He's offering a solution for watching the super bowl live, the original problem. Not a DVR recording.
They will notice if the video is not in sync with the audio. (For example, if the announcers announce a touchdown before the player makes it into the end zone.)The solution lies in syncing the audio. Nobody's going to notice the video's not in sync.
They will notice if the video is not in sync with the audio. (For example, if the announcers announce a touchdown before the player makes it into the end zone.)
Of course, this is the Super Bowl we were talking about. Many people watch that just for the commercials, and there is a lot better chance of there being talking heads in those.I don't know if you're talking about trying to cue up two rooms to playback a recording in near-identical time.
But for real-time playback with my Hopper3-connected TV and my Joey-connected TV tuned to the same "live" channel, the Joey TV plays back audio less than a half-second later than the Hopper TV.
If one were to correct this with a single-sourced audio solution like I described in my previous post, there's not much in a football game that would appear out of sync other than a talking head (or singing head in a halftime show).