BBC Discusses PVR Software, Creative Archive Plans 216
Fidigit writes "You may have heard something about the BBC Internet Media Player {iMP) - a computer-based PVR for the BBC's TV and radio content, 'only... available to UK broadband users', which'll use P2P to shuttle content around between downloaders. Now we hear the iMP content will distributed using DRM, using Microsoft's DRM technology, 'in a break with the BBC's long-standing support of Real.'" The previously mentioned BBC Creative Archive is also discussed - apparently its content "...will be downloaded using a similar application, but will not be restricted by DRM, enabling people to re-edit it, or use it to make other programmes" - the content "will not be the complete BBC archive", but an example given of the initial content is "nature programmes".
Good Idea (Score:3, Funny)
What about the jackass who decides to rename his entire porn collection to titles of children's shows?
Re:Good Idea (Score:5, Informative)
Most P2P programs which break down files into chunks would have some sort of hash on the individual chunks, which are compared to others or a central tracker (a la bittorrent) - you cant rename file and try to share them, as your data will continually be corrupted to other users.
Of course, the more basic P2P apps, like the old gnutella (& co) simply worked off the name and downloaded from a single user, whereby renaming would let you download rubbish, thinking it was something else!
eMule/Donkey/whatever has a has for the files and even if the filenames the same, if the hash doesnt match, that users file is not lumped in with all the others that do match - its returned as an extra result in the search box.
Grrrrrrr (Score:5, Interesting)
No problem with them limiting content to the UK (and turning it into a revenue service outside the UK, as they do with BBC North America) but WTF do they think they should be restricting content? We paid for it after all.
For example the BBC has not embraced Open Source, even for their own in house products, even under a non-commercial-use-only license. They are an organisation that could do such things free from commercial considerations, yet refuse to. It's infuriating.
They do the same thing with their programming - because of the way they are funded they could offer interesting and different programming _NOT_ reality crap that is available on the commercial channels anyway. And they even have adverts (self promotion) now - and at a louder volume in the same irritating commercial TV style.
Well, I don't care, I don't have a TV and I'll just carry on stealing the few things I want to watch anyway. Groening et al can contact the BBC for their royalties, since if they could find their ass with both hands I'd be getting the content (legally) from them instead.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:3, Funny)
>they should be restricting content? We paid for it after all.
They're restricting it to people who paid for it, dumbass. How would YOU do it?
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:4, Informative)
He paid because the hassle was not worth the £100+ licence fee he might have saved.
It is a tax, not a service.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:5, Informative)
For example, if you purchased a computer monitor and a DVD player and connected them to each other, you would not be required to own a TV license to use them together, as you do not have a method of viewing "television". If you bought a regular TV you would.
In another example, if you had a black and white television and a VCR, you would have to own a colour television license, as the VCR is able to receive colour television, even though you cannot view it.
A further example would be if you owned a TV Tuner card for your computer, irreguardless of whether it was physically in the computer or not you would be required to own a TV License.
In cases where you do not own a Television Tuner, you are usually invited to sign a document saying that you do not, otherwise the TV Licensing authority will assume you are dodging paying your TV License fee and fine you accordingly. (This agreement also has the clause, like the license, that you must inform them when you move)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:5, Interesting)
You sign the damned form and send it to them. A fortnight later you get a letter saying "thankyou for informing us that you do not need a TV license now sign the form to declare it formallly." It's the same damned form. You send it away.
A week later a nice lady from TV Licensing phones you and announces that you've sent a form saying you don't need a TV license. She asks you why. You tell her. She asks "are you sure?". You assure her. She asks whether you'd mind signing a form. She'll send you one in the post.
So you get the same form again, in the post, inviting you to sign.
You phone them to explain. They say "just fill it in and sign it anayway." You protest but reluctantly agree.
A month later a man from TV licensing knocks on your door when you're in the middle of cooking your dinner.
He says, "You don't have a TV license!" And grins.
