Live Streaming Network TV Online - in Canada 120
ecampbel writes "News.com is running a story about a company called iCraveTV.com offering live streaming network TV feeds for Canadian Internet users (an area code is required to view the streams). Most of the stations offered are Canadian, but a few Buffalo, NY stations are offered as well. This is obviously the logical conclusion of streaming media, and is scaring the pants off the local network affiliates."
The Appeal (Score:1)
1. Watch TV from work.
2. If in Southern Ontario (where the channels originate), drop basic cable.
3. Watch on your computer and not spend $100 for a converter.
4. Watch on your computer without the need for a cable splitter/bunny ears.
5. Hey its free and cool. Why not impress your friends?
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
Cool! Now you can play the "Buffalo House Fire Home Game"! Watch the local news. Try to guess which part of town tonight's house fire is in (eastside, southside, etc.) Bonus points for guessing the specific neighborhood/street ("An Allentown couple is homeless tonight after a two-alarm...")
Don't forget the basic format: if two or more people died, it's the lead story; otherwise, it'll be the first story after the first break.
I always thought that they should shoot for some sort of promotional tie-in - e.g., "Tonight's fire is brought to you by "First Alert" brand Smoke detectors..." or Diamond-brand matches, or...use your imagination! Think of the ad bucks!
BTW, you aren't a true Don Cherry fan until you own and wear the entire Don Cherry ready-to-wear collection
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
There's a whole other province in that area code!
You have to watch out for these mainlanders
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
Well, yes it probably does that, but rather than prevent pesky americans from watching Canadian TV, it's to prevent pesky Americans from watching AMERICAN TV. Network affiliates have broadcast exclusivity agreements in the areas they serve, and the NBC (for example) affiliates in Chicago, Miami, Dallas, etc., would be rather upset to learn that people were watching "E.R." on WGRZ Buffalo instead of their local stations.
Living here in Buffalo, I'm probably safe--these are the channels I see anyway
Re:Free as in beer? (Score:1)
Free as in speech = unencumbered; open
Free TV is free as in beer, but not free as in speech... i.e. I don't have to pay for it, but I can't put my own show on it unless I kiss some big-wig's ass or shell out big bucks.
The Internet is free as in speech, but not free as in beer... i.e. I can put up my own page that can be accessed just as easily as anyone else's (the Internet's most important quality), but I have to pay for access.
Re:Cool, but... (Score:1)
Sounds more like a blessing than a curse.
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
I did restaurants cause they rarely have 800 numbers which screws it all up.
Or maybe 800 is taken as *?
And folks who criticize this guy for missing a few- sheesh, relax folks. He was being helpful, not slighting anyone. A lot of you \. readers could really use a case of those chill-pills. Or maybe they stopped production in 1994.
He Shoots - HE SCORES!!! (Score:1)
Re:canadian tv better? (Score:1)
Did anyone else notice in the latest TLC video Unpretty that when the breast implant is being removed from that woman that they actaully blurred the nipple? Watch closely and make sure to have pillows on the floor to soften the blow when you hit it laughing.
If aspects of American culture like this weren't doing such a good job of seeping into our own, I wouldn't be so worried. But as it is, I'm terrified that the merchants to the south are going to totally supplant all world culture with their own. Hell, Disney owns the Mounties. And let's not talk about what's been done to hockey in the last 10 years alone.
As for uncensored news coverage, how about non-sensational relavent news coverage? I'm continually impressed by the quality of the CBC newsgroup to report national and international matters that matter. If I see one more ABC/CBS/NBC news report confirming that the people on board the Egypt Air flight are STILL all dead, I'll scream. Why do they seem to think we need to know EVERY detail about something like this?
And having watched MTV/VH1, I pitty you. MuchMusic actually plays _music videos_ on a regular basis! Imagine that! Anyway, I'm just passing on my own opinon and a little bit of experience having lived both on the border and away form it. If I wanted to really go hammer and tongs at the whole US-Canadian situation, I'd be here all day.
