Root6 Technology has added Dolby Digital Plus to the post-production deliverables on its ContentAgent repurposing platform.
Dolby Digital Plus is a next-generation audio technology for high-definition programming and media.
ContentAgent support will allow extremely low bit rate multichannel sound to be delivered via the web.
The
content repurposing platform currently transcodes a host of other
commonly used audio formats including MP3, AC3, AAC, WAV, BWAV and AIFF.
ContentAgent
product manager Kevin King said: "We are already fulfilling client
demand for multi channel audio as part of an automated workflow and
it's clear that further advances such as Dolby Digital Plus will play
an increasingly important role in the HD content experience."
"Dolby
Digital Plus combines the efficiency to meet future broadcast demands
with the power and flexibility to realize the full audio potential of
the upcoming high-definition experience.
"Built on Dolby Digital,
the multichannel audio standard for DVD and HD broadcasts worldwide,
Dolby Digital Plus was designed for the delivery formats of the future,
but remains fully compatible with all current A/V receivers. With Dolby
Digital Plus, you get even higher quality audio, more channels, and
greater flexibility."
ContentAgent is used by production
companies and broadcasters – including ITV and Pinewood Studios - to
re-purpose and convert video and audio content for programmes, archives
and online.
Yes well i did it and as soon as I got back from the USA i went out and
got myself my Iphone upgrade. I got to say they have done a lovely job
of the UI and the App Store is great even if a bit battery draining at
times. All together I'm impressed and i love the idea that I can now
use my work exchange and my home exchange server and my odd gmail
address on the same phone....What that, you say I cannot, but why Apple
why? You can only have one exchange account on the Iphone on dear this
will not do you mean i have to live with the same silly restrictions
that ActiveSync has on the Windows Mobile platform, oh mother to betsy.
Well I suppose we can use IMAP and get around that but workaround...tut
tut...
Then today I notice something on the tube on
the way in normally on my way into work I answer some emails delete
some spam etc and generally get on with work. On my windows mobile
phone you can work, delete move things around and when you next log in
to the server it updates all the cached
local changes with the exchange server.
Well
working this morning I tried to move some spam to
trash while on the underground, and up pops a error
message
which I thought was strange why couldn't it
move the message then I twigged that it must need network coverage to
move the message. I tried when I was above ground and yes it
worked...How strange and stupid that it can't cache what you want and
update when you next sync.
You can see i simulated
being underground in the picture above by turning
the phone into airplane mode. I can't believe that the Iphone can't
work the same as the WMobile and be able to delete and move message on
the fly wioth no coverage and cache the results locally till you nexrt
connect.
Well i thought i'd bring this up with Apple, so I
rang and spoke to someone who told me
"that on the iphone it is
different and even with exchange this has to be in
coverage."
Different I said....very
different...
So this got me curious
about what i can do underground and what will and won't work as i want
to use the iphone for work rather than the
WMobile and travelling underground in London is daily occurance.
So what
happens if we try and move a message from folder to folder with no
coverage....indeed it greys out the move to folder icon if you have no
coverage
to move the file. COOL the lady on the phone said we needed coverage so
they have greyed it out so i know i can't do it. OK Therefore under
that rule and keeping withing the
rules it should grey out/disable the Delete function so we don't get a
error message by doing something stupid that we know will fail.
Sound like common sense to me but then would
caching the changes and then syncing them up when you next push, like
the Windoze Mobiles do.
Well it looks like you can't
work with a Iphone with exchange anywhere there isn't complete wifi or
3G coverage. So if your thinking using it to travel to work in London,
lets hope you take the overground. But Kev, Kev......It works in San Fransisco, sorry mate.....I'll pass on the Kool Aid this time.
Well I've just got Thames Water to fit me a water meter, as I spend so much time away I thought it would help the old bank balance and the planet if I got one fitted.
i seem to have a few unread messages after being away fo a few days...lets hope its just the iphone messing me about and not really that many otherwise I'm going to have to get through a lot of Viagra emails.
