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Mike0812
06-24-2004, 11:32 AM
Every year we grow more and more dependent on Television. But would you know what to do if your television set suddenly went on the fritz?


You can never be sure when a television crisis will strike. Although television sets are made to exacting standards, there is always a chance that the components could fail, leaving you disconnected from the rest of the broadcasting world. It's because of that possibility that you should make alternate viewing arrangments, because no one wants to be cut-off from television's warm glowing-warming glow. We have included a few key points to help you prepare, should your television ever go down.

1. Curse!
Swearing at your television will help you vent some of your anger, allowing you to focus on more practical solutions. It's only natural to scream at inanimate objects that disappoint you, such as your golf clubs, your car battery, or your Windows operating system. Not only is cursing healthy, it also makes you feel superior. Go ahead and yell.

2. Wait For It To Come Back On
Often times, it's your cablevision that lets you down. Usually, if you stare long and hard enough, your powers of concentration will be enough to restore your connection, allowing you to continue to enjoy hour-upon-hour of fascinating mindless entertainment. By your will alone, you should be able to make your cablevision magically restore itself. If not, the mental energy you expend will make so drowsy you will nap long enough for your connection to return.

3. Slap The Side Of The TV With Your Hand
Most of the time, all you need to do is hit the side of the television to restore you to your glorious entertainment world. Give it a good slap! If this doesn't work, the time you spend in the hospital with your broken hand will be enough of a distraction to make you forget about television, at least for a short time. Hopefully, the hospital has a television in the waiting room. Next time try a clenched fist for better effect.

4. Lift The TV Off The Floor
Lifting the television a few inches off the floor is a sound solution, as the "jolting" action will either fix the problem or ensure that your box is "really" broken. This technique is very effective on computer boxen, so it's natural to assume you will have the same success with your 28" console television. Remember to lift with your legs and not your back. This is how the professionals do it.

5. Try To Fix It Yourself
Much like the time your looked under the hood of your 88' Honda Prelude, your attempt to fix the television yourself will probably be futile. However the activity will give you a false sense of confidence, making you believe that you have the knowledge required to restore quality television programming to your screen. Even if you fail, the electrical shock may jolt you into the realization that upgrading to a 36" widescreen TV when you had the money last month would have been a wise decision.

6. "Pop In" A Tape
If the only reason you're not watching Sunday football is because of a cablevision failure, you may still have a chance to watch other media on your TV screen. In the "old days," before the invention of the Internet, families passed the time playing magnetic tapes on "video cassette recorders" (VCR's), quaint little devices that allowed you to watch movies or other pre-recorded entertainment. While this technology is now obsolete, your parents may still have one of these VCRs in their basement that could theoretically be connected to your television. Check and see if they have any old recorded episodes of Hogan's Heroes or a copy of Splash. This is what they used to watch "back then."

7. Call The Repairman
While your Yellowpages are filled with advertisements offering premium television repair services, you know very well that a call to a TV service man is going to be a week-long experience. By the time you have negotiated a service call, you'll have forgotten the plot to that episode of The Sopranos. Plus, the cost of that housecall will be almost the same as a down-payment on a decent DVD player. You're be better off praying to God--because you're likely to hear back from him sooner than the repairman. And everyone knows that all TV repairmen belong to secret cults that already have your information as part of a recruiting project, and you know they're just waiting to "convert" you.

8. Play A "Board Game"
In the days before television, families and friends used to play "board" games, ancient recreational activities that required vast amounts of patience, and always included rolling dice, moving tokens, and cheating. Games such as Monopoly, Sorry, And Happiness were designed to pass the night away, much like reality television does for today's modern family. But these games almost always lead to massacres, or at least divorce. Be careful if you choose to play a board game, because the experience will almost certainly end in violence.

9. Put Your Foot Through The Tube
The frustration of losing your window to the world will cause people to do many radical things. However, venting your frustrations with physical violence toward inanimate objects is sometimes the perfect solution. Go ahead, put your booted foot to the screen. It won't make TV come back, but at least you'll have the satisfaction of showing your television who's really the master. You may also effect the same level of damage with a baseball bat, cinder block, or grandma's fruit cake.

10. Put Yourself Into Debt And Buy A Big-screen
Pull yourself together! You know you've been waiting two years for your piece-of-sh*t no-name brand television to bite the big one. Sure it's going to be hard to convince your spouse that you "need" to have that 50" plasma screen more than she needs to have the mini-van replaced, but if you can pull that off, you will be the envy of your friends, and even the cheesiest Sci-Fi cable series will seem like billion-dollar George Lucas productions. Damn the kids' braces and college funds! Don't forget the surround-sound audio components and the console gaming systems, because if you're going to go into debt, you might as well enjoy your "cocooning" time, because you won't be able to afford to go out until there's a Democrat sitting in the White House.

