there.

Obviously this store is not a quality dedicated A/V retail place. Many consumers make their purchases based on the uninformed advice of untrained staff from typical nationwide consumer electronic chains.

In the near past, a typical store could only have one of those HDTVs actually displaying HD, the only one that had an HD tuner; the rest were showing the same image from a video distribution loop not suitable for HD quality.

Today perhaps the whole store feed is all HD, and the sets that are staring at you show the same picture, but with different colors, contrast, image enhancements, blacks, whites, etc. because no one bothered to set them correctly. So you start wondering why HDTV is not consistently perfect as is being preached, is that what HDTV is about?

The sales person turns toward you and, in the middle of your consumer panic attack, tells you: "trust me, buy this TV, it would look much better at home once connected to an HD tuner". Would you buy a car without test-driving it?

Millions of people went through similar experiences since HDTV was introduced in November 1998. Fortunately, some improvement is gradually seen in the stores, especially in dedicated A/V retail stores, which should take more time to help consumers understand the concepts behind each display technology, and not just quickly sell the HDTV inventory with the red tags, as most national consumer electronic chains do.

Most consumers love red tag savings, and many leave the stores wallet-happy with a product they do not understand. Perhaps many of those do not actually want to understand because the HDTV technology has been introduced with a complexity level they refuse to deal with to just get a TV.

To illustrate the complexity of an HDTV purchase decision you might want to read Is HDTV Complex Enough?

The objective of the article you are reading is to help you make your purchase with more confidence, but first allow me to cover the following basic subjects about HDTV:

H/DTV and NTSC TV Systems, What are they?

You might already know of the US plan to replace our current analog interlaced TV system (NTSC) dated from the 1940's by a digital DTV system, by February 17, 2009. Curiously enough the idea started as "analog" HDTV until General Instruments proposed an all-digital system in 1990.

The DTV standard is composed of 18 digital formats grouped into two levels of quality, as approved by the ATSC (American Television Systems Committee) in 1995:

1) SD: Standard Definition, with 480i/p (i:interlaced, p:progressive) viewable horizontal lines of vertical resolution (rows counted from top to bottom), each line with up to 704 total pixels of horizontal resolution (counted from left to right), and with an aspect ratio (relation of width to height in units) of 4x3 (as regular TV), or widescreen 16x9.

2) HD: High Definition, with 720p and 1080i/p viewable horizontal lines of vertical resolution (rows counted from top to bottom), each line with respectively 1280 (for 720p) or 1920 (for 1080i/p) total pixels of horizontal resolution (counted from left to right), and only in widescreen 16x9 aspect ratio.

Note that, because is not complex enough, the horizontal lines (rows) are expressed as "vertical" resolution (480, 720, 1080), and the vertical columns made of the aligned pixels on the horizontal lines are expressed as "horizontal" resolution (704, 1280, 1920).

DTV was 15 years in the making before it went on the air in November 1998. HDTV is the quality part of DTV, but its implementation is not mandatory, SD is. I will use the term DTV only when addressing the digital TV system in general.

Later in 2000, the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), allegedly to help confused consumers, created another resolution level in between: ED (enhanced definition).

This promoted the 480p SD format to ED level, leaving only the 480i format in the SD level. It also granted any TV the right to be labeled HDTV if capable to display only 810i lines of vertical resolution within the displayed image, rather than 1080i.

One can argue how much this intervention from the CEA helped consumers more than helped manufacturers getting rid of mediocre sets. But that was back when CRT based DTV sets were the strength of the market; now most DTV sets are fixed pixel displays and their resolution is clearly specified as a pixel count in both directions.

Our current NTSC over-the-air (OTA) TV system is 480i analog interlaced (actually 525i with 480i viewable horizontal lines of vertical resolution). The regular channels of digital satellite and digital cable could be compared to digital SD of broadcast DTV, but they are also transmitting dozens of channels in HDTV.

To facilitate the transition, broadcasters were given one extra channel slot from the FCC for the simultaneous broadcasting of the analog and digital versions of their programming. It is a large investment for TV stations to build a DTV facility with new cameras, production, equipment, etc.

When DTV is fully implemented, broadcasters have to return one of the two channels, analog over-the-air broadcasting will stop, and current analog TVs, VCRs, TiVos with analog tuners would stop "tuning" as well (but they will still work as display devices if fed with a 480i analog signal from a converter, VHS tape, DVD player, etc). This date was originally set for January 2007 but has been extended to February 17, 2009. Once DTV is implemented, the FCC will auction that spectrum of airwaves.

Most OTA terrestrial TV stations are already broadcasting DTV in SD and HD widescreen, and consumers are buying HDTV sets at accelerated pace every year.

