Editor's Blog21 mins ago
Bbc Local
11 Answers
Not sure what section this should be in but ...
I have my home page as BBC. Normally to my local (SW Scotland) area, but quite often it switches to London as my local - which it ain't!
How do I reset to my area? It normally resets itself after a couple of days, but it's a bl**** nuisance until it does!
Thanks
I have my home page as BBC. Normally to my local (SW Scotland) area, but quite often it switches to London as my local - which it ain't!
How do I reset to my area? It normally resets itself after a couple of days, but it's a bl**** nuisance until it does!
Thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Goofy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You've not told us how you're receiving your TV signals. (It's a rather important piece of information here!). However, since you obviously won't get BBC London on Freeview where you are, I'll assume that it's Sky that you're using.
The satellite sending signals to your dish has no way of knowing where you are, so it sends all of the BBC regional services to you and lets your Sky box work out which one to show. Your Sky box can only do that because the required information is on your viewing card. If it can't find that information it displays BBC London by default. So you need to check that the card is inserted properly and that the box is reading it properly.
Disconnect your Sky box from the mains. Remove and then firmly reinsert the viewing card. Then power up the box again (and cross your fingers!).
The satellite sending signals to your dish has no way of knowing where you are, so it sends all of the BBC regional services to you and lets your Sky box work out which one to show. Your Sky box can only do that because the required information is on your viewing card. If it can't find that information it displays BBC London by default. So you need to check that the card is inserted properly and that the box is reading it properly.
Disconnect your Sky box from the mains. Remove and then firmly reinsert the viewing card. Then power up the box again (and cross your fingers!).
S-D:
Freeview boxes place 'extra' regional signals in the 800s in the channel listings. However they only do that when they can receive those 'extra' signals in the first place. For example, someone living near Ripon might get ITV signals from both Yorkshire and TyneTees (plus the corresponding regional BBC signals) so, via accessing the '800s', they'll be able to watch either service. However there's absolutely no way that they'd be able to view London services because their local transmitters won't carry them. Similarly there's no way that Goofy's TV set (in Scotland) could be picking up BBC London via Freeview.
Freeview boxes place 'extra' regional signals in the 800s in the channel listings. However they only do that when they can receive those 'extra' signals in the first place. For example, someone living near Ripon might get ITV signals from both Yorkshire and TyneTees (plus the corresponding regional BBC signals) so, via accessing the '800s', they'll be able to watch either service. However there's absolutely no way that they'd be able to view London services because their local transmitters won't carry them. Similarly there's no way that Goofy's TV set (in Scotland) could be picking up BBC London via Freeview.
Aha!
I've just remembered that the main BBC page offers a 'Change your location' facility, which puts a cookie on the user's computer so that (hopefully) the BBC's server will know where the user is (and provide appropriate content).
As it seems that the cookie on your computer, Goofy, can't always be read properly, I suggest deleting it and then creating it again. (Rather than explain about finding and deleting cookies, which varies between browsers, I suggest that you simply change your location to somewhere random, such as W1A 1AA, and then change it back to your own postcode).
Sorry about the earlier confusion!
I've just remembered that the main BBC page offers a 'Change your location' facility, which puts a cookie on the user's computer so that (hopefully) the BBC's server will know where the user is (and provide appropriate content).
As it seems that the cookie on your computer, Goofy, can't always be read properly, I suggest deleting it and then creating it again. (Rather than explain about finding and deleting cookies, which varies between browsers, I suggest that you simply change your location to somewhere random, such as W1A 1AA, and then change it back to your own postcode).
Sorry about the earlier confusion!