Hopefully some of these television alternatives will be able to assist you during your period of interrupted television service. But remember to have an emergency plan in case your television down-time is longer than you expect.

See also:

What Should I Do If The Internet Goes Down? (http://www.thetoque.com/031118/internetdown.htm)

link (http://www.thetoque.com/040615/tvdown.htm)

grinner
06-24-2004, 11:33 AM
get a new one?

NebariNookiee
06-24-2004, 11:45 AM
I like #9

generic_screenname
06-24-2004, 11:52 AM
I think you're supposed to grab it and say "Don't you die on me! Do you hear me? Don't you die on me!!" while weeping uncontrolablly. Then, when all is lost, drop to your knees, clench your fists, extend your arms toward the heavens, and yell "Nnnnooooooo!!!!!"

Spend the remainder of your shattered life searching for the bastard that killed your TV.

LT Garrix
06-24-2004, 12:01 PM
We did #10 without waiting for the old one to die. Someone here, other than me, decided that was the best way to spend his bonus. Oh well, it really does look cool, of course it takes up the whole wall, but it's only about 6 inches deep which is nice.

Mazinkaiser
06-24-2004, 12:01 PM
I think you're supposed to grab it and say "Don't you die on me! Do you hear me? Don't you die on me!!" while weeping uncontrolablly. Then, when all is lost, drop to your knees, clench your fists, extend your arms toward the heavens, and yell "Nnnnooooooo!!!!!"

Spend the remainder of your shattered life searching for the bastard that killed your TV.

but enough about you..... ;)

Id get a new one.

fermicat
06-24-2004, 12:03 PM
When my TV died, I promptly got a new one.

Right now I am doing without. I'm moving next week and already had my satellite service disconnected. I'm doing OK with it so far, thanks to my DVDs.

Mike0812
06-24-2004, 12:07 PM
I think you're supposed to grab it and say "Don't you die on me! Do you hear me? Don't you die on me!!" while weeping uncontrolablly. Then, when all is lost, drop to your knees, clench your fists, extend your arms toward the heavens, and yell "Nnnnooooooo!!!!!"

Spend the remainder of your shattered life searching for the bastard that killed your TV.

:rollin:

AyuRocks
06-24-2004, 01:50 PM
And what if it goes out during the mini!?!?! :eek:

NYPinTA
06-24-2004, 02:23 PM
And what if it goes out during the mini!?!?! :eek:

Go to the nearest department store that has that wall of tvs and change them ALL to skiffy. And threaten to bite anyone who dares change the channel.
:D

Clarsax
06-24-2004, 02:30 PM
:lol: I can just see it now... "Watch that guy, he's starting to foam at the mouth. No don't touch the controllers! Back off! I said back off!"

Third EYe
06-24-2004, 09:37 PM
I'd cry

Col. Kathryn O'Neill
06-24-2004, 09:45 PM
er.. i'd go just a bit nuts.

AgentSun
06-24-2004, 09:52 PM
tv...die? what? IT'S LIKE SOMEONE SHOOTING OLD YELLER ALL OVER AGAIN!!

soyarma
06-24-2004, 10:42 PM
Buy a TV tuner card at compusa for $49 and ditch the TV. A box that just shows stuff that is sent to it in a wire? Madness. Oh, and buy a couple external 240GB Hard drives so you can have every FS episode handy at all times.

AyuRocks
06-24-2004, 10:48 PM
I have a TV Tuner card, it kicks my ass.

soyarma
06-24-2004, 10:56 PM
lol... does that mean you love it or you cant get it to work...?

Kurt_eh
06-24-2004, 11:08 PM
"What should I do if my TV dies? "

Play taps with one of those digital bugles?

AyuRocks
06-24-2004, 11:38 PM
I love it! :D

soyarma
06-25-2004, 12:43 AM
good to hear it :)

abbadon
06-25-2004, 05:59 AM
Bury it....

Third EYe
06-25-2004, 08:04 AM
I have a TV Tuner card, it kicks my ass.


I'd rip it's legs off.

BaseLine
06-25-2004, 11:44 AM
So theoretically someone with a TV-tuner could stream the signal over the internet...interesting...:D

MrVesham
06-25-2004, 12:36 PM
Why yes... yes they could. =D

I'd begged some people to do that for TechTV [well, before the hostile invasion - now I dont care] so I could see it here. Damn this Comcast carrier and thier no-TechTV. Well... now, I guess... that's everywhere.

