Slashback: Revolutionism, Media, Oregon
Sounds and pictures from the same box -- impossible! An anonymous reader writes "The HP Digital Media Receiver ( discussed here before) is available for sale at CompUSA and online. The wired version is $199, and the wireless one is $299.
I've been using it for a little while, and I really like it so far. It took a while for the PC software to start serving, but now its fine. It found all my playlists and digital photos on the first pass, and the network setup worked properly too. I'd like to see higher-resolution photos, but it's a pretty cool way to show the pictures to my less-techie friends.
Also, I installed the PC software on both of my home PCs, and the Receiver automatically finds the music on both! It did have a bunch of duplicates (which made it easy for me to go prune out all my dual mp3s), but it was pretty cool. You can't edit a playlist at the TV set, which is a bit of a bummer, but I use WinAmp on my PC anyway, and that worked fine. I like the interface on the TV a lot (although it's a little dull after a while), and it sorted most of my media properly. Some of my MP3s ended up in weird places, but I guess that's from the ID3 tags?
One other thing - I am pretty sure I read somewhere that the Receiver runs Linux. Did anyone else see this too? The only other thing about it I didn't really like was the lack of a reset button. There is a power button, but it didn't reset the device when I pushed it, so I had to unplug it once.
Anyhow, I'm sure there are going to be a ton more products like this one out there soon, but I definitely prefer this to the Prismiq and the Audiotron. It's a much more intuitive box, although a front-panel LCD would be a really nice add!"
Since the general welfare means you, too. Cooper Stevenson writes "Thanks to all of those who called, wrote, and emailed their Legislators in Oregon, House Bill 2892 will get a hearing as covered by the Oregonian:
'A new bill would make Oregon the first state to take a formal stance against the hefty fees and technological limitations of software produced by large corporations such as Microsoft.''A House committee is scheduled to consider a proposal that promotes "open-source" software, which doesn't charge recurring fees and enables customers to alter the software code, making it more compatible with other programs.'
Global neural links sought. Controlio writes "With the first truly televised war underway, for the first time we have media members armed with sat trucks chasing the folks with the automatic weapons around. Several fixed cameras are mounted around Baghdad, and members of the media from all around the world are sending reports from the field using sat uplinks and video phones. So the question is, those of you with access to a Big Dish, have you found any wild feeds yet? I live in Michigan (U.S.), and have only been able to pinpoint local media backhauls (like Fox's news backhaul to their local affiliates), but nothing from abroad. Anyone out there have any sat and channel information for either the Baghdad cams, foreign news agencies, or best of all, the news feeds from the front line?"
This question is a good followup to a recent question posted as an Ask Slashdot seeking unbiased news about the current war.
mms is a menu system for playback of music and movies. It supports framebuffer/dxr3 and lircd/keyboard.
It's not encrypted or region coded so it's perfectly legal to watch.
Not entirely. As far as I know, AC3 audio and MPEG-2 video are patented in the United States.
Will I retire or break 10K?
They left out that it is for state agencies, not for private companies. The bill is here: House Bill 2892. There have been other slash stories on it as well. And a nice Google Search can get tons of info.
This is a good bill.
Oregon also has some Bad Bills like SB742 which would create terrorists of peace protestors, give them life in prison, and require local law enforcement to monitor "questionable" organizations. Hmm. A nice Google search can net you more opinions on SB742. It is disturbing!
Ogle and xine will play unencrypted DVDs if you are missing libdvdcss. In fact, xine has libdvdread and libdvdnav (and liba52?) in the main build now, so xine is all you need if you're playing libre discs.
There aren't many region free and CSS free discs in the US, but The Man Who Fell to Earth (VALIS) is one.
Revolution OS has been available from Netflix as a single disc since at least Christmas. My parents & sister watched it while visiting & learned more in 86 minutes about the open source movement than I could have told them in three hours.
My mother had to quit a job teaching Windows apps because they crashed so much she was embarrased. She consults on medical billing stuff running on MUMPS & VAXen (i.e. stable), so she was happy to learn that an alternative to Microsoft has some real momentum.
SB742 has died in comittee.
May it rot in Hell.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Actually the MPEG2 codec is patented, so free DVD player software would be illegal in the US unless you paid your $2.50 to the MPEGLA.
Course, we'll never be able to play HDTV on a computer.
Maybe *you* won't, but I've been doing it for over a year now. There are plenty of HDTV/ATSC tuner cards for the PC (windows only drivers so far) and since HDTV is fundamentally just a ~2MB/s mpeg-2 datastream, you don't even need special hardware to play it back.
Most ATI video cards sold over the last 18 months can play back hi-def mpeg2 with minimal effort. Even if you don't have such a card, it only takes about a 2.4GHz P4 or so to do all the decode on the cpu.
Ahem...ladies and gentlemen, may I have your attention please...
I now present, for your listening enjoyment, The Free Software Song!!!
I find that INCREDIBLY hard to believe. Not only has my experience been very positive (and I've got really good ears, and equipment to match), but the double-blind tests conducted have said the same.
Are you sure the problem isn't just that you don't like hearing the high-frequencies, or maybe you're just so accustomed to MP3 that you don't like hearing music without the artifacts?
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
How the heck do you effectively control windows/linux with a remote...
LIRC for Linux. It can control lots of software, including at least one HTPC software project.
It has a windows port too.
There are two alternatives to exchange (maybe 3), Lotus Notes, and Oracle's email server which is supposed to function as a drop in replacement for Exchange. There is also the old HP UNIX email server that was also a drop in replacement for exchange and which last I had heard was picked up by one of the largest users and was going to be worked on and made commercially available again (this was like 9 months ago, haven't looked into it since). Also if you want to put up with Exchange as the email server you can use Ximian Evolution with the exchange connector. None of these are free software, but all of them will run on free platforms and will allow you greater flexibility.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.