If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
cats watching TV
How can anyone know how a cat sees? Its not like they can get into the cats
brain or anything. I know that Gizmo is more responsive to certain TV programs than others. She particularly likes the morning program which had the news tickertape along the bottom. I can see her eyes following it across the screen. Angela "Brad Snow" wrote in message ... Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. Scientific follow up: Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
On Tue, 16 Sep 2003 15:11:53 +1000, "Angela Ryan"
wrote: How can anyone know how a cat sees? Its not like they can get into the cats brain or anything. I know that Gizmo is more responsive to certain TV programs than others. She particularly likes the morning program which had the news tickertape along the bottom. I can see her eyes following it across the screen. Angela Golly, guess she's one of the mentally challengd Brad "Brad Snow" wrote in message .. . Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. Scientific follow up: Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
I just tried for Gizmo pics from your earlier post. Can't make the
link or address work. Sure he's great, tho Brad On Tue, 16 Sep 2003 15:11:53 +1000, "Angela Ryan" wrote: How can anyone know how a cat sees? Its not like they can get into the cats brain or anything. I know that Gizmo is more responsive to certain TV programs than others. She particularly likes the morning program which had the news tickertape along the bottom. I can see her eyes following it across the screen. Angela "Brad Snow" wrote in message .. . Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. Scientific follow up: Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
I don't know, every once in while the TV gets the cats attention. But it may be
sound rather than picture. And Rosie is definitely into chasing the pointer on my monitor. -- Jo Firey "Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away." "Brad Snow" wrote in message ... I just tried for Gizmo pics from your earlier post. Can't make the link or address work. Sure he's great, tho Brad On Tue, 16 Sep 2003 15:11:53 +1000, "Angela Ryan" wrote: How can anyone know how a cat sees? Its not like they can get into the cats brain or anything. I know that Gizmo is more responsive to certain TV programs than others. She particularly likes the morning program which had the news tickertape along the bottom. I can see her eyes following it across the screen. Angela "Brad Snow" wrote in message .. . Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. Scientific follow up: Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Brad Snow wrote:
Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. And we all know how stupid women are, right? Scientific follow up: Finally, something from the rational male point of view! Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow My cats watch the TV screen all the time. I don't think it has anything to do with whether they're fast or slow - they're just looking at movement. Maybe they're seeing moving pictures, or maybe they just see moving dots and lines, but something on that screen captures their interest. Also, I'm sure the sounds coming from the TV contribute to their interest as well. Joyce - just another silly woman who thinks her cats like Animal Planet |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Felix is not the only one who requested a video :-)
I had a cat that never watched tv, except when we played a video we had of one of the other cats. She'd sit in front of the tv then, at a distance where it seemed likely that she could discern what was going on, and watch the whole thing. -- Nanny When you see a married couple walking down the street, the one that's a few steps ahead is the one that's mad. -Helen Rowland- "Seanette Blaylock" schreef in bericht ... had some very interesting things to say about cats watching TV: My cats watch the TV screen all the time. I don't think it has anything to do with whether they're fast or slow - they're just looking at movement. Maybe they're seeing moving pictures, or maybe they just see moving dots and lines, but something on that screen captures their interest. Also, I'm sure the sounds coming from the TV contribute to their interest as well. Joyce - just another silly woman who thinks her cats like Animal Planet I'm pretty sure Felix has actually watched TV at times. He even once specifically requested a video. :-) -- Seanette Blaylock "You attribute perfect rationality to the whole of humanity, which has to be one of the most misguided assumptions ever." - Alan Krueger in NANAE [make obvious correction to address to send e-mail] |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Nanny wrote:
Felix is not the only one who requested a video :-) I had a cat that never watched tv, except when we played a video we had of one of the other cats. She'd sit in front of the tv then, at a distance where it seemed likely that she could discern what was going on, and watch the whole thing. My cats are especially interested when there are cats on TV. They couldn't care less about mice, birds or fish, but bring on a cat, even a big cat, and they're riveted. One time I was watching a show about feral cats that had a scene of a mother cat and newborn kittens. Roxy was transfixed - she walked up to the TV, stood up on her hind legs, and put her paw on the screen. Did she see the kittens, or just hear them? I don't know, but she was convinced there were kittens in the big black box. At one point, she ran around to the back of the TV, sure she'd find the kittens there. When she didn't find anything, she came back around, looking befuddled. Joyce |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
"Brad Snow" wrote in message
... Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. Scientific follow up: Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow Cites (references) please. -- Alan Erskine alanerskine(at)optusnet.com.au John Howard is not fit to be Prime Minister of Australia |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
On Mon, 15 Sep 2003 23:26:25 -0700, Jo Firey wrote
(in message ): Neither watches much TV. Maya sometimes will watch a nature show if it has mountain lions. Lions, tigers, leopards hold no interest to her, just mountain lions. Its quite possible she has actually seen or heard one of them in real life. I was once watching Star Wars episode one and suddenly she was staring at the TV. It was the scene where Ani's owner was flying around and she was captivated by the wings fluttering like a giant moth. Bruiser often will watch the LCD screen on my laptop while I am playing computer games. He really gets into it too. I don't know, every once in while the TV gets the cats attention. But it may be sound rather than picture. And Rosie is definitely into chasing the pointer on my monitor. -- Jo Firey "Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away." "Brad Snow" wrote in message ... I just tried for Gizmo pics from your earlier post. Can't make the link or address work. Sure he's great, tho Brad On Tue, 16 Sep 2003 15:11:53 +1000, "Angela Ryan" wrote: How can anyone know how a cat sees? Its not like they can get into the cats brain or anything. I know that Gizmo is more responsive to certain TV programs than others. She particularly likes the morning program which had the news tickertape along the bottom. I can see her eyes following it across the screen. Angela "Brad Snow" wrote in message ... Saw this yesterday. People (well, women, of course claiming their Bootsie watched TV. Scientific follow up: Cats see faster than us. Have to, to see and pounce quickly. So we see a TV picture, but cat sees the dots and lines from the beam hitting the screen (dots and lines which translate into the picture we see). So: -Normal fast cat won't see/be interested in TV of birds or whatever, and -if your cat DOES watch TV, he's slow |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Can Cats Eat Dog Food? | JHBennett | Cat anecdotes | 31 | January 29th 05 09:42 AM |
Cats are not like windows | Shirley | Cat anecdotes | 19 | October 3rd 03 09:22 PM |
South FL Cats' Taste in Music | Hopitus2 | Cat anecdotes | 9 | August 14th 03 04:01 AM |