"That's right," you reply cheerfully, "I don't have a TV set!"
"Really?" He says, "why's that?"
"Because there's nothing on it I wan't to watch and I'd rather spend the 100-odd pound license fee on bits for my computer.
He agrees, muttering about the lack of quality TV content and leaves.
So you move house. A week later they put up a billboard poster across the road saying "3 adresses in don't have TV licenses."
No, this is not Soviet Russia or 1984. This is late 1990/early 2000's England, UK etc.
Now tell me we're not going to hell in a hand basket.
It happened to me Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:3, Informative)
I regularly got letters which hinted darkly that representatives could be in my area soon...
I phoned the licensing authority to make a formal complain and ask for compensation for waiting in for these representatives who never showed up!
They phone back (yes!) and said they would put me on a list so I wouldn't get hassled again for a year. (is th
Re:It happened to me Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
When I was at University, you could see that they'd mass mailed harrassing letters to all the students, even though none of us had TVs. IIRC, the wording wasn't even along the lines of an informative "if you have a TV you need a licence", but more "We know you have a TV and must pay up for face prison!".
When later on I did have a TV, and a licence, they still sent me harrassing letters! Presumably this was a mistake in their database, but I'm not the only one I know that this has happened to.
I have no p
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
You've got to wonder if they're spending all the revenue from the TV licences trying to enforce the policy.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Quite. I also wonder how much of it finds its way into the hands of the record companies i.e. via the Radio 1 playlist. That's right kids, we pay the record companies through this regressive (and virtually mandatory) tax to advertise thier shoddy wares (techno handbag disco music e.g. Kylie, Saints Alive, Pope Idle) at us.
Is there something fundamentally wrong here?
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
TVL can't fine you without evidence, nor do they have any right to enter your property without a search warrent served by the police.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
"You at the telly, didn't you?"
"It's a toaster!"
Then the inspector-man goes to the bathroom, shouting "I can wait! I know how... to wait!"
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:5, Interesting)
Steve.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
At the end of January my license ran out. Seeing as I don't have a TV any more, I phoned the license people and told them I don't need a license. They were very polite, apologied for any letters that might already be in the post to me, and I've not heard from them since.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Not quite there..
You can have a TV that is detuned (just clear the channel data), and not pluged into the aerial, and then you don't need a license. You need to contact them to let them know about this, and they claim they'll come and check on you.
This snippet of info is buried away somewhere on the TVL site. I wanted my TV for DVDs/PC/Xbox, so that's what I did. They've never actually
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:3, Informative)
He has to pay it, even if he doesn't have a TV [tv-l.co.uk], if he has a TV tuner card in his machine. Also, if he is a tenant in a flat with others, he has to pay the license [tv-l.co.uk], because the fee is allocated on 'separately occupied places'.
Have you seen the penalties? [tv-l.co.uk] Up to a thousand quid? Christ.
A small clarification (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it is if you have anything capable of recieving any active TV signals, and only if the device actually works... and if you don't have a license they have to prove the something was receiving TV signals (i.e. with their tracker van).
If you live in a flat with other tenants, and you have independant contracts with the landlord, then you have to have a TV license if you wanna watch TV irrelevant of the other tenants. If all the tenants are on a sharing contract, then only on TV license is needed for the whole building (or area covering shared accomodation).
I for one have first hand experience with the TV licensing people. On my uni industrial placement (internship), I lived in a flat on an individual contract. I didn't have a TV nor did I want one (boy did that free up my time for doing other things I tell you!), but I got a threatening letter from TV licensing nearly every 2 months... they threatened me by saying that you don't have a license, they'll get a warrant to check on me... blah blah. I was just waiting for the time they actually followed through with one of those threats just to be able to explore the option of being able to sue them... I know that they can trace a signal to individual rooms, and I was happy in the knowledge that I did not have anything capable of recieving TV signals (my PC video card wasn't VIVO either).
