User talk:Ariuzi

Welcome
Please do not add promotional material to Wikipedia. Wikipedia is not a vehicle for advertising. You are, however, encouraged to add appropriate content to the encyclopedia. If you feel the material in question should be added to the article, then please discuss it on the article's talk page rather than re-adding it. See the welcome page to learn more about Wikipedia. Thank you. Demiurge 22:26, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Please stop adding commercial material to Wikipedia. It is considered spam, and Wikipedia is not a vehicle for advertising. Take a look at the welcome page if you would like to learn more about contributing to our encyclopedia. Thanks.  Demiurge 22:59, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
 * Please stop. If you continue to use Wikipedia to advertise you will be blocked from editing. Demiurge 00:09, 29 December 2006 (UTC)
 * [[Image:Stop hand.svg|30px|left]] This is your last warning. The next time you insert blatant advertising into articles, you will be blocked from editing Wikipedia. Persistent advertisers may have their websites blacklisted from Wikipedia.  Demiurge 00:27, 29 December 2006 (UTC)

Please fill me in here. I am updating an Emmy listing with information from their own release. Nothing more has been added. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ariuzi (talk • contribs)
 * You're trying to promote your own company by claiming it has won an Emmy when it's not mentioned on the list of award winners for 2002. This is not acceptable behaviour on Wikipedia, and if you continue to insert promotional material, your contributions will be removed and you will be blocked from editing. Demiurge 00:33, 29 December 2006 (UTC)

You do need to be an Academy member to access the full records for past Emmy winners. I can suggest that you go to variety.com and check out the 2002 release put out by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for Technical Emmy Winners. You will find TM Systems for the creation of the "Digital Solution to Language Translation, Dubbing and Subtitling". Simply go to the Variety site and search for TM Systems...you will find it listed among the proud 2002 winners, just three months after the technology was introduced. You can also varify by calling the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in North Hollywood, CA., or requesting a list of 2002 Technical Emmy Winners from the Emmy Magazine website. This is not "promotional" material, simply a correction to the list of winners. You have excluded one of the most important winners of that year. This is easily confirmed.

Helpme
Hi, anything I can help you with? Bjelleklang -  talk 01:31, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

Yes. Please. I was a member of the judging committee for 2002 and when I saw the listing for the winners in the Technical Emmy category, I saw it was incomplete. Being a "first timer" with Wikipedia I know that perhaps I may have made some mistakes in working the Wiki way, however listing TM Systems, for the development of the "Digital Solution to Language Translation,Dubbing & Subtitling" was not a mistake. It was a completion of the 2002 Technical Emmy Award Winners. You may call the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, in North Hollywood, CA., to confirm, or simply google it. Thank you. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ariuzi (talk • contribs)
 * If you're on the judging committee, maybe you can explain why the 2002 list of winners doesn't include TM Systems? Can you also explain who all the other accounts making the same edits as you are, at least one of whom has the same name as a TM Systems employee? Demiurge 19:38, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

TM Systems is most certainly a winner. When word got around to our committee, it was suggested that we all get on the bandwagon to correct the issue. We try and stand by all of our winners. I suggest that more than 2002 and 2004 be included as this is a very prestigious acknowledgement.

Yes, this was first brought to our attention by an employee of TM Systems. Are they not entitled to correct a mistake on Wikipedia, or at the very least, ask someone else to do so?

So the probelm with Demiurge is that it was an employee of TM Systems that first noticed the elimination. Remember, all of the newcomers to the Wikipedia site are not as adept in Wikipedia rules. Perhaps they did "jump the gun" to make the correction, but once they were told that they could not make the correction as a member of the company whose information needed to be corrected...they asked qualified, knowledgable people to do so. That was done, I belive, according to Wikipedia rules...and TM Systems is most definately a 2002 Emmy Award Winner. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ariuzi (talk • contribs)
 * If you can just fix the PDF on your website to contain the correct information, that would be the quickest way to clear this problem up. Or even just put up a note on the site saying that they were accidentally omitted from the list of winners. Once that's done, I'll put the information back in the article myself. Demiurge 19:54, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

Please provide me with exactly what you are asking us to do. Fix the PDF on the TM Systems website? To read what please? I do not understand and I do appreciate your help here. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ariuzi (talk • contribs)
 * I'm asking you to modify the 2002 list of winners on your website to include the name of "TM Systems" as an Emmy winner, because it doesn't contain their name at the moment. Since you're on the Emmy Awards committee, this should be fairly straightforward for you to arrange. Demiurge 19:58, 3 January 2007 (UTC)

I have asked the Emmy webmaster to do so and will find out when it has been updated.

