Finally,
I sketched a little control panel on an index card around 1985.
Below is a 2002 color version of that sketch. The panel is
designed for a hypothetical radio broadcast of a state high school
wrestling tournament or similar event.
In
the first round of Pennsylvania's PIAA tournament, there are maybe
16 matches in each weight class. On the floor of the arena,
four mats allow four matches to take place at once.
From
1974 to 1980, I worked for the cable system in Washington, PA; we
ignored most of the matches, videotaping only the ones that featured
our local wrestlers. But local radio station WJPA broadcast the
whole four-ring circus live and somewhat chaotically, of course.
Is
there a way for a radio production to switch relatively smoothly
from one match to another? Perhaps a computer can help the
announcers decide where to go next.
(TEXT
CONTINUED BELOW)

Suppose
that we put an announcer near each of the four mats, plus another at
the PIAA officials' table. Each of the five announcers has one
of these control panels. There's also a host at an anchor
location to read the commercials.
Say
that this panel belongs to Jim at Mat Four. At first, none of
the four lights is lit; Jim is on a break or has nothing to say.
Pressing the big blue button toggles the green READY
light on and off. If it's on, it means that Jim is prepared
with an update. In addition, he can light the green URGENT
button (by pressing it) to signal that he has something of high
priority to report.
A
computer assigns priorities to the panels: First any URGENTs;
next any READYs
(first come, first served); then the anchor; finally (if the anchor
isn't ready) a tape player. Each panel displays its queue
priority: 1
means that as soon as the current reporter wraps up, Jim will be live.
When
that reporter signals, Jim's yellow STANDBY
light comes on. When he signals again, the yellow light goes
out, the red ON AIR
light comes on, and Jim begins talking.
When
Jim is almost done, he hits the big blue button once, and the WRAPPING
light appears. The computer makes its final decision and
flashes the ID of the next reporter in Jim's IS
NEXT window, for
example "Fred." Fred's STANDBY
light comes on.
Referring
to the window, Jim says something like "Now let's go over to
Fred on Mat Two." When he presses the big blue button a
second time and holds it, Fred is on the air. As long as Jim
holds that button, he is also on the air, so he and Fred can have a
conversation. Once he releases the button, he's off the air and
all four lights go out.
Nowadays,
rather than forcing the reporter to respond to these somewhat
cryptic buttons and colored lights, we'd give him a computer screen
that could communicate with actual sentences. |