Although I'm not sure on the precise details, but I think the TV license is illegal under European law... but with the UK being half in and half out of the EU depending on whether it suits the government at the time, not much can be done about it. The BBC's charter is up for renewal in 2006, and they've been hit hard by the Hutton report (those who say that will have no bearing on the charter renewal, yeah right!). Plus the license fee continually goes up in frickin price.
Just my 0.02, not going to the licensing gestapo though ;-)
Re:A small clarification (Score:2, Funny)
Better bimbos on Mediaset than ITV, though
Re:A small clarification (Score:2, Insightful)
So that means it just needs to be installed - even if the TV was never plugged in - you would need to pay for a licence
Re:A small clarification (Score:3, Informative)
The TV licenceing website is lying. Complaints have been made about it to the advertising standards authority, and an MP called Andrew Carey complained about it in the house of commons. This is easy to check, there are numerous websites with information about the TV licence.
Some links to get you started:
Abolish the TV licence [tvlicensing.biz]
C.A.L. [spiderbomb.com]
Broadband and [kevinboone.com]
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Nonetheless I think they'd be hard-pressed to use open source stuff on a widespread basis. Remember when they used to stream Radio One using ogg [bbc.co.uk]?
They refuse to do things free of commercial considerations because at the end of the day and notwithstanding their highblown language, they still have to think about the all-mighty pound.
'OK,' I hear you say, 'you sure about that?'
Yes [google.com], I'm [bbc.co.uk] sure [digitalspy.co.uk].
Really sure. [216.239.59.104]
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:5, Informative)
I do wish that people would do a little research before going off on bordering right-wing murdoch style rants, especially ones so ill-informed.
Also, be aware that there are several sources of technology advocacy within the BBC, the engineers in R+D at Kingswood Warren are a lot more open to open src software than the less technically astute creative types (who are brilliant in their own way, but not always best placed to make such decisions).
The BBC
Rather than merely writing off things you know nothing about, a little background research might be an idea.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
There used to be [slashdot.org] a unit at Kingswood Warren that worked extensively using OSS. They even had a webcam here [No longer working] with a great big inflatable Tux in the background. Then the unit got sucked into the Beeb's commercial arm, moved elesewhere and
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
That's odd, because most of the stuff I see coming out of the BBC is interesting and different programming. Especially, as another poster said, BBC4.
But you wouldn't know that, since you don't have a TV.
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
But you wouldn't know that, since you don't have a TV.
I have a TV. I watch the BBC. But only 1 and 2, because that's all they deem fit for international distribution. BBC 4 is one of them digital thingamajiggies that you can't receive unless you get a digital tuner, or you have cable, and digital doesn't travel very far over the channel.
So yes, all the inte
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
Observant readers will have noticed that I'm not located in the UK and digital channels don't make it across the channel, so my Belgian or Flushing-based friends aren't able to pick it up either.
If I want to watch BBC 4 programming (and as I've mentioned, anything good is instantly banished to the digital channels, there wasn't even anything good on 1&2 at Christmas ferchrissakes) it would have to be purchased from BBC Worldwide (the
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
This observant Sky subscriber seems rather more aware than you that the Astra Satellites are in SPACE, and that there are a great many people outside the UK who buy themselves a Sky receiver in the UK and then use it abroad.
Digital channels more than make it across the channel numb nuts, the do a whole 72000km journey before being watched even in the UK.
