Peer-to-Peer Internet Television
Lanaki writes "A non-profit based in Austin, TX is merging the free software and Copyleft communities through a new internet TV station: ACTLab TV. They are streaming Creative Commons, Copyleft, public domain content, and original videos using Alluvium software and their own media player. It's all open source, encouraging others to make their own audio and video streams. Their website was released this week and the player and demo stream will go public next week."
Wow, it's like public-access cable TV, only world-wide. Whoopee.
Have you read my blog lately?
Why do they feel the need to surround their text with agressivly flashing graphics?
I couldn't get past the first paragraph before I'd had enough of this. Call me back when they offer a non-stroboscopic version of their content.
You can't take the sky from me...
I was wondering when someone was going to try and organize Creative Commons stuff into a central TV station that people can go to.
/. announcement. If there is no media or software to download yet they might not be slashdotted.
The name isn't very good. ACTLab doesn't feel like a name for a place to go for media... but that's ok.
Good timing on the
And suddenly we have a world where people can only watch the first half of a show because all the seeds drop off once the show is finished and never upload the last 30 sec to anyone.
No thanks, I'd rather have the current setup where the most rare piece is the highest priority and simply "Tivo" the shows.
Also, a movie isn't automatically better because it's independent. IMO, the only advantage indie films have is they're not focus tested to death so they often aren't so formulaic. The ratio of good to bad movies is about the same for indies and major studio releases. I'd say 90-95% of all movie releases can go straight in the garbage, regardless of what entity actually produced the movie (and I'm someone who loves movies).
4mbit down, 384kbps up... typical Comcast cable modem.
;)
1.5mbit down, 128-384kbps up.. typical SBC DSL line.
*Downloading* a video blog might not be too much of a hassle, but *uploading* one is going to turn a lot of people off from it.
Let's not forget all of the poor saps that are still on dialup.