Intercontinental Real-Time Surround-Sound Full-Scr...
phrawzty writes "According to CBC, "Researchers, musicians and engineers at McGill University in Montreal, have made I nternet history. They set up the first intercontinental netcast of a live concert in surround sound and full-screen video, Wednesday night." " Thats a whole lotta buzzwords to basically say that we're one step closer to having actual good video over the internet. The freaky part is the long term goal: mimicing environments down to floorboard vibrations to allow musicians to perform together from around the world.
Its amazing how much bandwidth is being thrown around like nothing these days.
First spam, first porn site, that's the stuff people are interested it... by the way , does anyone know these things?
dinosaur comics
even with speed-o-light satellite links a musician in one continent will be out of time with the others....
try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
You might be able to let people watch a performance where all the musicians are sync'd by the "performance coordinator," but if you're piping the sound of a drummer in Montreal to a bass player in LA and a guitarist in Geneva, the noises those two make will NOT be in sync with each other, let alone the keyboardist in Hong Kong. As a collaborative tool for live performances, this ain't gonna work - for studio work, it sounds great, though. One question - is a week of this kind of bandwidth and technology any cheaper than just putting the performers on a 747 and flying them to Mussel Shoals?
I love vegetarians - some of my favorite foods are vegetarians.
Maybe it wont be long before a concert consists of a net broadcast to multiple locations with huge LCD panels spanning the walls, along with a decent surround sound speaker setup.
;>
I could see this working for a symphony type setting, but I dunno about Pantera or anything
Just think, you wouldn't have to worry about booking artists at multiple locations... They could just watch people on the huge 100' x 60' TFT screen as they broadcast from one location =)
"Stop saying 'Don't quote me' because if no one quotes you, you probably haven't said a thing worth saying" -KMFDM
I wonder if we're ever going to reach a point where artists just record a concert once and have it broadcast to venues all over the world, instead of actually travelling.
It might be neat to know that you're partying the same time as everyone else, just like that Molson Canadian contest advertises.
Also, it's not like being at a big concert is all that different from watching on a big screen - you don't exactly touch the artist.
when the rain comes, they run and hide their heads. they might as well be dead.
What's this being transferred as? It's gotta be compressed somehow-is the sound just MP3 quality? And the "full-screen" video-what is the actual size? I'm sure it's just a 320x200 or something that can be expanded. Is this MPEG-2, or ASF, or what? A lot of questions left unanswered...
Colin Winters
did this require? I mean this sounds great and all, but if you have to have a household OC3 to use it, than there isn't a whole lot of practical use for it.
I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
I _knew_ that my battle.net was really slow the other day....Damn bandwidth whores.
-Superb0wl
-Superb0wl
It's not that I'm lazy....it's that I just don't care.
Does this mean that "You've got mail" will become part of live concerts? Can I use my cell phone when I'm "at" the concert? How can I tell if people are actually playing? For all I know it could be a recording. Also, my speakers are not the best for concert quality sound.
and how soon does the floorboard become flexible and wearable?
Do you think Metallica would be open to someone setting the equipment up on stage at their next concert?
The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
For recording I agree that this could be a great thing. Many different artists could get together without having to sync their schedules to be in the same place to record. However, I always thought half of the point of a live concert was to be there. To see the sweat on the singers brow, to be with the other screaming fans. When that person is half way around the world it isn't the same. I suppose there will be a solution for that someday too. VR concerts, where you don't even know your not there. Until then I'd much prefer to see everyone together at the same place.
Kate
_________________________ Visit me at http://pornforcomputers.com
...that considers Hi-fi internet broadcasts to be a worthwhile research project.
:)
And since it's in Canada, tax payer money funded it...
BlackNova Traders
They've been around since Mozilla was a baby. Sending out spam to innocent victims.
If anyone knows how to kill these people, please let me know.
The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
sulli
sulli
RTFJ.
Once this technology matures and becomes available to the masses, i dont think the latency
will be the biggest problem. We will just have greater access to musicians who suck!