The First Effort of the DTV Transition

Just a look back at CEA's 2003 statistics, on the first 5 years of HDTV approximately 6 million DTVs (of which only 300,000 where integrated with DTV tuners) and 400,000 tuner set-top-boxes (STBs), were sold between 1999 and 2003. By the end of 2007, the HDTV count was 8 times fold, and about 50% of households have digital TV sets, according to the CEA.

Back in 1998/9 it was not unusual for first generation HDTV monitors to cost $10,000, and HD STB tuners to cost from $700 to $3,000. It was expensive for early adopters.

By the end of 2007, a huge variety in technologies and TV sets was available for every viewing environment. DTV sets are much better in quality, and sell for a small fraction of the price they sold back in 1998.

Quality HDTV, or Quantity DTV, or Both?

We all love the incredible video quality of HD, however, since HD is not mandated within the DTV plan, it allows a broadcasting station to use the allotted 6 MHz space (for the HD channel), to multicast instead several sub-channels of lower SD quality, as it is actually happening on many stations across the US.

When sharing the same 6MHz total bandwidth, SD sub-channels rob about 2-3 Mbps each from the needed bandwidth of an HD channel that by itself should broadcast at 19.4 Mbps (if the station also multicasts an HD sub-channel). The parallel broadcast forces further compression of the 19.4 Mbps HD signal to a lower bit rate to make room for the SD sub-channel, compromising HD quality.

In many cases, more than one SD sub-channel is multicast together with the HD sub-channel. When the reduced HD bit rate compresses the signal beyond acceptable limits, it renders a lower quality image with noticeable artifacts, especially on fast moving images in sports, which are more evident, and unacceptable, on large screens (more on it later).

It might also be possible that the TV station desires to share some of the bandwidth for data-casting interactive services, or for mobile DTV applications for hand-held portable devices (because there will be no analog broadcasting to those portable devices as well). For more information, check the articles I wrote on the "Mobile DTV" series, where I analyze the potential impact of mobile applications on the quality of an HD channel when robbing from its bandwidth.

We all hope that HD will reign, and HD quality will prevail over the digital-quantity business models, and you have to encourage DTV broadcasters to do so, besides, most consumers bought an HDTV not a SDTV.

Backward Compatibility with Legacy Analog TV for Digital Broadcast

When the DTV broadcast is fully implemented in February 17, 2009, there would be backward compatibility with your current analog equipment, but there is a catch, in order for you to watch DTV terrestrial digital channels on your current analog TV you would need a digital over-the-air STB tuner connected to it. Your current analog TV would display an analog interlaced 480i version of the digital image.

There is no need to rush for the replacement of an analog TV that might be in good working condition if you just want to continue watching similar quality TV, but you would have to buy a STB digital tuner for broadcast DTV.

This applies also to your analog VCR, DVD recorder, TiVo, etc., if you want them to have broadcast tuning independence. A few years ago, DTV STB tuners were relatively expensive, in the $400-$1000 price range, imagine buying a $400 digital tuner for a $30 analog VCR, but they are gradually coming down in price.

The US government has approved a subsidy coupon program to help people purchase DTV tuners to facilitate the analog-to-digital transition so existing analog TV sets can continue to be used for broadcast digital DTV.

For that purpose, Congress approved a fund of $1.5 billion dollars, with an initial allocation of $990 million dollars to subsidize up to two $40 coupons per household. The coupons became available in January 2008 and can be requested by consumers until March 2009, to use them toward the purchase of two DTV tuners.

The two coupons cannot be used together to purchase only one DTV tuner, neither they can be used to buy another type of OTA tuner/DVR STBs, satellite STBs with broadcast DTV tuners into them, or cable STBs.

The tuners offered by this program are expected to cost in the $50-$70 range each; the consumer would have to pay the difference after applying the $40 coupon. According to the plan, the tuners would become available by mid February 2008 through the national chains of Best Buy, Circuit City, etc.

Although the subsidized tuners are designed to tune digital SD and HD channels, they cannot output the tuned signal other than 480i analog resolution to an analog TV. In other words, the subsidized tuners would not perform as typical HD tuners passing resolutions of 480p, 720p, or 1080i to HDTV devices for HD viewing. Their functionality is just to downconvert because their purpose is backward compatibility to analog TVs, but their price is lower than typical ATSC HDTV tuners with variable output resolutions and digital outputs.



Satellite/Cable, and the DTV Transition

If you are a satellite subscriber you already have the satellite STB you need for their digital SD/HD services. Additionally, most satellite boxes also have a terrestrial ATSC tuner if you want to get free local channels using a VHF/UHF antenna. However, DirecTV introduced a new model in late 2007 without antenna input; the local channels would have to be viewed from the satellite feed, a service they have already for most major cities.

If you are a cable subscriber, when the cable company decides to disable the analog feed to your household and supply only the digital feed, you would need a digital-to-analog cable STB to view the digital channels on each analog TV in your house, similar to the approach of the coupon program for broadcast DTV above, but you would have to lease or buy the cable STB, no coupons.

