BBC Opens TV Listings For Remix
ntoll writes "In a continuation of their free software friendly activities the BBC has announced that they want to open up their TV listings to creative developers. They explain, 'Developers and designers are being encouraged to come up with innovative ways of using TV and radio schedules by taking part in a BBC competition. The competition, announced at the Open Tech conference in London, has been organised by the BBC's backstage developer network. Backstage lets people remix the BBC's content to make new applications. We want people to innovate and come up with prototypes to demonstrate new ways of exploring the BBC's TV schedule.'"
Could people PLEASE STOP USING THIS. Seriously, shove it up your blogosphere.
TODO: Something witty here...
All posted in TV Anytime format, even the BBC have wrote a little opensource Java API for it...
Now to hunt down a parser in PHP...
"What do you mean you have no ice? Do you expect me to drink this coffee hot?" - Random Customer, Clerks
Mixing videos and music - ok, that's pretty normal and doesnt take a skilled person to come up with something..
But mixing a TV guide??? A lot more of a challenge.
I guess what they are after is for example something where someone can do better seraching through the guide, or perhaps linking the information within an application.
One such thing could be linking an article or other media where you can refer it to an upcoming show on tv. Eg, you're browsing some website about natural disasters, and have it automatically tell you about an upcoming TV show about floods.
That's about the extent of my creative juices though..
Sparks:Gadget:Beer Maker
For more than just BBC.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/xmltv
I've found that my posts don't format quite right w/o a sig.
Imagine an American media company pursuing this project. That's not even science fiction, it's fantasy.
But what do I expect from my country, whose highest cultural aspirations are inevitably reruns in a British accent? All copyrighted, even patented, of course. While the British have a long enough cultural memory that they've been remixing Shakespeare for a half millennium.
--
make install -not war
Darn it BBC, you're supposed to be stifling creativity like the American television corporations.
Snap into line!
What's so bad about that? I assume anyone who does anything with this is going to know they're not getting paid...
Isn't that what OSS is all about, helping each other for an ego boost^W^W^W the greater good?
C17H21NO4
The BBC would be more likly to use Dirac, being that they came up with it... It's open source and can be used along with Ogg Vorbis ;) Theora looks great and all, but as long as it's in an open source codec I don't care which...
"A truly wise man realizes he knows nothing."
Give a hand, not a hand-out.
I wonder if the BBC would like my idea of linking the listings to torrents of the TV shows :)
I've been using the BBC listings with MythTV for months now. The XMLTV script used to parse the HTML, but the BBC realised serving all the HTML results in greater server load, so they made XML data available.