Community Wifi Feeds Community Cable in NYC
akb writes "Manhattan Neighborhood Network has embarked on a project to combine two community networking communities in NYC, the nascent community wifi network on that isle with public access cable TV. The project has successfully conducted a test which involved cablecasting an mpeg4 video stream being transported by the nycwireless.net wireless node in Bryant Park."
OpenFox's newest reality show...
one two three four five ?!! That's the combination on my luggage!
The newest fad: Warbroadcasting.
Don't believe me ... I'll send you a tape of the "Hallelujia" woman. She sits there sings something in Spanglish ... then screams "Hallelujia" at the top of her lungs, does a chirpy scream ... turns on the guitar distortion ... rocks out to something that resembles a beeat ... and then declares her love to the baby jesus, not the later years of course.
I don't know if she's doing like story reviews "Obviously baby jesus was more likeable than dying on the cross jesus" ...
Obviously going off topic here, but who gives a shit? I guess if you don't like it don't read it, but I read it and I just don't see any reason why this gets a spot on slashdot. Compressing a movie to mpeg-4 than transfering it over "wireless" internet has been done before on many occassions.
If you wanted to impress me, you would have used pigeon carcasses and shoestrings.
Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
i wonder if all this community activity will turn into a movement that actually makes all those little subnetworks (wifi and cable connected) into kind of a sub-net culture that will be independend of the big, commercial internet.
will they be controlled by the world's governments soon? will corporations try to switch them off?
anyway this is exciting. i think with dmca-legislations hanging over heads of the people in different countries all over the world, this is kind of a light in the darkness.
am i too naive?
We are all individualists!
When you steal something, it is no longer available to whoever you stole it from. Therefore, this is not theft.
Nice troll, though.
I think ALL cable systems should be REQUIRED to have a local access channel. It could be a source of revenue for the cable stations, you actually have to buy air time. (Like Wayne's World) - New York and California shouldn't get all the fun. I bet that cooking shows, computer shows, and craft shows would flourish in local markets and help with our cable bills at the same time.
I, for one, would love to an Apple Computer / Linux Help show.
Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
fucking bravo, those fucks would say they are "civilised people/society" while watching the homeless people dig in the shit to eat
Perhaps someday soon this will be practical - but for now, WiFi has too many disdvantages:
1) Bandwidth - even on the newer 54Mbps feed will quickly become saturated
2) QoS is still a pipe dream
3) Microwave ovens - still a predominant feature of many people's homes.
And with HDTV coming out - will we really want to be stuck with 320x200 doubled at 15fps for our TV? Might be a novelty or convenient when you want to watch something important when you're away from home - but seems to me that until WiFi becomes more hardwire-ish, this is a project best left for the novelty that it is. Continue to wokr on giving free ubiquitous wifi on a grand scale (i.e. bigger than just NYC)....
some peopel dont even understand the word "community"
Won't they have to pay royalties to Acacia for the bogus "transmit compressed video over (insert any form of transmission here)" patent? The claim doesn't even seem to describe any actual invention!
Indeed, if you paint such a black-and-white picture your point is clear. The reality is often in many shades of grey. Why do you assume that only "bourgeois pseudo intellectuals" would benefit from this? Isn't it possible that this movement will grow to the point that it will one day make it possible for someone poor enough to own a hand-me-down computer but cannot affort monthly access charges to be able to get online and get some of the same advantages in knowledge as those SoHo poseurs?
"Feed people, not networks," you say. Certainly. But why can't you do both?
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This is just a netcam broadcasted over CATV, the quality is 1/2 as good as a standard CATV feed too. I can see the advantages of this from a cost perspective, but personally I think the quality of community access is bad to begin with, not to mention the shows actually broadcasted.
From the article:
Funny, this doesn't seem to indicate they are trying to create a "pirate" ring. Sounds more like they are trying to make it easier for anyone to create and distribute original content.
Maybe you are just a lying slanderer who wants to steal the rights of everyone else and give yourself a monopoly on the entertainment market so you can steal everyone's money through your fraud and deceit. Maybe you should be in jail, thief.
Anyone else catch this on public access in Austin, TX? I don't remember the actual title, but that was the content: leather, spankings and dumplings.
Disturbing and entertaining at the same time!
Tell them to feed themselves.
What, do you need your art spoon-fed to you? what you described seems no more or less valuable than Friends or Fear Factor.
bah! cablecasting!
you wanna be a media-consumer, that's fine... but there will be commercials involved.
I suggest you download something like andromeda and stream your own content to yourself!
It can stream video and audio files that you have to any PC on your LAN. My setup is that I have a 300GB server in my bedroom which has TV-out. This is hooked up to a cheap wireless audio/video transmitter (2Ghz)(available at x10.com) which sends the signal clearly to my TV & Surround system in the living room. Even the crappiest DivX looks unbelievably crisp at TV resolution!
geeks are cats who dig a certain kind of cool
"Some rich kids produced some TV shows instead of working. They did a WiFi broadcast of it in Bryant Park. Meanwhile, no guests at the Bryant Park Hotel could be reached for comment, although a burly man wearing all black was overheard saying "can I see your pass?". Everyone else near Bryant Park was either homeless, not interested or a pigeon."
