Archive for the ‘internet access via cable tv network’ Category

Fighting To Save Public Access TV in Tampa

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Once again, John Russell and Mark Adams step up to the plate to defend our ever eroding civil rights.

Hillsborough County taxpayers were contractually promised in return for use of their property to run cable, a voice in the television medium… and that voice is public access television.

Cable subscribers support Public Access television through a monthly fee associated w/ their cable bill. So, what IS THE PROBLEM?

The problem is that Public Access TV and its programs has been a thorn in the sides of many Establishment politicians, through the unfiltered voice that Public Access TV provides.

The false rationale that we just cannot afford Public Access television operating for over 20 years, in such “lean times” because of the Florida Legislature’s Tax Cuts and associated decreased revenue to the county, is pure NONSENSE.

It is purely an ALLOCATION issue. Where the funds are going, and as Rose Ferlita so clearly pointed out in her arguments, the generosity to areas that disproportionately “augment” private business enterprise e.g., sports authority beneficiaries, does not demonstrate a magnitude of benefit to justify the level in increased expenditure and are therefore… inappropriate when other services are being left… HIGH AND DRY!

As Mark Adams details in his presentation, the only decrease is in the rate of increase in revenues to the county. The actual revenues for this year and next year are in nominal terms, HIGHER… NOT LOWER!

See link to County Budget Summary here…

http://www.hillsboroughcounty.org/managementbudget/budgets/adopted/fy0607/publications/budsummary.pdf

Jim Norman gives a circuitous discourse on the value of investing in the recruiting of sports events to Tampa. Comm. Norman uses the investment made by West Palm Beach in his argument which is inappropriate from a number of perspectives. WPB has no professional sports teams, no comparable venues so from a standpoint of desirability is non-competitive w/ Tampa Bay when marketing its assets to nationally recognized sporting events.

A true test would likely be to cut marketing dollars for a year or two and see if there was a dramatic drop off in attracting sporting events of this nature to Tampa in comparison to WPB.

In reality, WPB offers little in the way of competition to Tampa when competing for large, nationally recognized sporting events… given Tampa’s professional sports and college teams, their associated venues, hotel and recreational accommodations. Ferlita trumps Hagen and Norman here…

This vote is purely political, and while I may have gotten the sequence of Commissioner Higgenbotham’s phone call wrong in my address to the Commission,, the character of the discussion leading to the re-vote where Commissioners Higgenbotham and White changed their vote should remain open to further public scrutiny.

While some on our side may have cringed when I called the commissioners to account for their change of heart, please understand that these people are going to do, what they are going to do…

Giving them a pass on their actions, behavior and motivations demonstrated by the “character” of the vote, only emboldens they and their benefactors further, and does not bode well for the future. Considering the “filtering/censoring” currently undertaken at Hillsborough County Public Libraries re:Internet Access to sites such as Youtube, Facebook, Myspace and Equality Florida are examples. These are attacks on 21st Century political speech.

Circumstances call for courage in exposing the tentacles of the Establishment that are in large measure, all around us.

Free Speech was deemed important enough to enshrine in our Constitution, and what defines speech and “The Public Square” have, and will continue to change over time.

It is our responsibility to stand firm against the forces lurking in the shadows, (those who pull the strings!) and call them out into the open whenever possible.

This is one case where the evidence is about as clear as you’ll find it in the public domain.

Let’s hope that the Commissioners will see fit to sanction their own rehabilitation and find some funding to preserve the 21st Century Public Square in Tampa Bay.

Duration : 0:6:20

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Sony Canada Delivers New Touch-Screen HD PC/TV – Video Press Release

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

http://www.sony.ca/view/press_845.htm

TORONTO, Oct. 8, 2009 Sony Canada today unveiled its new touch-enabled, multi-media machine— the VAIO® L Touch HD PC/TV. With the VAIO L Series multi-touch screen, easy access to your PC, HDTV, and DVR— your entire entertainment hub— is readily at your fingertips.

Equipped with a 24-inch (diagonal) WUXGA (1920×1080) widescreen panel, the unit displays high-definition content in Full HD resolution.

The VPC-L114 model features a Blu-ray Disc™ optical drive so you can enjoy high-definition movies. A rewritable BD drive for recording, storing and playing back personal content on high-capacity BD media is also available.