Intel has released Linux source code, and set up a community site,
to allow Fibre Channel frames to be embedded in Ethernet packets. This
means companies using Fibre Channel can make more use of the protocol
while maintaining their existing kit.
Open-fcoe
will provide a home for developments, as well as the various tools and
guides that will be needed by anyone trying the technology.
From The Register Ethernet dances the light fantastic I seem to have lambasted the rest of the article when i made my comments on the The Register
Part of me thinks, where were the Assistants who do the crowd control and did the director even tell the authorities that they were filming in the area??...Of course not, probably another production on the cheap thinking they can get away with it,
Their website says See your location on the map, with or without GPS. Save time and tedious
keystrokes finding where you are, what's around you, and how to get there. Why the uncertainty? The My Location feature takes information broadcast from
mobile towers near you to approximate your current location on the map -
it's not GPS, but it comes pretty close (approximately 1000m close, on average).
We're still in beta, but we're excited to launch this feature and are
constantly working to improve our coverage and accuracy."
So as you can see from the picture the dot is not showing me where I am, (the dot is around St James somewhere when I'm currently located in Soho, London and the accuracy of the location data can be up to 5km off. So rather than telling me i'm in Soho it could be telling me I'm in Islington lets hope they improve the accuracy soon.
Well the academics at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis revealed their shock findings yesterday from their research "Beer makes people have sex with you!!!!"
Yes, they have already started on next years work Trying to find out if the Pope is Catholic and do Bears toilet in the woods.
No more listening to the guitarist tune up between songs, oh bliss! Guitar manufacturer Gibson has started to produce the self-tuning Robot Guitar.
The technical details of how the axe keeps the strings nicely in tune -
via pitch-monitoring bridge, CPU, and servo-motored machine heads - is
available here.
indexing is great and can allow people to find great stuff on the web but when someone comes along and programs their spiders to make 10000 request and indexes(rapes) the whole site, I think oh my god you've killed my bandwidth. Which has got me a bit pev'd. The last few times its be Id-search.org, you and read all about that on this link. This time it looks like Identity sellers 192.com .I don't mind them indexing but have some consideration of peoples bandwidth cost, 10000 pages in one go is just excessive. Here a example out of the log file.
Stephen fry said exactly what i was going to say "The rest of the world can
mock as much as it likes. If you’re going to have a phone/video
player/slideshow/music centre/web browser/camera in your pocket, is it so wrong
to want one that makes you grin from ear to ear? Not with smugness (though
heaven knows the enemies of the device will read that into the smiles) but with
delight."
May I present my Iphone, yes I have as my Gee at work put it. "Sucked on the Apple Crack Pipe." (C) 2007 www.podrush.net
I didn't have a good time with the Nokia N95 and found it to be a bit of a dog with a battery life of a dying bee. So lets hope the iphone is better.
Broadcast Engineering the local parish magazine in this neck of the woods printed a Phil Crawley esk article on running media over networks.
One of the great statements it makes it that "the indeterminate nature of an IT network is fundamentally at odds with its use in media applications. It could be argued that Ethernet and IP are the worst possible network technologies for real-time media systems." and that "A modern broadcast technologist must think in terms of both the broadcast engineering and IT domains when designing a networked infrastructure that must support real-time transcoding." So the next time our designing a broadcast IT network, don't let the spotty Dilbert from IT that fixes the email server design it, call in a qualified broadcast engineer.
The Article in question http://broadcastengineering.com/storage_networking/real-time-media-networks/index.html
Sex and violence may sell, but if you want better ratings you got to have some substance says a study, the boston globe covers it here
"fuck you you fuckin fuck" Crudeness and the slipping standards of TV, despite big fines fruity language is up on TV, you can read the full article
Did you get a chance to make a cup of tea, well put that cup down, its already booted.
