BBC Begins Open-Source Streaming Challenge 373
bus_stopper copies and pastes: "The BBC is quietly preparing a challenge to Microsoft and other companies jostling to reap revenues from video streams. It is developing code-decode (codec) software called Dirac in an open-source project aimed at providing a royalty-free way to distribute video. The sums at stake are potentially huge because the software industry insists on payment per viewer, per hour of encoded content. This contrasts with TV technology, for which viewers and broadcasters alike make a one-off royalties payment when they buy their equipment." We've mentioned this project before but this story goes into a bit more depth about the goals and motivations of the developers.
Good old Auntie! (Score:5, Insightful)
John
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:4, Insightful)
My point is that by developing this code, _eventually_ and _slowly_ less and less people are going to have a television in the house and hence less and less people will pay the license.
Which means that the UK government will have to figure out how to finance the BBC. I would hate to see them deciding to sell it. It would be really unfortunate if this project marked the beginning of the end of BBC as we know it.
The Future of Television (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the future of TV will involve less and less advertising and licensing fees. Instead, big content producers like the BBC will sell their archives on a pay-per-view basis. Yes, I know they are planning to offer them for free, but if they have any sense they'll bag the license fees and attach a small, reasonable price to each download.
Everyone
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Re:The Future of Television (Score:2)
IIRC if you have a TV that is incapable of receiveing TV signals you don't have to pay anything. If anyone makes such a TV is another question.
Re:The Future of Television (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Future of Television (Score:5, Informative)
If you do indeed only use your TV in the UK to play DVDS or consoles, you can apply to be EXEMPT from a TV license as I did for 3 years. When you get the letter advising you have not got an up to date Television license, simply call the number on the bottom of the form, and advise them that you use your TV for console and DVD use and they will add you to the exemption list.
Of course when they show up at your door or sit outside and see if your TV tuner is actively tuned to broadcasted television channels instead of playing the XBOX or watching DVDs then you can expect to get heavily fined and rightfully so.
So if it bothers you that much about paying £125 for quite easily the best broadcaster in the world, I'm sure you will find my advice useful.
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Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:2)
Giving people the ability to opt out would be theoretically nice, but is practically not feasible.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:2)
What are you talking about? There are no adverts at all on the BBC. Sure, they have trailers advertising other shows but these are always between programmes, not during them. Unless you're planning to just veg out in front of the TV and consume, you'll probably never see these trailers because you'll turn on the TV to watch whatever you wanted to watch and turn it off again at the end.
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Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:4, Informative)
Channel 4 is partly government funded, and seeks grants for its, uh, unconventional programming from European projects which are themselves... government funded. Whether it means sending film crews to Italian beaches to film topless women, or showing 30 year old obscure Dutch movies about bicycling in 16:9 with subtitles, C4 reads the latest funding trends from Brussels and incorporates their needs into its schedule.
Channel 5 is entirely pointless and should never have been launched on analog. The government (the one you think shouldn't be interfering) forced them to add the movies and news bulletins which break up their otherwise relentless schedule of old material bought from other networks. In some cases the BBC (which you don't like) paid for this material (which you apparently DO like) to be made more than 20 years ago. Didn't you notice how the average C5 program seems kinda... retro?
In general I'm not in favour of government interference, but it's the reality we face. The technology for everyone and their dog to try to run a TV station doesn't exist yet, and might not for another decade. In the absence of that situation the invisible hand of market forces cannot operate properly, so the government inevitably must REGULATE broadcasting activity or we'll experience the spiral of reduced expectations. Once the government actively regulates the activity you're going to pay those taxes, and you might as well get something useful out of it. I think the BBC is fairly good value for money, and would support direct taxation rather than the "license fee" to support it until better means are available, despite the fact that this would inevitably mean that I personally wind up paying more for the same service.
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:4, Informative)
8 channels of television
11 radio stations (not including local radio)
BBCi (http://www.bbc.co.uk) including live streams of all of the radio content and 'listen again' facilities
BBC research labs contributing to the open source community.
I would say that the license fee is a bit of a bargain!
John
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:4, Insightful)
Even better, you can usually find something worth watching on those 8 channels. Since I moved to the US I have 20 times as many channels, and the best thing on is still British comedy reruns on public access TV.
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:3, Funny)
The only stuff in the UK worth watching these days are the British comedy reruns...
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:3, Interesting)
It's too bad that ComedyChannel.com sends out such bizarre, often-broken HTML. They have some good clips there, but pretty much everyone I know who has looked at it complains about how confusing and, well, "broken" it is.