Yes, we're kinda quiet, but you'd be supprised just what the average Canadian thinks about America. Yeah Canadian TV!
This is fantastic! Great for language study. (Score:1)
But, I have an ADSL connection - I just tried this out and most of the stations were very watchable. For the few times when I might want to watch something, this is good enough. In fact, all of the stations seem to me of better quality than my local TV reception.
What I'm really looking forward to is other nations offering TV - think of how great this would be for learning other languages, if you could watch regional TV shows. I'm really looking forward to watching Japanese TV someday...
Critique of your critique (Score:2)
Now that I'm back in Newfoundland (sadly), I don't get Global, but get most of my TV from the Comedy Network (American: Dennis Miller Live, John Stewart, Ben Stein, WKRP(!!), Canadian: Tom Green, Kevin Spencer ("he's a chain smoking, alcoholic, sociopath"), Butch Patterson: Private Dick ("Give me another drink or I'll slap you around like my prison lover"), Mike Bullard) and Teletoon (who, unfortunately, do not play "Late Night Anime" anymore, but still play Duckman, Spawn every Halloween, and the Canadian "Ned's Newt" (with jokes like, "Who's the man who's a machine to all the chicks" (It *is* a kid's show after all, they had to clean up that reference), and "That's brilliant, you're way too smart for the army, you're fired") and, of course, Splat!).
Wow, I've got to give up with those damn parenthesis, I've been programming a little too long.
I guess I'll go watch Win Ben Stein's Money, now...
Re:Just some more things that weren't mentioned (Score:1)
It's actually very easy to do...
What about the CRTC? (Score:2)
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
Re:Just some more things that weren't mentioned (Score:1)
The percentage of revenue we're setting aside is being put into an account until the appropriate copyright bodies decide how payments of this nature should be made. When the decision is made, the funds will be released to the appropriate parties.
----
Andrew McCallum / Technology Wrangler, iCraveTV.com
Re:No thanks... (Score:1)
I decided that I didn't want to spend the $30/mo for cable, instead I got ADSL. I was left with 2 fuzzy channels I would get with an antenna here in Waterloo.
Now for no extra cost, I have the selection of basic cable with the same quality I had before.
Re:It's time to fork the internet (Score:1)
Basically though you're sending one stream to a 224.0.0.0 netmask and any client that wishes to retrive the stream simply adds that to it's multicast (or older cards go into promiscuous mode and use software to filter packets).
Yes, you're still wasting bandwidth, but you're wasting less bandwidth.
- MbM
Now all we need is a RealAudio client for Linux.. (Score:1)
...that doesn't suck.
Seriously, the current client is awful. On the same machine under WinNT the difference is astounding -- the Linux client is buggy, slow and just awful. Hopefully, Real will throw a little more money or open up the development of it a bit
On the other hand, the Mac client is terrible, too. I guess that pretty much tells us that Win32 is their target market. :)
It would be nice if someone (Apple) were to port QuickTime to Linux. They've already open-sourced the server to a degree, pity we can't get the client. I guess the copyright issues with some of the codecs are a problem, though.
Re:Per-channel critique by someone who's seem them (Score:1)
Actually, I'm a little suprised they didn't rebroadcast a few more of the French stations. I'm sure they'd garner a larger audience if "Bleu Nuit" was available daily. :)
Either that, or their servers would get thoroughly tooled by the number of hits they'd get.
The Onion had this first (Score:2)
Downloads Real-Time TV Programs,
Displays Them On Monitor
The highly touted "Internet Revolution" took
another major step forward Monday, when Compaq unveiled the
breakthrough Compaq Presario 6000, a $4,995 multimedia
computer system that enables users to download files containing
network-television programs and display them on a computer
monitor.
