Updated: 9/7/02; 3:22:40 PM.
News Items
A collection of news items I've found interesting.
        

Friday, May 10, 2002

The Entertainment Server.

"In short, a battle for control of your living room is about to be waged by consumer electronics makers, developers of personal-computer hardware and software, and set-top-box designers that sell directly to cable and satellite providers. Now that home networking is a reality (albeit a tricky one), companies are building devices that not only store or connect to a range of entertainment choices but also communicate with one another to distribute those choices throughout the home....

Still, traditional arguments against convergence do not necessarily pertain. If you wanted to build a digital camcorder that also takes high-quality still images, you would have to install two image-capturing devices. But adding music-jukebox capability to a digital video recorder, or enabling DVD playback on a game console that already uses a DVD-ROM drive, is simply a software update. By this fall, TiVo customers will have the option of activating a RealOne media player, already a common feature on PC's. While the precise configuration has yet to be announced, the TiVo application is likely to provide not only streaming audio and video from the Internet, but also the ability to store and play hours of music directly from the TiVo's drive....

In the next couple of years, Sony plans to introduce a similar product, the Personal Network Home Storage device. A concept product demonstrated last fall had a capacity of one terabyte, or 1,000 gigabytes, which means it could hold either 450 hours of DVD-quality movies, 1,500 CD's or 600,000 high-resolution photographs. Presumably that sort of box would sit in the corner of the room or in the basement (one nickname for entertainment servers is "media furnace"). Sony also plans to offer networking in most of its consumer products, so that the content in your media furnace could be vented not only through TV's and audio receivers but also through clock radios and MiniDisc players.

The reason all this is not yet on the market is that manufacturers are still searching for answers to the big questions of simple interoperability." [NY Times Technology]

Emphasis above is mine, mainly because that's the part that made me drool. That's as someone who consumes as much media as I possibly can. Laugh if you want, but my friends will tell you that I could probably fill a terabyte pretty quickly. Hopefully media companies will realize that and take John Robb's advice to help me fill that terabyte, rather than restrict what I consume to the point where it's not worth it anymore.

Putting on my librarian hat causes me no end of concern in the above scenario. When digital content is being sold directly through digital pipelines to consumers, I hope there are ways for libraries to still circulate it. If the current mindset in the entertainment industry prevails and there are no exceptions for libraries to lend digital files, then we will slowly lose our relevance and even our mission to serve our patrons because we can't provide information or entertainment outside of our four walls. That's the exact opposite of what I advocate libraries do - shift their services into their users' worlds.

[The Shifted Librarian]
6:24:58 PM    comment []

There's a lot more RSS news today, starting with two new feeds to which I've subscribed. Lori and Teri are now using the Voidstar RSSify service to provide feeds for The Handheld Librarian and It's All About Books! Expect to see more of their stuff show up on my site now that they've found their way into my news aggregator!

Grab the feeds for yourself at http://www.voidstar.com/rssify.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fhandheldlib.blogspot.com%2F and http://www.voidstar.com/rssify.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fallaboutbooks.blogspot.com%2F.

[The Shifted Librarian]
6:24:09 PM    comment []

FCC considers putting amateur radio operators above Wi-Fi users: in an interesting set of events, the FCC has opened a docket on making amateur radio have the primary status for the 2400 to 2402 megahertz band, the lower part of the unlicensed ISM band which 802.11b, HomeRF, Bluetooth, and cordless phones all use. Primary status would give them the ability to push unlicensed users off or require manufacturers to put subordinating equipment in. The worst case would be abandoning channel 1 of Wi-Fi. The announcement is available from the FCC as a Word doc, a PDF, or a text file. The rulemaking would also give hams (the informal name for amateur radio enthusiasts) secondary status on the 5250 to 5400 MHz band, which overlaps half of the 5150 to 5350 Mhz U-NII band used for 802.11a.

[80211b News]
6:18:36 PM    comment []

Single Molecule Can Convert Light into Work [Scientific American]
6:16:07 PM    comment []

Here comes the neighborhood!. I have a new neighbor. Or at least a new 802.11b wireless base-station for a neighbor. I suppose I should say neighbors, really -- the access point ID is "15th Avenue Gang" (avenue altered by +-7). And either they're high-gain or very very close. I've ruled out 6 of the 10 neighboring houses and suspect 2 in particular.

Now I could do the sane (albeit a little odd), friendly, getting-to-know you thing and walk around knocking on doors, but that wouldn't be very wired of me, now would it?

What would Brian Boitano do?

On the off-chance they're only a house or two away, I've set my own ID to "Hi15thWhereRU" for a week and am checking every so often for a response in kind. Now _this_, surely, is SETI@Home! Ok, so STI@Home ;-)

P.s. For those hot-spot dwelling big city folks marveling at my fascination with something so, like, last August, I should note that I don't live in a particularly wired (read: wireless) centre ville. [raelity bytes]


6:12:27 PM    comment []

Oliver Willis - the relationship between blogs and books.

This piece by Oliver Willis makes some fascinating conclusions for potential authors. I agree wholeheartedly with his conclusions and have been promoting this idea to several writer friends of mine for sometime. Maybe they'll start listening now. [oliverwillis.com]

[www.davidwatson.org]
6:10:46 PM    comment []

Frontier House. I'm no Survivor fan, by any stretch of the imagination. The sensationalist, arbitrary, artificial, lowest-common-denominator, nasty, scheming bent of it just doesn't hold any appeal.

PBS's "Frontier House" -- running April 29th through May 1st -- however, has me hooked.

Three families pledge to spend 178 days homesteading in The Montana Territory, circa 1883. No million dollar prizes. No voting eachother off the continent. No toilet paper (plenty of leaves, though), shampoo, television, condoms (there's always a pig intestine), or much in the way of historical innacuracy. Just a plot of land apiece on the Frontier, a covered-wagon, milk cow and calf, dog, period clothing, period medicine (such as it was), packets of seeds, a few period bucks, small ration of food, blizzards, hunger, and neighbors. And, of course, a camcorder for video diaries. [raelity bytes]


6:07:52 PM    comment []


© Copyright 2002 Mark Oeltjenbruns.
 
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