New Asus Mobo's will have Slashtop on them, The point of Splashtop is to get you surfing the web seconds after you press that power button. Virtualise the device and your up and running. check out the video below for more info or check out their website http://www.splashtop.com/index.php
I hadn't really watched a movie on it just used it to play games through till this evening when I came to watch Hot Fuzz I bought in the US. I finished playing Bioshock and popped the HD-DVD in the drive. it opened up got the lovely universal HD DVD logo and then BANG the dashboard popped up with an error COULD NOT PLAY CONTENT Error C667000A. First I thought it must be the disc or region encoding so I googled the error with not much luck. Then I came across the answer on this page.
Basically there was a dashboard update for the HD DVD player in May 07 and this fixes the problem. The reason I had not recieved the update is that you have to start the HD DVD with no other disks in the XBOX drive so it doesn't switch to a game in my case Bioshock first. Once I removed the game, made sure i was connected to Xbox Live I pressed play on the HD DVD and the dashboard update popped up and downloaded...and Eureka the disk restarts and plays fine.
If you don't connect you XBOX to Live then you can download the update from the page above.
Well this could be a intresting stand to see at IBC
On
its joint stand with NuMedia Technology, the BBC is set to show the
latest addition to the Dirac family of open source video compression
codecs. The Pro 270 application of Dirac allows the transmission of
HDTV signals using the cable and infrastructure already used for
standard definition TV. Which is quite sexy if I say so myself....
This requires
more compression of HDTV signals than Dirac Pro 1.5, but the new Dirac
Pro has the flexibility to achieve this with very little loss of
quality. Broadcasters that employ the Pro 270 will have the ability to
transform their programme output to HD quickly.
Other reasons
to use it include the fact that 1080P50 HD islands can be connected
between sites over existing links. And because Dirac is Open Source,
the wider industry can use the technology, add to it, and develop other
applications. This will be helped by the fact that Dirac is license
free too.
Nokia has identified that in very rare cases the affected batteries
could potentially experience over heating initiated by a short circuit
while charging, causing the battery to dislodge. Nokia is working
closely with relevant local authorities to investigate this situation.
Nokia has several suppliers for BL-5C batteries that have
collectively produced more than 300 million BL-5C batteries. This
advisory applies only to the 46 million batteries manufactured by
Matsushita between December 2005 and November 2006. There have been
approximately 100 incidents of over heating reported globally.
Sony the makers of the world famous exploding batteries have sent out another product recall. This time its the Cyber-shot DSC-T5, I posted back in Nov 06 about the LCD recall.
This time Sony has announced a recall of another 350,000 digital cameras. But there's
no need to reach for your fire extinguisher, because this time the
recall is focused on the metal casing of one model that has the
potential to cut or scratch users.Someone used the wrong type of glue and they are falling apart at the seams.
The problems surround the Cyber-shot DSC-T5 camera with serial numbers between 3500001 and 3574100, which was released in 2005.
365main one the San Fransisco's biggest facilities, had their PR monkeys issued a press release celebrating the site's "two years of 100-percent uptime at 365 Main's San Francisco facility." Oops.
Not wanting to tempt fate this morning/last night their facility shut down due to a power outage losing Craglist, and Livejournal as well as other big names. The area has been seeing power problems all day but it seems the backup supply didn't kick in.
Reminds me of a story about a nameless facility that had generators on the roof to run the technical mains in case of power loss then on winters night when the snow was heavy on the ground. The facility lost power and the generators kicked in, after about 15 minutes the generator started to set off the alarms for low fuel. Its seemed that whoever wired the generator into the building wired the fuel pump into the house mains rather than the technical so the pump was not working. So some poor engineer had to spend all night hand filling the generators till the morning came and the power came back on.
well if you can see this it means my blog is back up again...it's been off since Mon 02/07/07 it seems that somewhere between the company that supplies my blog and interweb is going wrong at a very regular interval. Its been dropping off line since March when i first reported the problem. Well lets see how long its up for?