"Tension is the great integrity" -- R. Buckminster Fuller
As a Ex-concert violinist and a great music lover of all types, all I can say is it isn't the real thing. Perhaps in the not-so-distant future, when PCs can handle the 100 terabyte/sec downloads something close to the real thing can be apreciated. but there is so much more to alive performance then just audio and sound. I mean CDs have very shitty sound even on very expensive high fidelity equipment compared with going to a live performance, and they want us to be happy with mp3s? I think this will be to agonizing to hear. until you can record a audiovisual concert and play it back locally after touchup and make it seem like you are actually there why try and make it seem that you are actually there 1000 miles away? this is just way to fire ahead of the times
Think of this as a problem similar to the one DJ's face when mixing songs. When you beat match between two records, there has to be a person (DJ) who serves as the conductor between the two. Without the conductor, the music can get out of synch and end up sounding horrible.
Musicians at the various locations will have to play along to a prerecorded version of the music or with a metronome. (Playing along to headphones is common for drummers in the recording studio.) The video could then be synched up at a seperate location by matching the time stamps and then broadcast from there.
While this seems like cheating, synching up the music instantly with no delay and beat-matching will be nearly impossible.
"These are the days that must happen to you." -Walt Whitman
The musicians aren't in different continents. The viewers and the concert are in different continents. All this is is a high-bandwidth pipe from North America to Japan, carrying a high-quality equivalent of a streamed RealVideo concert.
There is no international or inter-continental collaboration going on here.
I'd never collaborate with anyone who didn't vibrate my floorboards. Sadly, that was the most interesting bit of the whole thing. They said nothing about how it was achieved or even had any reaction from those present. Yay crap journalism!
*gel
The depth and clarity they are seeking will eventually be attainable. Software and hardware will eventually reach the level of perfection demanded to have quality that truly rocks. The question is, what will it be used for?
Personally, I can't wait for the day where I am totally emmersed in the internet, with the same feeling as at a big screen movie theatre. It isn't that far away.
--
Bad spellers of the world, untie!
I seem to remember a story right here on /. just a couple of weeks ago laughing at people who fell for a major scam supposedly involving concerts over the net in full-screen video.
Is this another case of technology proving people wrong as soon as their words have been spoken?
insignificant sig
Mix this technology with the recently discovered fact that the speed of light can be broken, and you've got the makings for an experience that, while using the net, doesn't focus around it. That's pretty cool.
Of course, all the typical disclaimers about how the development will take forever should be included here...
Feminism is the wild notion that women are human beings.
Yes, this time, but read the last paragraph again:
That's where lag becomes a problem. This broadcast is nothing terribly special - just a higher quality than previous broadcasts.
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$x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
I mean, hypothetically, technology could progress to the point where we could do any number of things remotely... Screwing, having dinner, going to the movies (our boy Gates already does this), etc. I think the group in Japan got the shaft-- they got to look at a damn monitor. If even that.
I suppose it has applications where a true collaboration is impossible, but a concert? I wouldn't be impressed.
*gel
Moderators dilemma: there is no 'Spammer (-5)' choice for the above post!
I don't believe anyone is surprised by this.
When it comes to live broadcasting the quality is as high the connection speed allows.
Unless we are talking about a new technology that makes this possible over old modems or something it's just a sign that the connections get faster in general.
In other words: Not "Internet history".
(IMHO)
So what we have is a souped-up streamed live concert broadcast now, with a roomful of professors who think it'd be really cool to collaborate across the globe, despite the havoc played by any possible lag.
Streaming video has been done before.
Internet-based collaborative concerts have been done before, but haven't succeeded in any significant way.
My point is that this story consists of a boring implementation of streaming Audio/Video, along with the half-baked musings of some professors about an inherently flawed "international internet concert" theory that has already been tried, but has failed.
There are many people who have ideas about what they'd like the internet to do, but I don't really think most of them are newsworthy until they come up with something concrete. And more impressive than streaming a concert (even with great sound and video) to Japan.
Also, a person by the name of Wieslaw Woszczyk seems to be involved in the project, and has done a lot of research on various aspects of sound recording, sound mixing, especially involving the Internet 2.
Couldn't find any specifics on the technology other than it uses Dolby 5.1 digital sound, and a couple places elude to the fact that it's the same system used in digital movie (as in the big white screen) playback.
The project in question is the AES project, not the SRE project which I originally linked to.
They tell us to go make money by concerts, but no!! Even concerts can be pirated, down to the last squeaky floorboard. What's next? Smelly unshaved armpits of screaming fans? What cannot be digitized? How shall we artistes of the world make our dough now?
