31 August 04 -- Yahoo Groups now archives the new DV-L
20 July 04 -- DV-L reopens on Google Groups Beta. Yahoo Groups Archive does not yet work.
21 June 04 -- DV-L is down: server crash.
17 Apr 02 -- DV-L is back in business
16 Apr 02 -- testing new server and discussion software from Lyris.
12 Feb 02 -- DV-L is down due an unrecoverable server crash.
23 Jan 01 -- DV-L Doings by BS. Required reading for DV-L members.
22 Jan 01 --DV-L now has its own domain name: DV-L.org, goes straight to this page.
9 Oct 00 -- Set up DV-L archiving at Egroups.
22 Feb 00 -- DV-L is now 3000 people large and growing.
30
Jan 98 -- Simpson's DV-L Chat Room.
Thanks to David Simpson of Mining Company,
DV-L chat room opens its doors.
17 Jan 98 -- New web-based subscription/ unsubscription method.
26 Nov 97 -- message size is now limited to 10K, to filter out possible Spam and Worms.
Flying Pigs Ranch hosts a List for users of in:sync's Speed Razor. Speed Razor is one of the top non-linear editing applications for Windows NT, soon to be available for DV-Master.
News | Links | Products | We want your input |
Sponsors
August 31, 2023
DV-L's Yahoo
Archive now works
Yahoo Groups have long served as a web-accessible archive for DV-L, and it has now started accepting and storing messages from the "new DV-L" on Google Groups.
July 20, 2024
DV-L has moved.
Re-subscribe
here.
The server that I host DV-L on, crashed about a month ago (on June 21), and while all the data is intact, I don't have the time to try and resuscitate it yet, as it would involve quite a bit of configuration and testing, with an application I am not very familiar with (SQL server). Which brings us to a question: shall we not let someone else (rather than me) host DV-L? Let's talk about it on Google (Beta) Groups DV-L:
DV-L on Google Groupshttp://groups-beta.google.com/group/DV-L
While the interface seems to be not as sophisticated as on, say, Yahoo Groups, it is certainly cleaner, and does not bombard you with banner ads.
Please sign up to Google DV-L now.
DV-L List Server |
|---|
|
The oldest and the most popular discussion forum about DV and FireWire technologies, since 1997 |
Join: DV-L (new subscribers):
Important: If you are not sure if you want to join, browse the archives first, and then decide.
DV-L is an Internet-based discussion board for free exchange of information and ideas about DV, FireWire and related technologies.
If you are not sure if you want to join, browse the archives first, and then decide.
How it works. To browse through the messages, you need to do nothing - just browse. If you do plan to post messages, you need to subscribe first. You can do it in immediate or a digest mode. In immediate mode, you will receive all list messages into your e-mailbox individually. In digest mode, you will get one large file, usually around midnight PDT, with all messages of the day included.
Why not a newsgroup? On a newsgroup, one can get swamped in off-topic messages, including commercial and private "FS" (for sale) posts. No protection against uncivilized behavior either. We, the list-police, try to closely guard the list against uncivil behavior.
Topics normally revolve around matters DV and FireWire, but can be quite diverse, covering NLE, camcorders, computers, and new technologies in general, but then again - anything goes as long as it is interesting and civilized. After all, we are only humans, although participation of any form of life and intelligence is welcome, viruses excluded.
The list is only as good as its contributors. Our contributors are fantastic and include representatives of many major players in the industry, prominent industry watchers, news gatherers, video gear dealers, and simply wonderful people who share their knowledge and experience on DV-L.
Feel free to introduce yourself to the list and describe what brought you in, express your suggestions and ideas.
This is a free list in a free country. All we ask is to follow general netiquette rules. Please don't stray too far from the topic of this list. (What's "too far off" is, of course, in the eyes of the beholder.)
DV-L started in May 1997 by Alexei Gerulaitis and Bertel Schmitt, when the first DV-based editing products started to arrive, such as DPS Spark and Fast DV-Master. The idea of DV-L was spawned from the speed razor list (list of users of in:sync's Speed Razor, hosted by Flying Pig Ranch), where it received a very enthusiastic response.
The list would not have been the same without Bertel Schmitt who devoted efforts of biblical proportions into building and supporting DV-L and this web site.
The list is currently operated by
Alexei Gerulaitis and
Bertel Schmitt. It is hosted by Alexei's company DV411, a Digital Video Systems
Integrator in Los Angeles.
See Join_DV-L
There will be a confirmation sent to your E-mail address, along with a confirmation number. Use this number to confirm your request. Instructions will be given in the confirmation message sent to you. This procedure may seem cumbersome, but it is a very good measure against unwanted "3rd party" (un)subscriptions.