The fact that they seem to send only Real and Windows
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Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:2)
You don't have to pay for it, but they make their money through another revenue stream called advertising. Adverts on European channels are okay at the moment. What I don't like is the North American layout, where you get about 2 minutes of adverts for every 10 minutes of program. Sometimes it feels like the gap is less. Not only that, when they show a film they select the climax points for inserting the adverts - enough
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:3, Informative)
well, to be fair, you're paying for thr priviledge of receiving broadcast TV. you don't need a licence just to own a tv if you only use it for video's, dvd's, consoles and the like (ie no broadcast tv at all).
not that it should make you feel any better mind you
actually, what I dislike about people like sky tv is that they charge you the earth for alot less service (or so it seems). sky seems to spend it's time just buying shows from
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Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:2, Troll)
10 miles from the centre of major city (leeds) and can't even get C5 let alone freeview. They won't even give a date for possibly upgrading the transmitter (presumably they will do it before they switch off analogue, but maybe not, who knows...)
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:2)
I think you mean "2 channels of television". Although the others are made by the BBC, IIRC their funding doesn't come from the license fee.
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/info/licencefee/
and
http://www.bbc.co.uk/info/report2004/text/finan
Re:Good old Auntie! (Score:4, Insightful)
It looks like the BBCs intention is absolutely not to compete with the likes of Real. All they are saying is that the license fees for the existing codecs do not scale, and that it will be cheaper from them to write their own. There is nothing in the BBC's remit that requires them to spend the license-payer's money on overpriced software they can more cheaply write themselves.
While it is true that dirac may reduce the amount that Real, etc, can make from their codecs, once again there is nothing in the BBC's charter which requires it to prop up commercial software markets at the license-payer's expense.
The BBC is not selling dirac. It is simply a tool they feel they need to do their job. However, they are releasing it under an open-source license. You may feel that this is anti-competitive as it undercuts Real, but Real et al are not the BBC's competitors. ITV, C4, etc are the BBC's competitors (though in an ideal world, the BBC is supposed to be about pulic service, not competition). By making the codec open-source, the BBC is freeing these other stations from the requirement to pay Real and its ilk. It is freely giving the products of its work to its most direct competitors, along with everyone else. This seems to be a very fair and competition-friendly way of going about things.
As for public service, a primary use for this new technology is to provide a huge, free, online repository of BBC content. This is an extraordinary project, entirely in the service of the public, which would be absolutely impossible for a commercial broadcaster to attempt. Whatever else people may have to say about the BBC's scorecard in living up to its remit (and I certainly think it's gone too far on a number of occasions) this is an absolute bullseye.
Ogg Theora (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:2, Interesting)
Ogg Theora is alive (Score:5, Informative)
Tarkin is the Ogg wavelet codec. You're correct that work on Tarkin has more or less stalled, but wavelet codecs are a legal quagmire today, in part because so many people have conflicting patents in this area and are just waiting for the chance to litigate. Are any of the images on your website JPEG2000 instead of regular JFIF? Thought not.
You mean Ogg Tarkin (Score:3, Informative)
Ogg Theora is lurching towards an actual release, and is supported in a few tools like VLC, while Ogg Tarkin never really got very far along in implementation. Theora was meant to be the quick interim release while Tarkin was developed, although the schedule has slipped quite a bit since.
Open standard (Score:3, Insightful)
As a non-Windows OS user, compatibility is extremely important for me. I'm si
Don't count your chickens yet (Score:3, Insightful)
Compression efficiency
Cost of implementing decode in consumer electronics (read, what's the cheapest chip that can decode it)
Support for existing transport mechanisms (like MPEG-2 transport streams)
Existence of industrial grade en
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:3, Insightful)
The started with a clean slate with much attention paid to keeping the IP clean. I think this was necessary, any excuse for MS or Real or whoever to shut down or slow down the project should be avoided.
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:2, Informative)
This is one of the main reasons companies try to get software patents, as well as copyrights.
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:3, Insightful)
Daniel
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:5, Interesting)
IIRC, it takes forever-squared to encode, but once done it beats just about anything in terms of file size and picture quality. Since the BBC's model is going to be encode once, then let the public download at will, this is fine by them.
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:2, Interesting)
There's more to running an open-source project than giving away your code. You have to maintain it, patch bugs, run a mailing list to inform people of the bugs, and so on.
Wouldn't it be better if they collaborated with the Ogg project so that, even though they are developing a new codec, the codec would be an Ogg codec, with the surrounding infrastructure maintained by the Ogg projec
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:2)
Personally I would think that this should be a goal for a lot of codecs. People want to fit movies onto a single CD with the best picture quality. Most people are interested in moving this video from a remote source (ahem BT) and put it on permanent storage for multiple views.