"Imagine watching TV at the click of a mouse, instead of a
remote control," Compaq director of product development Bill
Welborne said. "With the Compaq Presario 6000 and a few
reasonably priced add-ons, you'll never have to watch TV on a
television again."
Go gadget CBC! (Score:2)
Kudos to iCraveTV.com [icravetv.com] for this most excellent site.
Free as in beer? (Score:1)
Re:Geeze.. now here's a way to make money (Score:1)
Multicasting (Score:1)
Thankyaverramuchinadvance
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
Interactive Digital TV (Score:1)
http://www.kitv.co.uk
If you live in Hull in the UK you can have it today but if you live in some backwater, you'll have to wait
Kingston Interactive TV is delivered as IP over ADSL, it includes Interactive & Digital TV, Real Video on Demand, High speed Internet Access and a Local Link. This tech is amazing.
Cool, but... (Score:1)
Anyhoo, I think the real disappointment is that Buffalo doesn't have a UPN station. No Voyager and no Dilbert! =(
Powers&8^]
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
In my house we've been playing for years... my parents didn't call Channel 7 "Blood and Guts" for nothing! I've always been a Channel 4 guy myself... dunno why...
I guess I'm not a true Cherry fan then... Suits that don't allow me to sit down aren't my thing
I think Powers would agree with me, Rochester news just doesnt have the same cheezy charm that the Buffalo newscasts do, they're way too bland... (Except R News, I watch that just for entertainment!)
Local Broadcasters (Score:1)
There shouldn't even be a fear that the big broadcasting companies (ABC, CBS, Fox, et al) will steal viewers and revenue away from local stations. The local stations will still have the best base for running local news, sports, and any other local information that people will always want to see.
This is also a much better way to see how many viewers are REALLY watching a particular show. Statistics are still statistics, and will always be open to interpretation and corruption, but checking the number of unique IP addresses that hit a show is much more likely to be accurate than a randum pole.
Of course, the technology isn't prefect, and bandwidth sucks.. but every technology has to start somewhere.
Excellent! (Score:1)
I'd also like to note that the G2 player is available for Linux at the following site:
http://proforma.real.com/real/player/linuxplayer.
The picture is more reasonable if you select the double size option.
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
*shrug*
Powers&8^]
Wasn't this invented in the 1940s? (Score:1)
canadian tv better? (Score:2)
How about full frontal nudity on broadcast?
I can't think of anything else that would be
worthwhile to watch.
why do the networks care? (Score:1)
Something I just don't understand here. Why should the networks care about the rebroadcast? They make money off of advertising; as a result, if their viewer base increases (and they have some way to monitor it), then their ad revenues should increase. If they could get iCraveTV to send them viewership numbers (to forward to their advertisers), then it seems to me this would be a *good* deal.
This reminds me of something my hometown radio station did... they started webcasting a few months ago, but introduced a 45 second delay so that people wouldn't be able to call in on the contests. Why not? Isn't the purpose of the contest to get more people to listen in? And since they know how many people are listening to the webcast (and can pass it on to their advertisers, same story as above), isn't that all good for them?
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:2)
Hrm... I have realplayer in my netscape prefs, or 'realplay' anyway- whats the variable to pass the file labelled as?
Come on all you netscape 4.7 linux users.... someone look in your application prefs.
Channel 25 is the only one that interests me (Score:1)
to whether or not we watch their TV. The problems
they have are the mother fuckers in Ottawa and
Washington who can't get to an agreement on
US and Canadian culture content.
The CRTC and FCC prohibits us from watching
each other's TV.
I asked a few days ago to dish if they plan
on providing us the French lineup of ExpressVU
and I was told that the FCC prohibits them from
doing so. They would love to sell me the service
but they can't legally do it. You can still
subscribe to expressvu if you have an address
in Canada and are billed there but if they
ever find out that you actually live in the US
they cut you off. Not that they would not want
to sell you the service but because the
governments forbid it.
In this case, the arguments about the local
stations don't hold water as there are no
French language stations in the USA.
