Bruce A. Johnson
A 1981 graduate of the Boston University College of Communication, Bruce A. Johnson got his first job in broadcast television at WFTV, an ABC affiliate in Orlando, FL. While there, he rose through the ranks from teleprompter operator to videographer, editor, producer and director of many different types of programming. It was in the early 1980's that he bought his first computer - a Timex/Sinclair 1000 - a device he hated so much, he promptly exchanged it for an Atari 400. But the bug had bitten hard.
In 1987, Johnson joined Wisconsin Public Television in Madison as a videographer/editor, and still works there to the present day. His responsibilities have grown, however, and now include research and presentations on the issues surrounding the digital television transition, new consumer technology and the use of public television spectrum in homeland security. He freelances through his company Painted Post MultiMedia, and has written extensively for magazines including DV and Studio Monthly.
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Monday, September 22, 2008
The Comeuppance of a Digital TV Critic
I’ve made a bit of a cottage industry out of criticizing the Digital TV transition over the last eight years. I still hold my core beliefs - that the transition was unnecessary, poorly engineered, and largely a welfare program for equipment companies and TV set sellers. But the biggest problem in my eyes is that the ATSC standard is locked into the technology of when it was ratified - 1996. That means that the top-shelf technology of 12 years ago - MPEG2 compression - is supposed to be our TV standard for decades to come.
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Bruce A Johnson | 09/22- 02:17 PM
The Comeuppance of a Digital TV Critic I’ve made a bit of a cottage industry out of criticizing the Digital TV transition over the last eight years. …
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