FYI, the link above is for the National Academy. The ATAS or Academy of Television Arts & Sciences is the distributor of Prime Time Emmy Awards and you'll see that the list on the National Academy, or NATAS link above does not include any of the ATAS winners. We were all going crazy trying to determine what the problem was here, but that is it. Apparently the existing ATAS site only goes back to 2003. I am still working with the webmaster on this, however I can give you all of the support links that include the actuall Academy announcement of the 2002 winners, or you can simply call them directly.

What a good question! No, the Engineering Awards are not on the website, but they soon will be as a download under the Primetime Awards section. Thanks for bringing this serious omission to my attention!!

I suspect your colleague looked up the NATAS Technical Awards. As you know NATAS and ATAS both do tech awards, and ATAS' history would not be included with theirs.

Happy New Year to you, too!

Best,

John

John Leverence Senior Vice President, Awards Academy of Television Arts & Sciences 5220 Lankershim Boulevard North Hollywood, CA 91601 818/754-2871 PHONE 818/754-2836 FAX leverence@emmys.org

And his attachement and list of Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Technical Winners...

ACADEMY OF TELEVISION ARTS & SCIENCES

ENGINEERING AWARDS BESTOWED FROM 1978-2006

1978

Emmy Award: ULTIMATTE video-matting device

Citation: To the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers

1979

Emmy Award: Automatic Scan Tracking System for helical video tape equipment

Citation: Magicam real time tracking of independent scenes system

1980

Emmy Award: Closed Captioning for the Deaf System

Citations: "409" and "TRACE" computer programs for off-line videotape editing

Vital Industries for its pioneering development of digital video manipulation technology

ECS-100 Video Tape Editing Systems

1981

Emmy Award: Rank Cintel Mark III Flying Spot Telecine

1982

Emmy Awards: To Hal Collins for his contributions to the art and development of videotape editing (posthumous)

Dubner CBG-2 electronic character and background generator

Citation: To Chapman Studio Equipment for the development of crane systems

1983

Emmy Awards: Eastman high speed color film 5294/7294 color negative film

Citation: EC-35, a camera used for electronic cinematography

Ampex Corporation ADO, a digital effects displaying capabilities with improved picture quality

1984

Citation: 60XL Color Correction System

1985

Emmy Award: Auricle Time Processor

1986

Emmy Awards: Nagra Recorder

To CBS, Sony and Cinedco for the design and implementation of electronic editing systems for film programs

1987

Emmy Award: D220 Dual Headed Video Disc Player fo

1988

Emmy Awards: Optical Disc Corporation's Recordable Laser Videodisc System

DVR-1000 Component Digital VTR

1989

Emmy Awards: Pacific Video Inc. for the Electronic Laboratory

Steadicam

Klystrode UHF High Power Amplifier Tube and Transmitter

TBC Control System

Engineering Plaques:

Composite Image Systems for the Pin Registered Transfer Process

WESCAM Camera Mount

Nettman Cam-Remote

Streamline Scoring System

Steadi-Film System

UCLA Film and Television Archive for the restoration of the Fred Astaire Specials

Louma Camera Crane

Image 300 35mm High Speed Camera

1990

No awards given.

1991

Emmy Awards:

Vari-Lite Series 200 Lighting System

Camera Platforms International, Inc. for the D/ESAM Digital Mixer

Engineering Plaques: Dcode TS-1 Time Code Slate

Lightmaker AC/DC HMI Ballast

Mini Image Intensifier for ENG Cameras

Kadenza Digital Picture Processor

Charles H. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award to Harry Lubcke

1992

Emmy Award

To Charlie Douglass, for the invention and development of the post production sweetener

Accom D-Bridge 122 Video Encoder

Engineering Plaque:

Filmlook process for film simulation

Charles F. Jenkins Engineering Award: To Kerns H. Powers

1993

Emmy Award

Avid Media Composer.