Cable companies were authorized by the FCC in late 2007 to continue their analog feed service for another 5 years (up to 2012) if they prefer, but they are not obliged to do so. Cable STBs do not have DTV digital terrestrial tuners into them so you cannot use their STB connected to a UHF/VHF antenna to receive free local channels.

Cable companies face at least two alternatives on the analog-to-digital transition between 2007 and 2012:

a) If their subscriber base is mostly digital, a cable company might have the incentive to make a large up front investment to acquire enough digital STBs to convert all the remaining analog subscribers as soon as possible to digital tier services, who would have to lease one digital STB for each analog TV. That would release the bandwidth occupied by the analog broadcast channels on the cable feed, which could be used for additional digital channels, and receive an increased revenue if those are premium, VOD, PPV, etc. paid services.

b) If the subscriber's base is mostly analog, a cable company might prefer to keep the existing mix of analog and digital STBs, and maintain the analog tier as long as needed until 2012. Since the cable feed bandwidth allocation for the analog broadcast channels must continue with this alternative, the company would have to postpone the potential growth of digital channels and services, but there will not be a need for an up front large investment for expensive digital STBs because there is no forced conversion. This option seems economical for both the company and the subscriber, because a subscriber would not be forced to lease a digital STB for each analog TVs that might be currently connected to the wall coax without a STB, as many non-primary TVs are in most households.

While the up front investment of a large number of digital STBs could be expensive to a cable company, there could be a partial offset with the potential revenue received from additional digital pay services such as VOD, PPV, or premium channels. Additionally, the number of digital STBs required for a full digital conversion of the cable feed might be further reduced when considering the growing base of integrated HDTVs with CableCARD tuners expected to increase in 2008 and 2009.

However, since the integrated CableCARD tuners within HDTV sets are only unidirectional, there might still be a cable subscriber's base that would still require the bi-directional capabilities of cable HD-STBs for VOD, PPV, and cable supplied programming guide. Each cable company would have to balance those factors until 2012.

Tuner Integration

In 2002 the FCC issued a "mandatory" plan to gradually integrate digital broadcast tuners into DTV monitors and other tuning devices, such HD DVRs. The plan has been already implemented in 2007 for all the sets larger than 13", and all DTVs on sale today are mandated to include digital terrestrial tuners (except for some industrial/professional models). In most cases they also include a cable on-the-clear tuner for non-premium unscrambled channels, or even include a CableCARD tuner for premium channels and services.

As mentioned above, the CableCARD tuners are unidirectional only, and lack the bi-directional features of Video-on-Demand, Impulse Pay-per-View, and cable-company supplied programming guide, for which a separate set-top-box from the cable company would still be needed until integrated TV sets are designed to have bi-directional capabilities on their integrated CableCARD tuners.

Industry analysts commented for years that economies of scale would bring down the price of digital tuners to the level of today's very low price analog NTSC tuners within TVs, but the reality is that STBs for ATSC terrestrial, or for cable, satellite, DVRs, etc. (not the down-converting government-coupon STBs) still have a high price, considering that comparatively, large HDTVs came down from the $5,000-$10,000 in 98/99 to more accessible prices below $1000.

More on this subject is covered further down.

The Effect DVD had for DTV

Most of the 6 million people that bought HDTVs on the first 5 years of the transition (98-03) did so NOT to view HD, but rather to enjoy playing widescreen DVDs at 480p. Even now in 2008, after Hi-Def DVD has been already introduced in early 2006, regular DVDs are still a favorite content for DTV, because they certainly display quite well as progressive 480p, or upscaled to 720p or 1080i/p to the native resolution of the digital set (by either the DVD player or the TV set). The same DVD played on an analog TV would only show the image as a 480i interlaced scanning.

In addition, an HDTV has the capability to show widescreen DVDs in anamorphic format displaying all the original vertical resolution stored on the disc, while 4x3 analog TVs would show the same DVD letterboxing the image between larger top/bottom bars in order to maintain the wider aspect ratio of the movie, and with less vertical resolution for the image itself.

For more info about the latest HDTV models, visit http://besthdtvlcd.com or http://www.hdtvmagazine.com for more articles.

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Telephone Hearing Aids: Complementing The Facility

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by David Faulkner

A slight loss in hearing ability may sometimes mean the loss of some important utilities and pleasures of the modern lifestyle. One of the possible problems is listening the telephone; though hearing loss may be overcome by hearing aid equipments but during telephonic conversation they may become a great hindrance and a source of embarrassment and disappointment. But the time of your problems is over and you don't need to avoid telephonic communication now. Our novel instruments, the telephone hearing aids, are here for your help. The telephone hearing aids will enable you feel like a normal person without any problem anywhere.