When there's a WiFi network in Washington Heights, Inwood and the "other" parts of Manhattan, let me know so I can tune in.
There actually is a difference between New York public access and say, Kansas City public access. The public consists of a good seven+ million, many of which came here with artistic ambitions. So the quality of programming, IMHO actually surpasses glossy network television "let the people be the content" shows of the moment. (*Not that there isn't a whole boatload of utter garbage as well, but...diamonds in the rough)
Also, Bryant Park is in the middle of the business district. The only people who live in/near are homeless people, not wealthy urbanites.
Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
Indeed. You'd never use WiFi as a multichannel solution, for the reasons you describe.
The article was about doing one local channel. Assuming you got multicast working correctly (no idea what the story with WiFi and multicasting is), multiple viewers can watch the same packets to watch the same stream. This would be more like a local pirate radio solution for video.
As for data rates, I think with the leading codecs today, you could do "good enough" quality (as good as digital cable) for TV display at about 1 Mbps, maybe a little less with some content.
My video compression blog
You are rocketing back to the past.
Why not just require cable companies to supply symetric internet access and static IPs? They could make money selling internet access that way and anyone could provide any content they felt like, you know like the peer network the internet was supposed to be! They use public land for their silly cables, they have an obligation, no?
Oh wait, that futre was killed by greedy shit heads. Dreams never die. Those that stand in the way tend to be trampled.
Golly gee, I'm on TV! Not. Thanks Cox.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
Yep, the problem with convergance is that the home electronics start becoming more like computers as well as the computers becoming more like home electronics. A couple of years ago, I got a Dish Network box that ran a version of WinCE, and even had Doom installed (nearly impossible to play with a remote...). Which was all well and good, except that the box would crash randomly, need to download upgrades regularly, and the HD was loud, and eventually failed! The non-MS replacement unit is still working fine, but still.
Meanwhile, all the other electronics just keep on trucking, NEVER doing anything weird. I'm sure I'll still be using my five year old Pioneer amp for years to come, although it'll be depricated from the home theater soon (it only routes S-Video).
A 50-year old TV can watch a broadcast today, and today's TV could have watched a broadcast of 50 years ago. As convergance hits, that cycle will probably drop to 5 years, maybe less.
But, of course, it'll be nice to get 20 channels into the bandwidth where once we could have one.
My video compression blog
I have to agree with all the posts about the high quality of NYC public access. I don't watch much television but I make a point of watching some of MNN's broadcasts. They have four channels, and are included in the "No Antenna" package which the cable providers are forced to give every home with a wire installed.
My mind is often blown by the things I see. One guy was selling videos of his Asian sex tour, and the footage was both fascinating and disturbing. Try seeing that in Cleveland!
One of the best shows on television is "Subway Q&A", by the Metro Channel (a subsidiary of New York Magazine). A comedian named Rich Collier recruits people off the subways to participate in some ridiculous project, in between segments of people being asked fascinating questions. As simple as it sounds, this show makes me laugh harder than any sitcom currently airing, and simultaneously reaffirms my faith in humanity.
It would be better if it were the otherway around. The internet already liberates Computers, you can get any kind of information from millions of sources on the internet.
What would be cool (imho) if Television and Radio were "broadcast" as IP-based 'channels'.
If we could build a AP that was both a Broadcast Node (if you chose to create a stream) AND a 'listening node' (so you could tune-in digital TV & Radio' AND a Repeater Node (so you could extend the service range of others who are "Broadcasting".
This kind of Radio/Television liberation could broadcast all kinds of Independant tv, 'pirate tv', etc etc etc , open up a radio/television kind of "internet" where anything/anyone can participate.
Does this make much sense?
When there's a WiFi network in Washington Heights, Inwood and the "other" parts of Manhattan, let me know so I can tune in.
Yeah! Now there's a community that's underserved! But, of course, the WiFi network is a grassroots network. It only expands when someone new decides to build a node.
So i guess the real question is: why haven't you done anything to build a node in your neighborhood yet?
When you have something that you have not paid for, and the government has laws stating that you're supposed to pay for it, then you're breaking the law.
The judge will laugh at you when you say it's not theft.
I'm not trying to feed the troll, but too many people around here think that they can do whatever they want to in the information/digital world, as long as they don't physically steal some tangible object from somebody.
Insightful: 76, Off-Topic: 379, Flamebait: 24, Funny: 152, Interesting: 201, Underrated: 55, Troll: 9, Total: 896
"Not theft" doesn't (or at least shouldn't) imply "not illegal".
I think the point was that theft is the wrong term to apply. There's far more accurate, meaningful language to describe illegal use of IP, but the simpler terms "theft" and "steal" are used to evoke emotional response. For example, in the troll at the top of this thread.
I can't wait for some "Baby, let me bang your box" in Bryant Park!!!
How many times can you say community in once sentance and still make sense?
--Should work--
Competitive fury is not always anger. It is the true missionary's courage
and zeal in facing the possibility that one's best may not be enough.
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