Dish would provide me with one French station
(TV5, international TV) for the price of all
of the Canadian French language network at
expressvu.
Re:SHVA (Score:1)
case that you wouldn't know.
The FCC does prohibit us from receiving
Canadian TV except what we could get off the
air.
I think it has a lot to do with getting back
at Canadian cable TV who steals signals from
the USA and black out the US commercials to
put canadian commercials.
The internet may force the two groups of morons
in Ottawa and Washington to remove the stupid
border in the TV industry.
Speaking as a Canadian... (Score:1)
The Canadian gov't, you see, has recently begun efforts to make Canada more high-tech, and iCrave is a very firm response to these efforts. Since our legal system has so much power, and since most of our judges favour the current government and its stances, there's a good chance that, even if iCrave does get sued, it'll survive.
Hopefully, this will start a trend, or rather reverse the current one; Canada's been bleeding technology companies for a few years now, and the ones that remain are looking at nicer tax regimes (i.e. Nortel, interviewed in National Post as saying that Canadian taxes are driving them out).
I would wager that iCrave, if they play their cards right, will survive and thrive. I hope so, mainly for my sake. I've been missing my Air Farce and This Hour for far too long now, and I don't want to have to give them up again.
An end to network TV? (Score:1)
Online streaming media still requires an internet connection.
Great stuff. (Score:2)
Where I live we get a whole range of Canadian stations on cable (BCTV (Vancouver), ITV (Edmonton), CTV (Toronto), and NTV (Newfoundland)): what's nice about that is because of the wide timezone spread (-3:30 to -8:00 from GMT) we have the ability to watch Star Trek (or B5 for you Babylonians) at virtually any hour of the day...
--
Area Code Required to watch (Score:4)
506 418 819 450 514 705 807 204 306 403 780 250 604 403
Regulatory Issues/Video on Demand? (Score:1)
Any thoughts on how this relates with Video on Demand?
Not a big deal... (Score:1)
Having said that I do find it useful to keep a news broadcast going in the corner but actually watching my favourite sitcom is out of the question. The TV is here to stay for awhile I would think until streaming media catches up in quality.
Geeze.. now here's a way to make money (Score:3)
Someone should invent something that would transform these signals to analouge and then transmit them using a wireless mechanism and RF Modulation.
Then cheap, monitor like boxes could be built with the wireless networking gear built into them, and the cost of the service to consumers could be paid for by advertising.
Of course, we might have a problem with competing standards - maybe the W3C could come up with something..
Hmmm... I might just seek some VC finance..
Hmmmm... now wait a moment.. I remember something like that from back when I was young..
;-)
Area Codes (Score:1)
Some Canadian Area codes are:
450,416,250,604,709,905,613
Don't break the law. *grin*
------
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
Thank you.
Want to watch? (Score:2)
Goto their page: http://www.iCraveTV.com/tv/watch.html [icravetv.com]
Click on a link. Look at the url, should look like this:
http://www.iCraveTV.com/tv/c1.php3 ?u=T41ciii.ram [icravetv.com]
Change that to:
http://www.iCraveTV.com/tv/T41ciii.ram [icravetv.com]
Voila! Live TV
Yay! (Score:1)
Want to watch? (Score:1)
Goto their page: http://www.iCraveTV.com/tv/watch.html [icravetv.com]
Click on a link. Look at the url, should look like this: http://www.iCraveTV.com/tv/c1.php3 ?u=T41ciii.ram [icravetv.com]
Change that to: http://www.iCraveTV.com/tv/T41ciii.ram [icravetv.com]
Voila! Live TV
How myopic (Score:1)
I mean c'mon, do you watch TV for content or do you flip channels to find the clearest one. Or to put thiungs into perspective. How many people here buy linux/bsd for the install routine as opposed to using it. Raise your hands (journalists put your hands down unless you use it not install at home.)
