1. High latency MAKES NO DIFFERENCE. Jitter makes the difference, and low speed connections have no more or less jitter.
2. Things like hockey are only broadcast in their home regions(read basically the city they play in) and jumptv will be used to get around this. That is one obvious use.
"My first breakthrough was toreplace[SIC] the existing operating system, Windows, with a more stable and versatile language. I chose Linux, a IBM form of the operating system UNIX, because of its superior networking characteristics, its reliability, and its ease of programming."
I hate to say this, but I would seriously consider http://www.firstclass.com/casestudies/Business/ with some sort of anti-spam http://www.barracudanetworks.com/ns/?L=en infront of it.
The only serious problems I have with it:
-lack of true RIM support
-hard to find quality administrators
But it has all the functionality you could possibly need and it Just Works.
I have a friend in Japan who was telling me about this product. Land line quality phones and a data connection over the same wireless connection!!
7 megs/second!!!
http://www.somanetworks.com, I've heard they are trialing a few places in the US and maybe Canada. IIt would be pretty nice to get away from Bell.
1. High latency MAKES NO DIFFERENCE. Jitter makes the difference, and low speed connections have no more or less jitter. 2. Things like hockey are only broadcast in their home regions(read basically the city they play in) and jumptv will be used to get around this. That is one obvious use.
from http://www.irlp.net/03-background/body.html
"My first breakthrough was toreplace[SIC] the existing operating system, Windows, with a more stable and versatile language. I chose Linux, a IBM form of the operating system UNIX, because of its superior networking characteristics, its reliability, and its ease of programming."