Just to clarify, Prodigem comes with a torrent feed for each user. So once all your enclosures have been converted to.torrents, you can provide people with your new feed. For example, http://www.prodigem.com/torrents/rss/pep_delicious .xml
Prodigem is a service I've been running since December that allows you to upload content and have my server as a permaseed. It's currently free. Hmm, I submitted it as a slashdot story a couple weeks ago and it got rejected. Check it out regardless. The tracker is chock-full of creative commons goodness.
My new content hosting webservice for Creative Commons licensed content. Upload content, click a button and it not only makes a torrent, but my server starts seeding it.
torrentocracy.com/prodigem
Check out Torrentocracy for a way to download bit torrented content from RSS feeds straight to your TV. As far as content, that's the major stumbling block. There needs to be more people willing to license under the Creative Commons. Per that, I'm also currently hosting interviews from Robert Greenwald's last two movies, Outfoxed and Uncovered.
I've lived in Cincinnati, Columbus and now Austin, all of which are TW fiefdoms. It seems to me that Austin gets everything first as a test market but then TW shafts them by leaving them with the demo stuff. Cincy/Columbus's version of digital cable is much better/clearer/smarter than Austin's and I'd bet other cities have better quality than those. I wonder if the DVR units are the same, considering Austin got these back in February.
Though, I do hear we're getting a major update in Oct.
Is a robot hall of fame really necessary? What's next, a hall of fame for hall's of fame? I'd definitely put the baseball hall of fame in that hall of fame. I don't think the robots would make it, though.
I fail to understand how IBM continually can just think about penguins and get such great press. Especially when Dell has already certified all of their appropriate hardware on RH Advanced Server.
Just to clarify, Prodigem comes with a torrent feed for each user. So once all your enclosures have been converted to .torrents, you can provide people with your new feed. For example, http://www.prodigem.com/torrents/rss/pep_delicious .xml
If they came out with that headline tomorrow, it would be 5 years late! Dell's been offering Red Hat pre-installed on all servers since 2000.
Make money from Bit Torrent?... hmmm, Prodigem. Why slashdot hasn't picked up on our new ability to sell access to torrents baffles me.
Prodigem is a service I've been running since December that allows you to upload content and have my server as a permaseed. It's currently free. Hmm, I submitted it as a slashdot story a couple weeks ago and it got rejected. Check it out regardless. The tracker is chock-full of creative commons goodness.
My new content hosting webservice for Creative Commons licensed content. Upload content, click a button and it not only makes a torrent, but my server starts seeding it. torrentocracy.com/prodigem
Check out Torrentocracy for a way to download bit torrented content from RSS feeds straight to your TV. As far as content, that's the major stumbling block. There needs to be more people willing to license under the Creative Commons. Per that, I'm also currently hosting interviews from Robert Greenwald's last two movies, Outfoxed and Uncovered.
Not sure if you'll ever see this, but the answer is at http://www.torrentocracy.com/blog/archives/2004/06 /installation_go_1.shtml
I've been unslashdotted (at least for now).
Torrentocracy is committed to only linking to legal torrents.
in the meantime, you can see a screenshot at http://freshmeat.net/projects/torrentocracy
i'd been slashdotted once before and didnt go down. hopefully i can this back up pronto...
GO BUCKEYES
(ann arbor is a black hole)
thanks
for the record, Gore said that he "created" the internet,
as in the context of he voted for the bill which funded the creation of the internet.
I've lived in Cincinnati, Columbus and now Austin, all of which are TW fiefdoms. It seems to me that Austin gets everything first as a test market but then TW shafts them by leaving them with the demo stuff. Cincy/Columbus's version of digital cable is much better/clearer/smarter than Austin's and I'd bet other cities have better quality than those. I wonder if the DVR units are the same, considering Austin got these back in February.
Though, I do hear we're getting a major update in Oct.
Is a robot hall of fame really necessary? What's next, a hall of fame for hall's of fame? I'd definitely put the baseball hall of fame in that hall of fame. I don't think the robots would make it, though.
enjoying replying to myself, but here's my blog entry about the same thing
http://www.lerhaupt.com/foo/archives/000047.html
He left out a feature in his review: 9 includes devlabel.
www.lerhaupt.com/linux.html
www.dell.com/linux
I fail to understand how IBM continually can just think about penguins and get such great press. Especially when Dell has already certified all of their appropriate hardware on RH Advanced Server.