Will Telephone Hearing Aids Function Well Phone.

The telephone hearing aids are compatible to almost all type of the fixed line and mobile telephones. To ensure that any type of phone may not cause any encumbrance for telephone hearing aids users the federal government has already promulgated Hearing Aid Compatibility (HAC) Act of 1988. This act makes it mandatory that all fixed line phone sets, manufactured post 1988, should be telephone hearing aids compatible. The federal government is also enunciating the principles compelling the manufacturers of other types of communication devices such as wireless phones to make them telephone hearing aids compatible.

Whether Telephone Hearing Aids Require Me To Buy A HAC Phone.

No we hope you may not need to. You need not to do so this in all cases. While using any public or social services institution fixed telephone you should remain sure that they would not be causing any problem for the telephone hearing aids as after 1989 almost all such phones were replaced with HAC compatible phones which work efficiently with telephone hearing aids. If your residential fixed line phone was purchased after 1989 you need not to worry about that because as mentioned above all the phones manufactured after 1988 were ensured to work fine with telephone hearing aids. However if you have a telephone set manufactured before 1989 you may need to buy a new one but this should not be of any problem as the telephone sets have become quite cheaper these days.

Telephone Hearing Aids And Mobile Phones.

The federal government has laid a supplementary provision to HAC Act for mobile phones. According to this provision all the mobile phones manufactured after 2008 must have to be telephone hearing aids compatible. But the phone companies have already initiated manufacturing the mobile phones which obey the provisions of HAC; such phones carry easily recognizable labels for HAC compatibility, so you can also buy your telephone hearing aids compatible mobile now.

Can I Ensure That Phone I Am Buying Is HAC Compatible:

For mobile phones Yes! It is mandatory for all phone sellers under HAC that they should let their customer confirm that the mobile he is buying functions fine with telephone hearing aids. For wire phones though this is not mandatory but on the insistence of their customers many shops even allow for that. For further facility of telephone hearing aids users the phones are also equipped with volume control option to enable them listen clearer.

You can also find more info on conduction hearing aids and hearing loss treatment. FirstHearingAids.com is a comprehensive resource for people suffering from hearing loss to get information on hearing aid options, prices and maintenance.

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Monday, April 21, 2008

The Music of Neil Peart and Alex Lifeson

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by Groshan Fabiola

The summer of 1968, Canada: a new band was brought to life - Rush. It started out as a heavy metal band and throughout the years it has evolved musically, embracing numerous rock genres as hard rock, modern rock and progressive rock. Rush did not have a smooth start, for many band members have come and gone until 1974. Prior to this, Rush had only managed to release one album in March of 1974. However, in July 1974, Rush was about to achieve its definitive form as Neil Peart stepped in to replace John Rutsey and since then Rush has managed to release eighteen albums, the latest of which was released in 2007.

Neil Peart's arrival in Rush was a blessing for the other two members, Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee. As the founder of Rush, Alex Lifeson had great plans for this band, but they were drawn back by members coming and going. Prior to Neil Peart joining Rush, this rock band had only managed to release one album. After Neil Peart's arrival, Rush released two albums in the coming year, 1975, and sixteen others until 2007.

Neil Peart always dreamt of becoming a drummer and as an adolescent he dropped out of school to pursue his dream. The England rock scene was increasingly evolving, so Neil Peart went to this country to become a full time drummer. However, because of numerous set backs, he decided to return to Canada where he joined Rush. For this rock band, Neil Peart became more than a drummer; he also became a song writer. Although he had found his band, Neil Peart did not give up his dream of becoming one of the greatest musicians ever and his talent and efforts paid off. He is regarded by both critics and fans as one of the greatest rock drummers ever. The long list of honors and awards that Neil Peart has received stands as proof of his great skills.

Alex Lifeson, the founding member of Rush, embraced the coming of new member Neil Peart and with him, Rush received success and world reconnaissance. Ever since he was a boy, Alex Lifeson dreamt of playing the guitar and his dream finally took shape in 1968, with the birth of Rush. As the rock scene progressed throughout the years, with the birth of many genres and sub- genres, Rush also needed to make progress in order to rise to fans' standards. Alex Lifeson did not limit himself to playing electric and acoustic guitar, and started experimenting the mandolin, mandola and bouzouki, instruments he now plays very well. Moreover, in concerts, he occasionally plays the keyboard and does backing vocals. Alex Lifeson is regarded by both critics and fans as a great artist and guitar player, but unfortunately he is mostly overshadowed by his band colleagues.

Since its birth, Rush evolved enormously and with each album, this rock band became more and more famous. Although the members decided to take a five-year break, their come back was magnificent and they are now as appreciated as ever. The three band members, Alex Lifeson, Geddy Lee and Neil Peart have succeeded in making Rush one of the most appreciated and inspirational bands of all times.

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