The server automatically unsubscribes addresses that generate a number of bounced mails. There could be several reasons for that. Your ISP may reject some or all of the incoming mail because the mailbox is full, or because it assumes that the list mail is SPAM and filters it out, or because it is set to reject messages above certain size. Besides the ISP, sometimes a major Internet backbone could be down and cause the mail to be rejected.
In any event, we don't have any control over automatic unsubscription and the only remedy is to re-subscribe and possibly to work with your ISP to sort out possible causes of frequent unsubscriptions.
The gory details of automatic unsubscriptions.
Our list server
unsubscribes a subscriber automatically if it receives a message from, say
"[email protected]" that says something like
"This is the Postfix program at host
mail.yourmail.com.
I'm sorry to have to inform you that the message returned
below could not be delivered to one or more destinations."
This usually is an indication that the account has been closed, so our list
server closes the subscription automatically at it's end. (It also receives
a lot of messages in foreign tongues, which it cannot understand, and it
just ignores them, which results in thousands of messages getting back &
forth, but that's another story).
Sometimes, the message above is triggered when a mailhost is temporarily down. Our list server tries for a while, and then it gives up. The longer the down period and the heavier the list traffic, the better your chance of getting unsubscribed because of your ISP. The solution is to resubscribe. And your troubles should be over.
If you are being unsubscribed all the time.
This points to a
bigger problem, and here are some possibles:
- We often see that digests are rejected by mailhosts because of their
length or because of the stinginess of the mailhost. Your mailbox at the ISP
could also be full and you don't know it, because your mail reader is set to
not delete messages which you have read. It then marks them as read and
doesn't show them to you. Eventually your mailbox fills up without you
knowing. The large messages get rejected first.
Try this:
- Check you mail reader settings.
In Eudora, Tools>Options>Incoming Mail>Leave Mail on Server
should be unchecked.
In Outlook Account Properties>Advanced>Leave Copy of messages
on server should
be unchecked. (Use corresponding settings for other mail
programs)
If that setting was checked, you have to empty your mailbox at the
ISP first. This can be done by leaving the "Leave Copy of
messages on server" (or equivalent) option checked, then check
"Remove from server when Deleted from Deleted Item" (or
equivalent) and then "Empty your Trash" or "Delete deleted
Items" (We know, it sounds gaga, but that's the way it is ..).
Once this is done uncheck "Leave Copy of messages on
server" and your mailbox at the ISP will be cleaned out when you check
your mail.
- Check you mailbox often. It may be small and it overflows quickly,
especially when the digest comes along. Did we mention that the digest is
big?
- If all of the above doesn't help, change your DV-L delivery options to
"Immediate Delivery" and see whether that changes things. If it
does, there definitely is an overflow/bounceback situation like the above.
If it does not, your ISP has a mailhost which is down often. If you have
frequent problems accessing your mailhost for a while, then our list server
usually has the same problems. Ours is less patient than you, because it's a
program. Ours will give up on your ISP's mailhost after a number of
unsuccessful tries. At some point, you may want to do the same and look for
a more reliable ISP.
So your attempts to write to DV-L return with "sorry, you are not allowed to post". That means that DV-L server does not recognize your email address among all of the subscribers.
There are two possible reasons for that.
One: you are really not subscribed. Only current subscribers can post.
Two: your email address does not match the email address you subscribed to DV-L with.
Either way, it's really not our problem: please do try and figure it out yourself. We maybe can help you, but we have neither time nor resources. If you need help urgently (hooked on DV-L or something), call DV411, explain that you need help with your DV-L subscription and prepare to part with US25,ドル and then if we can, we will help you. If we can't, you will not be charged.
You can help yourself.
If it's "one", check if you are still subscribed, by trying to re-subscribe with the same email address you did it last time.
If it's "two", it could be your server, or your email configuration, or a number of other issues. Email yourself with a test message. Once you receive your own test message, examine the envelope, i.e. a bunch of tracking info that comes with each email message. See if your "reply-to" or "from" field matches exactly the email address you used to subscribe to DV-L.
Don't remember that email address? Tough luck, buddy.
Remember, you have to post from the same address you are subscribed to DV-L with.
Good luck.
Snail-mail to:
DV Central
3767 Overland Ave., Suite 103
Los Angeles CA 90034
Remember. There is no guarantee that you will get any response either way. We try hard but DV-L is a free service with all the consequences.
For those who need policies, here are the unofficial policies of DV-L as pertaining to Common DV-L Law, subsection 3, part IV.
In short: We welcome the input of professionals. We ask for your help to keep it professional. And always remember: Whatever you say on DV-L will be recorded on Yahoogroups for the world to read, analyze and quote.
Last
updated 11 Oct 2023 at
16:17.
page views since 20-Feb-2002
Written mostly by Bertel Schmitt. Maintained by Alexei Gerulaitis.
Copyright ゥ 1997-2007 DV Central. All trademarks recognized.