Video Toaster

Engineering Plaques: Mini-Rapid Deployment Earth Terminal (RADET)

To Les Aseere for the scientific detective work that solved the mystery of type "C" video tape dropout and ventilated scanner debris.

Charles F. Jenkins Engineering Award to Richard S. O'Brien

1994

Emmy Award:

Vari-Lite VL5 Wash

Kodak Keykode Edgeprint Film Numbering System

Engineering Plaques:

Cinema Products, Research in Motion, Evertz Microsystems and the National Film Board of Canada, four creative hardware developers whose reader, decoder and user technology enabled the widespread use of Keykode.

1995

Emmy Awards:

MPEG Encoding Chip Set

Barber Boom

Tascam DA-88 Digital Multitrack Recorder

Philips Ghost Cancellation

Engineering Plaque:

Mobile Power Distribution

Charles F. Jenkins Engineering Award to Julius Barnathan of ABC

1996

Emmy Awards:

LaserPacific Media Corporation for the Supercomputer Assembly

Digicipher Digital Television System

Powervu Digital Video Compression System

Profile Professional Disk Recorder

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award to Joseph Flaherty

1997

Emmy Awards:

J. L. Fisher Camera Dollies

AJ-LT75 DVCPRO Laptop Editor

Grand Alliance Digital TV Standard

Engineering Plaques:

BOOM TRAC™ Microphone Dolly System

Mark V Director's Viewfinder

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award to Richard E. Wiley

1998

Emmy Awards:

Digital Projection International’s POWER Displays Texas Instruments’ Digital Micromirror Device

Tiffen Filters

Philips Digital Video Systems and Eastman Kodak’s Spirit DataCine

Engineering Plaques:

Avid Real-Time Multicamera Systems and Tektronix Lightworks’ “Heavyworks” Multistream Editing Systems

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award to Yves Faroudja

1999

Emmy Awards:

Sony's HDCAM HDW-500 Digital HD Studio VTR

The Optex Aurasoft Soft Light

Engineering Plaques:

Videotek's VTM-200 Series Multi-Format, On-Screen Monitoring

Spectra Professional IV-A Digital Exposure Meter

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award to Charles A. Steinberg

2000

Emmy Awards:

Dorrough Loudness Meter

Panavision Lightweight Camera

Clairmont Camera's MovieCam Superlight

Engineering Plaques:

High-Speed Film Cleaning Technology

TASCAM Div., TEAC America, Inc.

Integrated Operations Nucleus ION Operating Environment

Cooke Prime Lenses

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award to Charles Mesak

2001

Emmy Awards:

VARI*LITE Virtuoso Console (Vari*Lite, Inc.)

WYSIWYG (Cast Lighting, Ltd.)

2K Color Enhancement System (daVinci Systems, Inc.)

Pogle Platinum with MegaDef (Pandora International)

Primo Lens Series (Panavision, Inc.)

FireWire (Apple)

Clairmont Camera lenses (Clairmont Camera)

Engineering Plaque LenCin Pedestal (Chapman/Leonard Studio Equipment, Inc.)

The Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award Gilbert P. Wyland

2002

Emmy Awards:

The Digital Solution to Language Translation, Dubbing and Subtitling (TM Systems)

Final Cut Pro (Apple, Inc.)

Boujou Automated Camera Tracker (2d3 Ltd.)

Arriflex Cameras (ARRI)

Engineering Plaque

EZ Prompter (Barber Technologies)

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Award

Emmy Statuette to Charles Cappleman

Interactive Televison Programming Plaque

Band Of Brothers Interactive Television Programming (HBO Interactive Ventures)

2003

Ray Dolby Charles H. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Engineering Award

Panavision Philo T. Farnsworth Corporate Achievement Engineering Award.

