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Skype Founders Develop Media Streaming Tech

[RnP]Venom writes "It appears that after selling Skype to Ebay, Skype founders Janus and Niklas haven't been resting on their laurels. As reported by ZDNet, and the International Herald Tribune, they have been hard at work developing a new TV streaming application called Joost. With as little as 6,000 people currently testing the project details are a bit scarce, but if it does remotely as well as their Phone/IM success, it could be a real treat. From the IHT article: 'Joost may eventually try to move onto television sets, but the company said it will initially focus on making it easier and more fun to watch TV on a computer. Similar to the Skype model, Joost users will download free software -- this time to help them browse for channels and clips they're interested in. One of the company's executives, Henrik Werdelin, said in a videotaped interview that Joost aims to keep the quality of television programming, its picture quality and its ease of use, but improve other aspects.'"

3 of 69 comments (clear)

  1. Bandwidth Usage by emil10001 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The following is off the Joost FAQ Page (requires a login ID):

    Joost(TM) is a streaming video application, and so uses a relatively high amount of bandwidth per hour. In one hour of viewing, approximately 320Mb data will be downloaded and 105Mb uploaded, which means that it will exhaust a 1Gb cap in 10 hours. Also, the application continues to run in the background after you close the main window. For this reason, if you pay for your bandwidth usage per megabyte or have your usage capped by your ISP, you should be careful to always exit Joost(TM) client completely when you are finished watching it.
  2. More reasons for Net Admins to curse by Danathar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You think skype uses bandwidth, wait till users using this get on your corporate network and get selected as "super nodes".....

  3. Re:56k Modems? by Duds · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I doubt it'll work on a C64 either.

    Sometimes you just have to accept that the cool new thing MIGHT just need technology from this decade.