SIIA Chair Simon Tay on Clinton's Asia visit (Bloomberg, 20th Feb 2009):
Steve Engel (Bloomberg): Speaking of provoking, where do you see Hillary
bringing the tact in bringing the issues that Obama wants to raise to the
Chinese in her trip this time. Yuan revaluation is one, and also of course
hum
> I looked into this for our operations because we do both
> (internet and video). The price was reasonable
That's interesting. Under the commercial television broadcast model of
American networks such as ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, The CW and MyNetworkTV,
affiliates give up portions of their local a
Just an ad used to illustrate the low cost and ease of use. The fact that it's
quicktime also made me realize it's also ipods, iphones/wifi, and that Apple
has web libraries ready for web site development on their darwin boxes. Also,
I would imagine this device could easily be cross connected
The OSCAR is the first H.264 encoder appliance designed by HaiVision
specifically for QuickTime environments. It natively supports
the RTSP streaming media protocol. The OSCAR can stream directly to
QuickTime supporting up to full D1 resolution (full standard
definition resolution or 720 x 480 NTSC
> Why would TV of any sort even touch the 'Internet'. And, no,
> YouTube is not "TV" as far as I'm concerned.
FWIW:
http://www.worldmulticast.com/marketsummary.html
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If the cable operators put their broadcast content onto an access
network multicast . . . Then how could they resell the same content to
europe?
> -Original Message-
> From: Scott Francis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, April 18, 2008 4:15 PM
> To: nanog@nanog.org
> Subject: [
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