Dedotec, USA Inc. Dedolight 400 Series Lighting System Emmy Award to Dedo Weigert

Laser Pacific Media Corporation 24P HDTV Post-Production System Emmy Awards to Emory Cohen, Randolph Blim and Doug Jaqua

Lightning Strikes, Inc. Softsun Emmy Awards to David Pringle, Leonard Pincus, Ashot Nalbandyan, Thomas Kong and George Johnson

NewTek, Inc. NewTek's LightWave 3D Engineering Plaque to the NewTek Development Team

2004

Engineering Plaque to Roscolite Scenic Backdrops Rosco Laboratories, Inc. Philip John Greenstreet

The Roscolite scenic backing uses digital manipulation of photographic images and computer painting technology, combined with traditional theatrical backdrop techniques.

The result is a backing which displays a smooth transition from day to night as its illumination is crossfaded from front to back. Roscolite backings thus provide a flexible creative tool, which also saves time, money and stage space.

Since their first use on 1993’s “NYPD Blue”, Roscolites have appeared in literally hundreds of television shows, both as custom backings and as rentals, including many 2004 Emmy nominees.

Engineering Plaque for Perfect Horizon Motion Picture Marine David Grober Scott Lewallen

Motion Picture Marine would like to introduce you to the PERFECT HORIZON, our patented camera stabilization head. The PERFECT HORIZON mounts between your tripod and fluid head to remove vehicle motion before it reaches the camera. This allows the camera operator to use the camera in a normal hands-on mode. The PERFECT HORIZON mounts to any watercraft including boats, barges and jet skis. The PERFECT HORIZON is also used on land vehicles such camera cars, quad bikes, snowmobiles, as well as underslung on crane arms or on dollies where it can elminate the need for dolly track or leveling. The PERFECT HORIZON eliminates vehicle motion and provides rock steady stabilization to get the shots you never thought possible on land, sea, or air.

Charles F. Jenkins Lifetime Achievement Engineering Award Les Paul

Philo T. Farnsworth Corporate Achievement Award Chyron Corporation

From the introduction of the first character generator in 1970 -- a product used to display airport flight schedules -- to today’s high definition HyperX CG, Chyron has become synonymous with television graphics. Broadcasters worldwide have used the ubiquitous “put up the Chyron” to mean inserting eye-catching graphics for everything from live events and sports to fast-breaking network and local news. Chyron is proud to provide the latest advancements in graphics display technology, and is honored to be recognized for its contributions to our industry as one of this year’s Emmy Award recipients.

Dolby LM 100 Broadcast Loudness Meter With Dialogue Intelligence Dolby Laboratories

The result of years of research into loudness estimation, the Dolby® LM100 Broadcast Loudness Meter with Dialogue IntelligenceTM helps solve the problem of loudness-level inconsistencies in broadcast programming. Dialogue Intelligence was developed specifically to measure the perceived loudness of speech, which research shows to be the major factor in television volume adjustment by viewers. The LM100 presents its measurements in an easy-to-understand numerical format, eliminating the variations commonly found when using VU or PPM meters, neither of which were designed to measure subjective loudness. Applications range from postproduction and quality control to final transmission, program turnaround, and cable head-end facilities.

The First 24P Digital Imaging System Emmy Awards to Sony Corporation and Panavision

The Sony/Panavision HDW-F900; a.k.a. Panavised F900, is the world's first digital 24P imaging system that combines high quality optics, cutting edge digital signal processing and storage in one package. The Sony HDW-F900 digital camcorder was extensively customized by Panavision to meet the requirements of the most discerning cinematographers, and mounted to a new generation of high quality optics that were specifically developed for the Panavised F900. The first productions made by the Panavised F900 were “Vidocq” (director Pitof) and “Starwars Episode-II Attack of the clones” (director George Lucas). Ever since, the HDW-F900 has become the benchmark camera for multi-camera TV sitcoms, documentaries, and independent movie production.

2005 Emmy Statuette to Dolby E Dolby Laboratories

Dolby® E is a digital audio technology optimized for the distribution of surround and multichannel audio through digital two-channel postproduction and broadcasting infrastructures. Dolby E has been instrumental in bringing Dolby Digital 5.1 to DTV and HDTV viewers. More than 325 facilities around the world use Dolby E, and more than 30 companies make products compatible with the technology as part of the Dolby E Partner Program.