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:3, Insightful)
reasonable quality != broadcast quality.
If Dirac had a 'reasonable quality' mode, then you'd likely see it at 2000kbps which is getting close. They say they are still optimising it, so perhaps they can come to within a gnat's whisker of Divx compression.
Re:Ogg Theora (Score:5, Interesting)
By the way, I haven't seen a link to it so far, here [bbc.co.uk] is a link the a BBC info page on Dirac and here [sourceforge.net] is the Source Forge page for those wanting the code.
Do OSS projects like taking orders? (Score:2)
This implies that the OT developers would be "taking orders" from the BBC, and I'd guess that wouldn't work out well (cf "herding cats"), either from an accountability perspective or from a poltical perspective. I'm assuming (perhaps incorrectly) that involvement in Ogg projects is at least partially motivated by all the
From the article (Score:3, Interesting)
It can be used for passing video round home networks, rights-managed peer-to-peer file sharing, or playing media in handheld devices, as well as for web streaming.
And this is why it will be fought against on the political front. How much you want to bet that the feds will want to require some sort of keying/user tracing mechanism in order for this "free" technology to be made publically available? Big media will argue that in order for the government to protect copyright, they shouldn't allow technology that can subert other's copyrights.
Re:From the article (Score:5, Funny)
Re:From the article (Score:2)
Re:From the article (Score:5, Interesting)
If the "feds" were to ask the BBC not to release it we'd end up seeing one of your politicians getting an unexpected kicking in his next interview. A few years ago a BBC interviewer asked the Home Secretary (in charge of the police, prisons, immigration, "Homeland Security" etc.) the same question *14* times, when he wouldn't answer the question.
14 times (Score:4, Informative)
For the lazy... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:From the article (Score:2, Informative)
Jeremy paxman (the interviewer) asked that question 14 times because the computer he was using to view his question list had frozen, and he couldn't get to the next one. It was still a great thing to do, but it's not quite the 'revenge of the BBC' that you suggest.
Re:From the article (Score:2)
Re:From the article (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:From the article (Score:3, Informative)
The reason he asked the same question 14 times was that he wanted a straight answer and the politician concerned (as usual for all politicians) wouldn't give one.
Last I checked the UK Was Not the 51st State (Score:3, Interesting)
Let the feds scream like stuck pigs.
Now that the Bush administration has completely gutted our diplomatic clout to such a degree we can't even rally people against emerging nuclear threats (remember the boy who cried wolf?), no one but no one is willing to blindly go alon
Re:From the article (Score:2)
"To secure for all the workers by hand or by brain the full fruits of their industry and the most equitable distribution thereof that may be possible upon the basis of the common ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange, and the best obtainable system of popular administration and control of each industry of service."
Go BBC! (Score:5, Insightful)
Only in the US (Score:5, Informative)
Again, there are other [tvlicensing.co.uk] countries [zdnet.fr] in the world where things don't happen that way. In most of the EC in fact...
For your information Michael, the Beeb is in the UK where your statement doesn't apply.
Re:Only in the US (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Only in the US (Score:2)
A TV license is a payment against royalties on content, not royalties on TV technology.
This may be true now; but during the 1980s it certainly wasn't. I needed a TV License to use a portable TV with no tuner, that I used solely used for my "micro-computer"[1]. No tuner in the house, still needed a TV License. The reason given was that the license was a license "to use the technology" - what use I put the technology to was my business.
20 years ago, etc, YMMV.
[1] A ZX-81, a Spectrum and (finally!) a
The BBC (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure, it has its problems, but I'd trust the BBC over any politician, especially ones who make threatening noises about its charter every time it does its job by being independent and embarrassing the government of the day...
Re:The BBC (Score:2)
Can I claim some of my license money back then [bbc.co.uk]?
Re:The BBC (Score:4, Informative)
Our public TV has some good stuff (and some HD too), but it gets minimal federal funding and has to beg for donations all the time. (AFAIK, the congress mandated push to HD is reaming their budgets too, they won't survive this decade)
The pay options are ok, but still ad driven and you can end up with a $100+ a month TV bill if you get any "top tier" stuff.As for me, basic cable is bundled in my rent, so there's little choice in it.
I am glad this is what my license fee pays for! (Score:3, Informative)
The link is the story is dead, I found the home page here [bbc.co.uk], and the SourceForge site here [sourceforge.net].
Thanks,
Andrew McCall
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Re:I am glad this is what my license fee pays for! (Score:2)
To us Aussies, we don't know what the damn hell your talking about.
