Posts Tagged ‘technology’

stream direct tv

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

*** http://starturl.com/stream_direct_tv ***
Watch Over 3500 Hd Quality Channels Directly On Your Pc.
Order The Live Tv Package & You’ll Also Get A Free Digital Video Recorder!

Our revolutionary software will allow you to watch over 4500
Digital HD channels via optimized streaming technology.
You will have full and constant access to all the aforementioned channels from any location on the globe!

Have all this and more, for half the cost of a single month of cable service! In addition, you wont need any dishes or boxes to activate our service.
All you need is our software a computer and an internet connection.
Think of what we are offering you.
Full, constant, High-Definition access to over 4500 of the worlds greatest networks and programming, All you need to do is pay a small, one-time only fee and install the software we provide
and you will be enjoying your favorite shows for decades to come!

Duration : 0:2:11

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Amateur Radio SSTV (Slow Scan TV)

Monday, March 8th, 2010

http://www.kernowradio.info

Slow Scan TV using my Yaesu FT-847 on 14.230Mhz (20 Metre Band)

Although we can now send pictures via e-mail,
What Fun it is to send and receive them via Radio with the Only thing between you and the other person is the Air we breath!! :-)

SSTV is a method of Sending and Receiving Pictures via Radio.

The Pictures I received was from a Radio Amateur in Spain Call sign EA5FO,
He was making a general CQ call for another Amateur to contact him and exchange pictures.

The Pc is used to decode the signal and display the picture in the software,
Slow Scan software used was MMSSTV.

All I used for this was my Pc mic that I put on top of my Radio speaker and my Pc with the MMSSTV Software and of course my Yaesu FT-847 :-)

My Method of using SSTV is not the Norm!
You would normaly have an Interface between the Radio and the PC, Not using a Pc mic on top of the Radio speaker as I did :-)

MMSSTV http://mmhamsoft.amateur-radio.ca/

Info http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slow-scan_television

Duration : 0:4:27

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The Gadget Show Web TV – Episode 1: Archos and TV on PC

Friday, February 5th, 2010

In this episode John gets an exclusive look at Archos’ new Internet Media Tablet and Dionne shows us how to watch TV on your computers.

Duration : 0:8:25

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FREE Live Webcast Software – USTREAM.tv – Hot For Video.com

Friday, February 5th, 2010

http://www.HotForVideo.com

Ustream.tv is a FREE live streaming webcast software server for broadcasting yourself for business, personal, or just plain fun.

Compared to all other free services, Justin.TV and Mogulus, it is the best in terms of professional layout and business feel.

This technology cost in excess of $25,000 per shoot just a year ago, now can be accomplished absolutely free!

To find out more about how to use this technology, go to Hot For Video.com!

This software can be used for Direct sales, online dating, long distance dating, streaming TV shows, your own internet broadcast, internet marketing, video seminars and more!!

http://twitter.com/HotForVideo

http://myspace.com/HotForVideo

http://youtube.com/HotForVideo

Hot For Video.com – Making Video HOT!

Duration : 0:3:53

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TV Tuner Headaches

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Last part of my Christmas vlog :p Sort of a summary of the problems I’ve been having with the Sony Handycam my mother bought for herself for Christmas, as of yet unresolved. Also issues with the integrated TV tuner that my hp media center pc came with, but no software to go with the TV tuner, aaargh. The most boring video of the four to be sure, but if you know anything about tv tuners and whatnot, I’d appreciate your help :D

Duration : 0:3:56

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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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