Emmy Statuette to Sprint PCS VisionSM Multimedia Services Sprint

Today marks a key moment in history. The first screen in people's lives (the television) recognizes the third screen: the mobile phone. While television easily transitioned to the computer, the subtleties required to deliver quality mobile television content eluded most wireless carriers. Sprint broke new ground in late 2003 by partnering with MobiTV to deliver this first-of-its kind service to consumers nationwide via a mobile phone. With its history of innovation, Sprint today continues its leadership in multimedia services with Sprint TV, using the same technology to deliver live TV, video and audio on demand across the Sprint PCS network.

Emmy Statuette to USAnimation Opus Toon Boom Animation Inc

USAnimation Opus is the leading enterprise animation software solution for traditional studios. Used by Walt Disney Television, Fox, Universal, Nickelodeon and Warner Bros, this complete animation solution is designed to handle projects of any size or level of complexity for TV, HDTV, film and the web. Flexible and easily adaptable, Opus includes digital ink-and-paint, powerful sceneplanning, sophisticated effects, compositing tools and seamless 2D and 3D integration, all in a configurable user interface and integrated workflow. Opus offers studios all the strength necessary to be the main animation backbone, into which third party software can be plugged-in, including 3D animation and special effects software.

Emmy Statuette to MobiTV MobiTV, Inc.

MobiTV is the first mobile television network and technology platform to bring live broadcasts to mobile phones, enabling customers to watch their favorite shows anytime and anywhere. Since creating the initial demand for mobile television in partnership with Sprint in November 2003, MobiTV has become the industry leader serving a market of over 1.6 billion mobile phone users worldwide. Sprint and MobiTV have continued this tradition of innovation to offer an ever-growing suite of live and Video-on-demand services. Top industry leaders now see MobiTV as television’s fastest-growing distribution outlet, offering a viable mechanism to reach new viewers across international markets.

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Engineering Plaque to Litepanels Mini LED Light Litepanels, Inc

The revolutionary patent-allowed portable daylight-balanced lighting system brings the advantages of light emitting diode technology to professional production lighting. Litepanels Mini employs highly efficient LEDs to produce bright, projected soft light perfect for working in studio or on-location anywhere in the world. Its compact, lightweight head mounts easily on a camera, stand, or elsewhere, making this versatile light ideal for any shooting situation, including on-camera and tight spots. Fully flicker-free and heat-free, Litepanels features include a 2 hour snap-on battery pack, and an integrated dimmer which is infinitely dimmable from 0 to 100% with virtually no shift in color.

2006

Engineering Plaque to Vid-Wave Boxx BOXX Communications, LLC Scott Walker, Mark Walker, Jeff Watts, Scott Noe, Richard Brooker

Vid-Wave Boxx is a digital point to multi-point video transmission system created exclusively for multi-camera monitoring and video assist. This new technology has been used on the network shows Rock Star: Supernova, Hell’s Kitchen, Nanny 911, Princes of Malibu as well as other primetime series. Vid-Wave Boxx provides an unlimited coverage area for wireless video and audio feeds to local control rooms and anywhere in the world via broadband. Vid-Wave Boxx is a lighter, smaller transmitter with lower power consumption, and most importantly has lower microwave radiated emissions to create a safe working environment for camera operators.

Engineering Plaque to Four-Channel Video Integrator (Quad-Split) Harry D. Flagle

Instead of viewing four television monitors side by side, The Four Channel Video Integrator (Quad-Split) electronically switches each picture in a time sharing sequence and combines them for viewing on a single monitor.

Improvements on my original patent # 3,207,842 incorporate compression and time base correction. Four non sync cameras can be viewed with out internal lock-up to a sync generator.

Each quadrant will display the original picture in compressed form.


 * Ah, that would explain the confusion then. I've readded TM Systems to the Technology & Engineering Emmy Award article for you. Demiurge 23:44, 3 January 2007 (UTC)