I run the soundboard at our church. One day I
mic'ed the drumset so we could record to tape.
The sound was run through the house mains. The
drummer immediately started to complain that the sound was "mushy", particularly on the cymbals. The delay was basically through a 50ft mic cable, a 16 channel mixer, builtin amp, 50ft speaker cables, speakers and about 5ft of air. Yet that was enough for him to complain about.
I can't see how anyone will be able to get latency out of a set-up that is two-way. While you can buffer and smooth out the recording from site A at over at site B, you could not also record at site B and play it in synch with what is occurring at A.
You could possibly cause both playbacks to occur simultaneously (as measured by some "global" clock), but then *both* playbacks would not be in synch with what the musicians are doing.
You can ask how much latency is "important". My emperical sample suggests that a couple hundred feet at electrical speeds is too much.
Darrin
I'm wondering why no one else has pointed this out. I also got the impression that they were using Internet2.
'Because McGill has access to a high-speed research Internet available to relatively few organizations, the University's researchers can experiment with the possibilities available with "a huge, wide pipe." '
What they don't seem to be taking into account is that as soon as I2 goes public, it will be saturated with a billion people with broadband access downloading pr0n and the latest decrypted DVD release. At that point their 'huge wide pipe' will be little better off than todays internet.
Other than that, it's pretty cool. I don't think it will work to have musicians at different parts of the world [due to lag, can't interact with the others] but for broadcast of 'localized' events it will be good.
Ender
Nothing to see here
So, are you saying that they "made history" because they could transmit video/audio in real time because they have a huge, wide pipe?
...Because fans will always want to go to the live show - the place where 90% of musicians actually make their money! Give the songs away as mp3 - offer for sale albums to the hardcore fans, sell merchandise and go on tour. Cut out the wasteful and sanitizing Record Companies for good.
e x p e c t d e l a y . c o m
Concerts are a great experience; much more than just viewing the performers and listening to the music. Imagine your favorite group, with each member in a different corner of the world. Imagine watching it on your home theatre system. Once you got past the novelty of the whole thing, do you really think it would be nearly as enjoyable as a live show?
All it seems like we're talking about here is a sort of HD-MTV. Who cares? Give me a real concert, with real performers interacting with the crowd. Give me a show at a site packed with a crowd who is as into the music as I am. Give me the onstage interplay between the musicians, for god's sake.
The discussion here should be about the amount of bandwidth and audio/video compression. That's the interesting and impressive thing. It'd be more interesting than discussing that a researcher's pipe dream is a pipe dream. (Or maybe it's just me. :-)
The concept is very damn cool.
I'm the band Defenestration of Vish*, and we just lost Nathan, a great guitarist who is passionate about music and is an all-around cool guy. He is now in China (the Communist part) and the band is struggling on without him. It has been a traumatic experience for all.
Hopefully, in the future, technology can prevent people from going through such a separation.
*You haven't heard of us [yet :]
Given that even light takes a while to get across an ocean, not to mention the time it takes to process and pass on data at routers, there likely won't be any *serious* Internet-based collaborative compositions anytime soon.
The musicians are all in one spot. Broadcast to a location elsewhere in the world. Cripes.
Since Babelfish doesn't yet have a Hype-eeze to English converter up and running yet, I will translate it directly:
Translation: We've done something not very remarkable on the Internet. Any company that tries to use this as a business model will be history.
Translation: We've managed to broadcast a concert in a screen that doesn't look crappy in a tiny 1 1/2" by 2 1/2" box on your PC; it looks crappy (with tons of compression artifacts) on screen the size of your TV!
Translation: The freaky part is that they are so clueless that they can't think of any application of Video over IP except for a physically impossible, economically impractible, and totally useless excercise of trying to get musicians on different contenents to overcome variable lag to play together.... badly.
I work in the real TV/video industry. Video Over Ip is a technology looking for a way to bilk investors and then die.
As with any new technology, the obvious uses are, well ... obvious. :-)
;)
I'm sure that most guys would agree that having virtual strippers in-house, on-demand would be, well, quite something. Eh?
He was refering to Hitler's rallies, not modern Nuremberg.
Information wants to be anthropomorphized.