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3GHz (Score:2)
The figures assume a 3GHz processor but the focus is on gaining speed by code optimisation rather than hardware because the BBC wants Dirac to be usable on a broad range of devices.
Who on the world has 3GHz processor in his desktop computer? Certainly not me, not my friends or relatives, nor even my boss, who has 2.4GHz.
Re:3GHz (Score:2)
Perhaps they're looking down the road. When Dirac is deployed, a 3GHz processor might be the norm. (By then your boss will have a 4GHz processor.)
Re:3GHz (Score:2)
Re:3GHz (Score:2)
That'd be me, then! Or at least very nearly, although I freely admit I'm not a typical user. But the point is, by the time this is ready for prime time, that leve
Re:3GHz (Score:2)
absurd:~$ egrep '(processor|Hz)'
processor : 0
cpu MHz : 599.027
processor : 1
cpu MHz : 599.027
see? I'm not that typical too, lest people around (including me) do lack some power. (and isengard is supposed to have more power than some absurd shadow)
Re:3GHz (Score:3, Funny)
Could be worse. :)
Will it run on low end hardware? (Score:2)
BBC (Score:2, Funny)
Ogg Vorbis & Theora (Score:2, Interesting)
A bit of politics (Score:3, Interesting)
Freedom of information is not about paying or not paying for commercial content. Freedom of information is about politics, human rights, rulership and ideology manipulation. BBC is on the side of freedom for some time, and currently under heavy pressure from the conservatives.
Letting free codec technology to public now may help in some near future, when independent journalists will be hunted to underground or illegality.
Videolan (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Videolan (Score:3, Informative)
Project homepage (Score:3, Informative)
BBC Dirac [bbc.co.uk]
The Dirac Project
Dirac is a general-purpose video codec aimed at resolutions from QCIF (180x144) to HDTV (1920x1080) progressive or interlaced. It uses wavelets, motion compensation and arithmetic coding and aims to be competitive with other state of the art codecs.
Do it quickly before Blair kills it (Score:5, Insightful)
From an investigation in August 2003:
http://www.culture.gov.uk/global/publicati
You can bet MS (or Microsoft lobbyists the BSA) will try damn hard to kill this project.
I wish the BBC would stop dragging its feet and do it, start releasing the archive now with their codec, before the politicians kill.
Dirac homepage (Score:5, Informative)
Dirac? (Score:3, Funny)
Per Hour? (Score:2)
If It's only by the hour does this mean the guys who never learned control get free porn?
COOL! finally someone who understands us!
Serious problem for conferences (Score:3, Interesting)
A good alternative to Real and Media encoder that is free is definitely wanted in these areas.
Offtopic: I wonder why the DV's of this conference are still not encoded...
"Dirac"? (Score:3, Funny)
(Only physics geeks will get this. Why am I bothering?)
Ogg Vorbis streams (Score:3, Interesting)
The BBC, IMNSHO (as a licence payer), should be champions of open communications, and this extends to the openness of their distribution formats. I wish they'd stop wasting resources from crappy little mini-sites with gossip and games relating to soap operas.
Rik
Re:Ogg Vorbis streams (Score:3, Insightful)
AFAIK, RealPlayer doesn't come with Windows, so the user has to go and download it, trying desperately to avoid paying for the non-free version.
If the user has already downloaded it, they can cope with downloading and installing a player, so I'm sure they'd be happy to download and install something like Winamp, with its less annoying installa
Re:Ogg Vorbis streams (Score:3, Insightful)
You're not wrong. But RealMedia is, unfortunately, a known quantity. Even people who don't like it at least know what it does and that it does what it's supposed to (albeit, historically, along with one or two things it wasn't supposed to), whereas many people simply won't have heard of Ogg. And I think this is what sways the decision. That and the fact that it'
BBC Technology Sale (Score:3, Insightful)
In fact, I found a schematic for the network (Score:5, Informative)
Re:In fact, I found a schematic for the network (Score:2, Informative)
Re:open codecs? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Parliament TV (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Darwin Streaming Server / QTSS (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Quicktime (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Quicktime (Score:2)
I'll admit the best codec for streaming isn't open source o free, but BBCs complaints( re: the article) are about a per stream or per hour fee. The best codec is just a flat out purchase, and a cheap one as far as anything AV goes at that. If they don't like that, then write a new, better codec. Which is what they are doing, but that has nothing to do with all the comments about real or windows media.
Re:Quicktime (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:OGG streams off line though? (Score:2)
A huge amount of effort and expense would have been needed to get the OGG streams up to production standard for all the radio stations, not to mention the need to train up support staff etc. I don't think that leaving the experimental services publicly visible for any length of time was ever going to be a starter.
Besid