The L Series is the ultimate multi-media hub— its your PC, HDTV, Blu-ray player and DVR in one compact, stylish device, said Puneet Jain, director of marketing with the VAIO business group at Sony of Canada Ltd. And with cutting-edge features such as multi-touch, its ideal for media lovers who appreciate HD performance and cutting-edge technology.

An optional HDMI™ input is available, so in addition to the units built-in HD features you can connect a compatible HD cable box, satellite receiver or PLAYSTATION®3 (all sold separately) via a single cable and enjoy HD entertainment without powering on the PC.

And with built-in DVR capabilities and up to 500GB of storage on the VPC-L114, you can create a personal entertainment library with up to 50 hours of HD television.

It comes pre-loaded with Windows® 7 Home Premium. Leveraging these new operating systems, the L Series is able to offer new functionalities such as a touch screen display enabling you to do anything you could do with a mouse with the touch of a finger.

Launch directly into Sonys own Media Gallery software by pushing the designated VAIO button on the keyboard and create high-quality home movies and slideshows in three simple steps. Import your photos and video, choose a theme and soundtrack, click finish and the software does the rest, generating a professional-looking movie complete with special effects— all by touching the screen.

The unit packs an Intel® Core™ 2 Duo Processor, loads of RAM, and a dedicated NVIDIA® GeForce ® series graphics for graphic-intense gaming and movies.

By utilizing built-in wireless 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi technology and your wireless router (required, sold separately), you can position the model virtually anywhere in your home and access the Internet, email or home network.

The model is ideal for anywhere space is at a premium. It has a mounting capability that allows users to attach a VESA-compatible mount (sold separately) to it and hang it on the wall of your bedroom, kitchen, office or attach to your desk.

When not mounted to the wall, the L Series features an adjustable stand to help you adjust the unit to meet your desired viewing or touch angle or simply to decrease the slant for space-saving. A wireless keyboard, mouse and remote control are included.

The VAIO L Touch HD PC/TV will retail for $1,699. It will be available at www.sonystyle.ca, Sony Style® retail locations, and select retailers around the country starting next month.

About Sony of Canada Ltd.

Established in 1955, Sony of Canada Ltd. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sony Corporation, of Tokyo, Japan, a world leader in High Definition. Sony provides end-to-end solutions through products that include the market-leading Blu-ray Disc™ players, BRAVIA® televisions, Cyber-shot® digital cameras, Handycam® Camcorders, VAIO® computers, broadcast cameras, IPELA security cameras and video conferencing and many more products that deliver the true entertainment experience.

Sony is one of the most comprehensive entertainment companies in the world with a portfolio that includes electronics, music, movies, games and online businesses.

With headquarters in Toronto, sales offices in Vancouver and Montreal and distribution centres in Coquitlam, British Columbia, and Whitby, Ontario, approximately 1,200 employees support a network of more than 500 authorized dealers and 67 Sony Style retail locations across Canada.

Sony Canada is proud to support the communities in which it operates through corporate sponsorships of organizations that include the Make-A-Wish® Canada, the United Way of Canada and Earth Day Canada.

For more information contact:

Candice Hayman
Sony Canada Public Relations
(416) 718-5048
Candice_hayman@sony.ca

Duration : 0:2:21

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What exactly IS IPTV (television over Internet Protocol)?

Friday, January 15th, 2010

There are many misconceptions about IPTV, but Geof Heydon, Director of Innovation and Market Development at Alcatel, is an expert in the IPTV future. In this interview he separates fact from fallacy in the IPTV and “multi-service network” world. For one thing, IPTV is delivered over a separate IP network that is not the Internet. It is not something you can do on the Web today (or even in the future). It is about offering video in all its forms, TV on demand, free-to-air TV and even pay-TV together – and richly imbued with simultaneously available multiple broadband connections, Voice Over IP phone circuits, video conferences and so on. But it will take place on a very different kind of network from those in use in Australia today.

Heydon explains the work to evolve the existing broadband networks towards IPTV, but also the entirely new networks that may be built to succeed the existing HFC cable when the latter wears out. Only new networks will be able to overcome the high “background contention ratios” that prevent today’s networks from delivering the end-to-end performance needed for IPTV. It is that high speed that allows IPTV features such as quick channel changes. ADSL2+ is a major upgrade to the access component of the network and that is one significant requirement of IPTV.