Mike0812
06-25-2004, 12:42 PM
Well, I figured I'd post the Intenet article too...I thought it was pretty funny...



Every year we grow more and more dependent on the Internet. But would you know what to do if your connection suddenly went down?


No one knows when the Internet will fail. It could happen at any time, leaving you bereft of your e-mail, your sports scores, and your Blogs. Therefore, it's important that you and your family have a contingency plan for just such an emergency. If your connection to Cyberspace were to ever get severed, you should at least be prepared. We have included a few key points that should assist you if that were to happen.

1. Panic!
An excited, agitated state will give you that heightened sense of awareness and will increase your thought processes allowing you to come up with rational solutions. Panic is just nature's way of putting your body into over-drive. It's a defense mechanism that gives you an edge when dealing with potentially harmful situations, such as a severed arm or the loss of your Internet.

2. Find A Telephone
Do you have access to a telephone line? Early computers connected to the Internet using a dial-up device along with a hardware device known as a "modem." Since this technology is obsolete, it will be of no use to you. Instead, use your telephone to call your friends to see if their connection is also down, as you will have lost the ability to send an email or an instant message. You can also use a telephone to call 911, an emergency service that will first tell you to calm down, and then will send out specially-trained technicians to find the source of the Internet's failure.

3. Use Your Back-Up Computer
It's always good to have an emergency laptop handy, in case you need to harry over to a buddy's place where the Net is still up. If there is still no Internet at that location, at the very least you could connect to a small network or LAN (Less-than Adequate Network). Laptops can also be placed on tables at coffeeshops, while you sit around with a latte, nervously waiting for your connection to be restored.

4. Install A Game
In emergency situations, installing a single-player computer game can occupy your down-time. While it won't replace the adrenaline rush of intense networked multiplayer action provided by the Internet, a quick game of Sim City or Flight Simulator may distract you long enough for your connection to return.

5. Perform Routine Maintenance
While programs such as Norton Antivirus have removed most of the tedium of computer system maintenance, nothing could help pass the time faster than cleaning out your hard drive, emptying your cache, or organizing your celebrity fake porn collection. Take the time to stare at your screen while you perform a defragmentation. The time will literally fly while you barely notice your separation from the Internet.

6. Turn On A Television Or Radio
Televisions, strange boxes that sit in your parents' living rooms, were once used to provide entertainment, long before DVDs and Playstations were invented. Televisions have the capability of broadcasting streaming information similar to the content on multimedia websites. With a "remote control," a wireless device that is like a small one-handed keyboard, you may be able to surf a limited number of "channels," while you deal with the loss of your connection. Unfortunately, television is only a one-way media.

In ancient times, radios were also used to entertain. A radio allowed you to listen to news, sports, and music, much the same way that you listen to live streaming audio on a Shoutcast server. Like the television, a radio will only have a limited selection of listening stations, and no video. Hopefully your separation from the Internet will be brief.

7. Read
People in pre-Internet times used to read "books" and "magazines", written materials once created in printable format to pass the time. Some e-books are still available on paper, and may offer a short-term solution until your power is back and your broadband is restored. If reading is not an option, as a last resort, you may wish to try doing "chores," or try your hand at cooking. While these activities cannot replace the Internet, they may be able to make the down-time a little more tolerable.

8. Go Outside
The idea of leaving your workstation may seem a little extreme, but you can perform errands that you normally get parents or spouses to do: grocery shopping, drycleaning, etc. Leaving your dorm room, basement, or above-garage apartment suite, may be risky, but again, the time may afford an effective distraction from your Internet woes. NOTE: Be careful to avoid the sun, because your pasty white skin will not be used to the exposure.

9. Spend Time With Your Spouse
Communicating with your wife or girlfriend may seem like a radical suggestion, but the time investment may offer long-term rewards. Spending any amount of time talking about your "relationship" may free up more Internet time for you later on, when your ADSL or Cable link to the World Wide Web has been restored. WARNING: These will probably be the longest hours of your life.

10. Use Your Emergency AOL Disk
If you find that your connection to the Internet is going to be longer than you can possibly stand, as a last resort, pull out an emergency AOL CD, the one with 910 free hours of connection to the AOL service. Take the CD in one hand...and slash it across your wrist! Suicide will probably be a better alternative than connecting to that service.

Hopefully some of these Internet alternatives will be able to assist you during an offline crisis. Emergency radio broadcasts will likely advise you of the state of the Internet and be able to predict when your bandwidth will be restored, but remember to have an emergency plan in case your digital detachment is longer than you expect.

link (http://www.thetoque.com/031118/internetdown.htm)