No thanks... (Score:2)
Coolest thing about this... (Score:3)
Tune in at 7:00 eastern on Saturday night for the Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Pittsburgh Penguins from Toronto, and at 10:00 eastern for the Vancouver Canucks at the Edmonton Oilers.
Like the t-shirt says: Hockey is Life.
------
Re:Want to watch? (Score:2)
You're asked to enter a Canadian Area code. These aren't exactly top secret.
Re:Great stuff. (Score:1)
By the way, CTV is not a Toronto network, it's nation-wide.
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
Seriously, also being at RIT like Powers, and being orignally from Buffalo, it's nice to get the local news and be able to watch CBC. Don Cherry is my man...
Re:Free as in beer? (Score:1)
The more important freedom is free as in speech. That you should have a right to see the source code of the program you are using, and adapt it to what you want. This is the main point of GNU (as far as I can tell).
The two are often contrasted when discussing the difference between certain companies giving products away 'for free' and things produced under a license such as the GPL (ie free as in beer good, free as in speech better).
At least that's my take on it.
Re:What? No YTV!! (Score:1)
Otherwise i'd be able to watch champions league soccer on TSN from work instead of settling for a java superticker :)
Re:No thanks... (Score:1)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:1)
IIRC, there's a law somewhere (maybe just a CRTC regulation), that you cannot have any more than 15 minutes worth of advertisement in an hour.
Your post could have been sarcastic, but if it was, I didn't pick it up.
News From January 2001? (Score:1)
[Note: this is speculative fiction]
The American Broadcasting Company (ABC), a has obtained an injunction against Ontario, Canada-based iCraveTV, in Canadian court, which forces a temporary end to iCraveTV's practice of rebroadcasting ABC television feeds.
In addition, ABC Networks is suing iCrateTV for $400 million in damages, calculated by the estimated loss in profits caused by millions of users viewing ABC Network broadcasts over the Internet for free. iABC, the video-over-ip service inaugurated in June 2000 by ABC, charges $25 per month for accounts by which registered viewers can watch video feeds online.
The damage estimate may in fact be raised, as ABC Networks has issued a subpoena for iCraveTV's access logs, which are said to indicate that at least 10 million people were using their service, per month, by August.
NBC and CBS are also following suit against iCraveTV, but the whole issue may already be moot. iCraveTV's network has been overwhelmed by the vast numbers of users attempting to connect to their network for free. The cost of providing the video-over-ip service has exceeded the profits gained by over 100 advertisers, and with the legal action from ABC Networks, iCraveTV's stock has lost $12 3/4 shares, down from $23 3/4 to $11 per share as of Tuesday.
With the apparent fall of iCraveTV, ABC Networks says iABC has secured the right to sole distribution of ABC content over the internet. The decision against iCraveTV is also being hailed as the fall of the last barrier to phasing out dependency upon some local TV stations.
Also, the fee increase for iABC accounts, from $25 to $35, originally announced in December, will take effect in February.
Re:Multicasting (Score:2)
Re:What? No YTV!! (Score:1)
In the article, they say they could rebroadcast for free any "PUBLIC" tv stations.
So anything that you can receive on an antenna is OK. Cable only channel are not.
Anyway, I should not complain 'cause I have a TV tuner.
I don't see it on their page anywhere (Score:1)
did they move the link?
Just some more things that weren't mentioned (Score:1)
----
Andrew McCallum / Technology Wrangler, iCraveTV.com
Newfoundland code (Score:2)
Just to add another one.
Re:Multicasting (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Nice try but.... (Score:1)
toronto tv stations (Score:1)
Not very practical - yet (Score:1)
Re:canadian tv better? (Score:1)
Did anyone else notice in the latest TLC video Unpretty that when the breast implant is being removed from that woman that they actaully blurred the nipple? Watch closely and make sure to have pillows on the floor to soften the blow when you hit it laughing.