But that’s just a start, says Heydon. You also need the network backbone to be upgraded, and for a small country such as Australia, it is not clear that the market can be allowed to look after itself without a visionary Government ensuring faster networks are implemented via a sensible regime of new incentives to the broadband industry. Heydon talks about the issues that have faced SBC, a telco in the USA that is using IPTV from Alcatel and Microsoft to wage combat against the leaching of triple play cable competition. (The SBC IPTV offering is expected to light up at the end of this year.) Heydon talks about broadband companies in places such as Italy, where FastWEB has many lessons for the Asia Pacific region.

Heydon also talks about the specifics of today’s user experience, with early systems such as the Microsoft Windows Media Centre and the Elgato EyeTV, or the Foxtel IQ PVR, offering the first glimpse of the IPTV benefits, but nowhere near the actual promise of a fully realised IPTV regime. Trickle fed video services on today’s Internet can’t deliver Standard Definition, let alone High Definition channels, with hundreds of such channels being instantly accessible. That requires a lot more network sophistication and a TV-oriented experience, rather than a PC-oriented experience.

And such a unified delivery system also establishes a unified TCP/IP environment so that 3G networks’ video-capable mobile handsets will seamlessly interoperate with the TV world, allowing applications to interoperate across both platforms with video shared and used appropriately on each. That means a unified user identification system, with a dramatic decrease in the number of passwords people will need to remember. It also means a much better capacity for the network to intuit each user’s needs based on its understanding of the user’s personal wants and needs as they assume each “personality” in their broadband life. Notwithstanding the potentially chilling confidentiality issues, one result will be that TV will serve different advertisements to children, as compared with when the parents watch TV later in the evening. It means a game player’s profile in shoot ‘em ups (established during that person’s teen years) will be maintained separately from that player’s more sober business profile during a day in the office.

In the IPTV world, it will also be possible for each device in a consumer’s life to control or access each other device. For example, a parent may use a Personal Digital Assistant while on the road, to transmit a message to the TV screen telling the children it is time for bed.

Heydon describes a metaphor: when water and electricity were installed a century ago, no one anticipated the dishwasher or clothes washing machine. But the way those early utility services, once so separate, eventually converged into new forms so useful that they are almost ubiquitous throughout the developed world, is a signpost to how today’s broadband services are likely to mix and match into new and ubiquitous forms in coming years.

And that thinking raises the vital issue of how entrepreneurs and technology strategists will profit from these changes. Heydon describes some of the new businesses and new products envisaged today, that will forge the profitable broadband value propositions of the next decade.

Duration : 0:37:58

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Simplest Way to Watch Cable TV Through Your Computer

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

http://SatelliteTVforPCelite.org -

The Simplest Way to Watch Cable TV Through Your Computer – When people hear the words, going to watch some TV, they automatically think of sitting on the couch in front of a giant screen television. For years upon years, this was true and the only way to watch your favorite shows. Well, now with computer technology growing and internet streaming becoming faster, watch your favorite episodes of The Office is now readily available from your computer.

Actually, watching TV through computers is increasingly popular as a de facto cable-TV system, and especially among households and individuals who would rather not spend extra for a subscription to cable or satellite. Plus, it has never been easier to do than it is today. All that is required is the right software, an internet connection and a computer. Here is a quick breakdown of how you can watch unlimited cable TV channels on your computer at no charge.

* The first thing you want to do is make sure the computer you plan on using meets all of the minimum requirements to run cable TV without any interruptions of the signal. Typically, your computer will use a DSL Internet connection, Windows XP or Vista and the most recent Internet Explorer or Firefox version.
* Go to a reputable computer shop and buy a good TV tuner card to install into your PC. These can also be found for purchase online. Any similar type of adapter program will also work for your needs. You are going to have a difficult time watching anything in real time without the correct software. You can, however, still watch pre-recorded shows or downloadable programs.
* As youre shopping around for a TV tuner card, youll have two options, either and internal one or an external. An internal tuner card is hooked up directly to your motherboard. An external card is plugged into the computer via a USB port. They both work the same, but you may have a more difficult time installing an internal card. Also, if you own a laptop, an internal card is not a good choice even if the external cards are much more expensive.
* It is a good idea to find out from your cable company if any subscription or software programs are needed before you can access the system’s programming. It is normally completed through special access codes given by the cable company. Another way is through installing software directly from a CD.
* Now that youre all set up with the installation of the TV tuner card and the correct cable subscription, youll need to download a quality media player to your computer in to watch these TV programs. These work much better than the players provided by the website itself. They are much more effective, and providing a more even streaming of video.

ComCastInfo is the premier one stop shop for all of your broadband and cable shopping needs

Duration : 0:3:50

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