af123's Thumbnail Generation feature of the web interface is a really useful feature*. But I find it often fails on a particular class of recordings: specifically, programmes originally transmitted, say, twenty years or more ago and now retransmitted on, say, the Drama or ITV3 channels: Morse, Poirot etc.
In these situations, whether I use the book-mark technique or simply set my own timer in the "Set Thumbnail" panel, I am simply offered a choice of five grey boxes. Yes: I have decrypted the recordings first; and yes: it occurs on more than one Humax box.
My supposition - from fiddling with recordings to find out what triggers the problem - is that it is somehow connected with the fact that these programmes were made in the pre-wide screen era, and have not subsequently been 'remastered'. I do notice, however, that the default thumbnail generator works OK, even when the web-interface one does not. One other 'clue': If I strip off all the modern lead-in to the old recording, then the web interface routine seems to be able to cope with what's left.
Any ideas, anyone?
Thanks
(*I'm not trying to re-open the "Why do you need thumbnails?" debate. Suffice it to say that my three-year old grand-children find it an invaluable way of selecting Peppa Pig or Thomas the Tank Engine.)
In these situations, whether I use the book-mark technique or simply set my own timer in the "Set Thumbnail" panel, I am simply offered a choice of five grey boxes. Yes: I have decrypted the recordings first; and yes: it occurs on more than one Humax box.
My supposition - from fiddling with recordings to find out what triggers the problem - is that it is somehow connected with the fact that these programmes were made in the pre-wide screen era, and have not subsequently been 'remastered'. I do notice, however, that the default thumbnail generator works OK, even when the web-interface one does not. One other 'clue': If I strip off all the modern lead-in to the old recording, then the web interface routine seems to be able to cope with what's left.
Any ideas, anyone?
Thanks
(*I'm not trying to re-open the "Why do you need thumbnails?" debate. Suffice it to say that my three-year old grand-children find it an invaluable way of selecting Peppa Pig or Thomas the Tank Engine.)