If aspects of American culture like this wasn't doing such a good job of seeping into our own, I wouldn't be so worried. But as it is, I'm terrified that the merchants to the south are going to totally supplant all world culture with their own. Hell, Disney owns the Mounties. And let's not talk about what's been done to hockey in the last 10 years alone.
As for uncensored news coverage, how about non-sensational relavent news coverage? I'm continually impressed by the quality of the CBC newsgroup to report national and international matters that matter. If I see one more ABC/CBS/NBC news report confirming that the people on board the Egypt Air flight are STILL all dead, I'll scream. Why do they seem to think we need to know EVERY detail about something like this?
And having watched MTV/VH1, I pitty you. MuchMusic actually plays _music videos_ on a regular basis! Imagine that! Anyway, I'm just passing on my own optinon and a little bit of experience. If I wanted to really go hammer and tongs at the whole US-Canadian situation, I'd be here all day.
Yes, we're kinda quiet, but you'd be supprised just what the average Canadian thinks about America. Yeah Canadian TV!
Re:SHVA (Score:1)
I'd like to believe that, too, but we should never underestimate the power of stupidity. If only we could harness it, we'd have an incredible free energy source!
Cool (Score:1)
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Belgium HyperBanner
http://belgium.hyperbanner.net
Monday update: iCraveTV must cease and desist @5pm (Score:1)
National Post general story [nationalpost.com]
NFL tells iCraveTV to back off [nationalpost.com]
Internet's great (Score:2)
Excuse me my sarcasm. It's just that inspite that the bandwith is growing, the connections are getting slower - at least where I work. Getting short, simple pages from US lasts longer and longer. It's the same phenomenon that makes each new version of Windows slower in spite of more powerfull computers. Quality does not improve: only the number of gadgets. I'd rather see quick loading of a page without even pictures than a java-live-video-audio-whatever-overloaded page which takes two hours to load.
When I think about it... it's like with buying a new back-pack. You had one which had 60 liters, and it was too small. Then you buy one with 100 liters, and it's still too small - but much heavier then the first one. The same goes for cars. And apartments. And benches in a lab. And money. Woah, I think it's a hardwired feature! I wouldn't be amazed if they found it on the 22 chromosome...
Regards,
January
P.S. It's not a flame. It's a joke.
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
Great quote from the article (Score:1)
Bwahaha! Too bad the proceedings that determine whether US companies can do the same thing aren't jury trials; I figure this one quote would go a long way towards getting approval passed.
Deosyne
Direct RealVideo Stream Access (Score:3)
NBC [icravetv.com]
NewVR [icravetv.com]
CBC [icravetv.com]
Global [icravetv.com]
ABC [icravetv.com]
CTV [icravetv.com]
OnTV [icravetv.com]
PBS [icravetv.com]
TVO [icravetv.com]
SRC [icravetv.com]
CTS [icravetv.com]
CFMT [icravetv.com]
WB [icravetv.com]
CITY [icravetv.com]
I must say that watching people argue on some crazy talk show in French is rather humorous.
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
Is it just me... (Score:1)
Just an observation
Seriously, though, I tried this out, and it's pretty cool. Low-quality video, but what do you expect from RealVideo? Obviously it's no competition for "real" TV yet, but it's kinda nice to be able to run on a machine that doesn't have a TV card, but does have a cable modem.
I've been connected for about 20 min now without a hiccup - then again, it's not 8am EST yet either...the real test will be to see how it runs from the flaky LAN at work.
I'd much rather have a TV card, or even better a TV within viewing distance of the comp - but this is pretty cool nonetheless.
...and they thought C-Band was a problem! (Score:1)
What? No YTV!! (Score:1)
Mark
Not the end but the start! (Score:1)
It's time to fork the internet (Score:1)
This junk should be seperated. A couple of years ago people got upset by the first streaming video's, like Iguana TV. Is anyone else still outraged? The average US house has a TV blaring in the conner that no one really watches. People just have it to keep themselvs company. I don't want that kind of junk slowing down legitimate content and hope it can be kept off.
