Categories
Education

Real hijacking QuickTime

Regardless of your best intentions companies like Real and Microsoft hijack files.

Real has been caught hijacking QuickTime movies in this format: rtsp://qt.WBR.com/enya/videos/qt/some_enya_movie.mov. You can clearly see this directory is for QuickTime because the directory is named “QT” yet Real’s Player hijacks the movie and unsuccessfully tries to play it inside it’s own RealPlayer application EVEN THOUGH Real’s application was never configured to playback RTSP video streams. Can’t we all just get along?

Full Article

Categories
Education

Audio’s new sweet spot

As technology has triggered amazing digital high definition televisions to the marketplace audio advances seemed to have been left behind. A new sound system that has been developed can place sounds in a theatre to seem like the origin of the sound is outside the building. Audience members can also hear footsteps move in unison from left to right or hear someone on screen whisper with the sound projected to their left ear.

The company who has developed this technology also built the .mp3 format used today by everyone downloading music and listening on desktop, laptop and mobile devices.

NYTimes Full Article

Categories
Milwaukee

Microsoft to launch Blogbot

Well if you have not considered blogging important – now you can … Microsoft has announced it will launch a blogging service. It will be initially launched in Japan.

Full Article via eWeek
Full Article via Microsoft-Watch

Categories
Smartphone

Blog from your PalmOS

HBlogger is a new blogging client for Palm OS devices. Send your posts while you are mobile.

If you are experienced blogger with multiple blogs, you can prepare and send posts to several blogs. HBlogger supports Live Journal, Blogger and Movable Type.

Full Article

Categories
Education

Japanese Satellite TV is QuickTime bound

A major Japanese satellite broadcaster may adopt Apple’s QuickTime for supporting the new H.264 format when it launches commercial broadcasts in mid-October.

Mobile Broadcasting said it is “considering changing the video codec for its digital satellite broadcasting service for mobile devices from MPEG-4 to H.264/MPEG-4 AVC,” according to Asia Online. The company said it began looking into such a shift six months ago, “because H.264 has higher coding efficiency and can produce more benefits.

H.264 may enable an increase of the number of video channels as well as improved image quality,” says the report, even though no final choice has been made yet.

Full Article
Asia Today Full Article