Yesterday my blog was flodded by a bot called ID-Search bot with the useragent: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; IDBot/1.0; +http:// www.id-search.org/bot.html). Within a few minutes it requested around 1,386
pages and came from the IP 66.90.101.75 raping about 50MB of band width in the process...you've got to love those Russian spy bots
Is this a spam-bot or a serious project? Three things which make we wonder
1.) The bot does not (yet) support robots.txt. A quote from their FAQ
Does IDBot accept the directives from robots.txt file?
IDBot can recognize the directives from robots.txt files only
partially, which is the result of the scantiness of our resources. Full
support of robots.txt will be launched soon.
2.) They are not willing to release their IP addresses. Quote:
Can I learn the IP addresses, which IDBot comes from?
Unfortunately, You can’t since it is against the rules of our company.
3.) They flood servers. According to their FAQ you can write an
email to tech support if the bot is causing problems. IMHO this is not
a workable solution.
In my time in tech support land and being a bit of a techie bloke you get some some of the strangest requests and some of the funniest from around the office because you know about technology they think you can fix anything, as I'm not there so often these days I do miss them. Today for instance someone in the office asked me if I could get their ActivSync working as their mobile phone would not sync with their email. Ok I'll have a look, I walked over to the mobile picked it up and noticed the black screen. I didn't want to say "Have you turned it on?" but it just slipped out.I pressed the power button and as if by magic it all started syncing! If only they were all that simple.
Like I've said before I'd post a review of the phone up here when had a good look at it. Well before I starting writing my I say I've just phoned Orange to return the phone back to them. If that isn't a sign of how much we don't get on I don't know what is! Coming from a Window Mobile environment its was hard to use what seems like a backward OS in Symbian, I suspect if you've always used Nokia phones you find it a blast. I found that the phone took 3 clicks on the keypad to do any normal funcation. It seems Nokia have hidden away all the funations inside a lot of menus and you really have to dig down to get to some of the setting. Some of the feature of the phone I liked were the maps and gps navigation. I tried this out on Friday on a journey to meet a friend on the Southbank for drinks.
I turned the gps on and it started download the map via 3g. I typed the location of were I was trying to get to and the phone told me the location didn't exist, not a good start then i tried the postcode and it found the location and displayed with the address i typed in that it said didn't exist. Oh well not to worry lets check the route. The route seemed to be sending me down all the major roads and across all the main bridges. I check the settings and yes I'd set them to 'foot' rather than 'car'. The route that the phone would have sent me on was going around the houses down the main shopping streets when the quickest route was to use the back streets and across Hungerford bridge. Ok so the route planning looks off. Lets use the GPS to nativate there or find out were we are, I have a little Polstar GPS which I've used around the world to get about with Pocket Streets and it normally picks up the 3 satellites its needs to navigate in about a minute once your out of cover. The Nokia N95 didn't even connected once or give me any GPS data at any point during the whole journey to the Southbank. Yes the GPS was on as I could see 3 or 4 satellites on the information panel but it seems you need 5 for the phone to lock and start giving you data to navigate by. In London the chances of getting 5 satellites to lock if about 1 in 50 due to the height of the buildings and width of the streets which makes this possibly valuable feature useless. The feature set on the phone does seem to be tied together having two gps apps in different places on in applications and one in tools just seems daft. It looks like Nokia have just been trying to hard.
Also Orange have block access to Truphone the VOIP system that comes installed on all Nokia N95's from the factory, this feature has been disabled to Orange can protect their call revenue and not have you make cheap VOIP calls.
All in all if your not it a big city, not into VOIP and you like Nokia OS you might just think this phone is the bees knees but I'm sorry to say its not for me....looks like I'll be getting a SPV E650 after all.
Neil king knows that a man should be judged by the devices he owns, with this in mind the old Orange M5000 aka the brick as James Clarke called it. Has been upgraded and retired and I got a all singing and dancing Nokia N95 as a free replacement. Well see how it goes and i'll post a review in a few days. Love the intergrated GPS so far.
Sime doesn't like blackberries much, well i think he's made his point that he really wants it to work. But i don't think that the blackberry could stand the Extreme Tech Support that can be meated out by engineers these days. Other PDA's be warned.