Re:SHVA (Score:1)
Re:SHVA (Score:1)
I think you're missing the point that this company is Canadian, not from the USA. The US congress has no say in the matter.
Irony (Score:1)
I get internet through cable.
I then get TV through internet at a much lower quality.
Therefore I get TV the normal way through cable, but at a much lower quality.
Also, this way it can never match the quality of normal TV because it is using less of the cable from further away, in a stranger way.
Also, what is with that WebTV? Do people get internet through cable on their TVs?
"I ran a virus check on my computer and it removed Windows"
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
Not that I care; I'm a Rochestarian now. =)
Powers&8^]
CC (Score:1)
"If a packet hits a pocket on a socket on a port
And the bus is interrupted and the interrupts not caught
Than the socket packet pocket has an error to report"
Traditional programmer's nursery rhyme
Canadian TV has 2 minutes *less* commercials (Score:1)
VCRs (Score:1)
" Computers have really changed the world,
In the past people would tar and feather
Now they tar and zip "
Nifty at work (Score:1)
Unfortunately, daytime TV pretty much sucks no matter where you watch it (unless you are a fan of children's programming or those trashy talk shows)! Actually, now that I think about it, that is probably a Good Thing - I don't really need another distraction during my work day!
YS
SHVA (Score:2)
For those of you who don't own sat dishes, here's the deal in brief: In the Good Old Days, the owner of a C-Band dish (big dish, not the little mini dishes like Primestar) could subscribe to stations like the Denver 5, and receive NBC/CBS/ABC via sat. Nice clean picture, the best you're going to get via NTSC. Also, if you lived in a time zone other than the origionating station, you gained another chance to watch your favorite show.
Then the cable cabal and the networks banded together, and managed to push the Satellite Home Viewers Act through. Now, if you are in what the FCC calls the "Grade B contour" (read: crappy, ghost-ridden image 80% of the time, nothing 20% of the time) of a local station, you are forbidden by law to receive network programming from satellite unless your local station provides you with a wavier. Yeah, and Mr. Gates will let vendors install Linux next to Win-98.
Given this, I wonder how long the networks will allow Webcasting to go on before they push for an amendment to the SHVA to cover this.
Just like Microsoft and NSI, the networks don't want to see their monopoly end, and just as assuredly, end it must due to technology.
Re:SHVA (Score:2)
Re:Wow! An area code required??? (Score:1)
Re:Great stuff. (Score:2)
Better yet, it might force them to switch to multicasting, with QoS support. Can you imagine an ISP with -modern- networking facilities?
I'd love it if this spreads to the USA and Europe. Massive network grey-outs, resulting in Big Companies leaning on the ISPs & backbones to supply a decent service for a change, with backup routes, multicasting, RSVP, CBQ, RED and ECN. The luxury!!!
The democratization of production/distribution (Score:3)
Much as we needed the recording industry over the past 50 years to press those damn CDs/Records and distribute them, we're currently relying on the TV studios and networks to make/distribute their products. Also witness the current TV climate: much as the recording industry creates their own hypes and ignores non-conventional artists, the TV (and movie) industry is falling victim of their own success. Their desire to standardize everything and make it 'safe' for (their) ideal targe audience (families with kids, etc) results in a product which excells in conformity and blandness.
Given this, advances in technology which make it possible to distribute (and eventually produce) decent quality TV programs at low costs, will lead to the proliferation of 'independant' studios. With their monopoly on creation/distribution of movies vanishing in internet time, the TV studios will eventually face the same tide the music industry is facing now: We don't really like them, we don't really need them anymore; let's move to a medium we can control and just ignore the studios. Looking at the sad state of the (currently +- 30) TV stations I get via cable, this may just be good
Re:Area Code Required to watch (Score:1)
I think you're missing a few... 613 519 905 416... what'd ya do, skip Ontario?