Is BBC4 on Astra? I was assuming you were on about terrestrial Sky digital, since you didn't mention the particulars (and ex
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:2)
I think it would be best if the BBC could avoid getting tangled up in such contracts, but that would mean paying more up front, and I don't think the organization is ready to gear itself towards free content. They're still thinking of mak
Re:Grrrrrrr (Score:4, Funny)
A few years ago I did some work at TV Centre with BBC News Online. I was told, "The servers run Windows. The person responsible for this mistake has since been removed." :-)
At least this will stop people calling me a pirate (Score:5, Insightful)
Downloadable Nature shows - now that's a Good Thing - Once the average person understands that "you are not a pirate if you download music/videos", then its a step in the right direction as far as I'm concerned.
oddly (Score:2)
I was looking at some comp magazine, PC Weekly or one of those mags, can't recall, but I remember seeing like a two page fold out - which would have equaled 4 pages - with an MS advertising touting how easy it is for you to share music. "Microsoft where do you want to go after you by our product, rip mp3's, share them, and then get arrested because you didn't know it was illegal. But don't let that stop you from buying our products. After all clarifying the legalities of music sharing is not our job" would
Re:At least this will stop people calling me a pir (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:At least this will stop people calling me a pir (Score:4, Informative)
Since no-one prosecutes for making tapes for the car, I suspect it's unlikely (although entirely possible) that anyone would prosecute you for ripping CDs you own to MP3.
Q.
Re:At least this will stop people calling me a pir (Score:2)
There are cases where whole-sale copying is allowed without explicit permission, such as time-shifting TV programs using a VCR.
Agreed.
Re:downloading copyrighted material is stealing (Score:2, Insightful)
Copyright violations are not theft because they do not deprive the owner of the work they have created.
In your mechanic example you have deprived the mechanic of his time without compensation. He does not have the time he spent back, nor can he sell his time again.
Your electricty argument is getting a little absurd. I would argue the fact that anybody who designed a building to have an eletric outlet open on the sidewalk is a dumbass, anybody who charges $20 for the juice to charge a cel
Crippled (Score:2)
So in short: the BBC will put the "BBC Creative Archive" online, composed of BBC programs (well, slightly crippled, it's not all of the BBC's archive) using Microsoft's DRM technology (only a bit crippled, as the DRM part of the technology is disabled).
In short, it really seems t
At last! Digital quality BBC recordings.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:At last! Digital quality BBC recordings.. (Score:5, Funny)
Well no, those records were naturally wiped out when Lister found them after his million-year stasis.
Re:At last! Digital quality BBC recordings.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:At last! Digital quality BBC recordings.. (Score:5, Interesting)
I read recently (no citation, I'm afraid, but it was probably on a BBC site) that the old film (rather than video) was literally piled up in a building and was a fire risk. As the perceived value of these old programmes was zero, they were trashed (not reused). With most of the ephemera, they were right. They weren't to know the cult status some like Dr Who would achieve years later, and selling video was also years in the future (ironic for an SF show to suffer from the lack of thinking forward).
Re:At last! Digital quality BBC recordings.. (Score:2)
For those Slashdotters that don't know, the BBC committed the outrageous sin of recording over much of the live shows of "Pete and Dud", Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. Peter Cook was nothing short of a comic genius, and for the BBC to have destroyed much of his work when he was at his peak is a crying shame.
(Note that other than this outrage, I think the BBC
Re:At last! Digital quality BBC recordings.. (Score:3, Informative)
"Shuttle Content" (Score:3, Interesting)
You have to be kidding (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah right, that'll happen.
quick fix (Score:2)
Re:You have to be kidding (Score:2)
Last thing the BBC wants is for you to distribute kiddie porn and pretend that its the latest episode of some children's programme. With the 'DRM signing' you wouldn't be able to do that.
Re:You have to be kidding (Score:3, Interesting)
The article specificlly says that content will be forcibly deleted (deactivated) after a certain number of days, one example they gave was 2 days. It takes crippled hardware and stupid DRM games to try to enforce a rule like that.
Of course like any DRM attempt, it is an inherently flawed goal. It is flat-out impossible to prevent an owner from opening his own property and directing it NOT to delete. They can merely make it inconviene
Re:You have to be kidding (Score:2)
What's the problem? If you don't want to use the BBC content, don't run their P2P software. If you do, then realise that all the money and effort they've invested in the material is being given to you for the "small price" of having to reshare the content.
Re:You have to be kidding (Score:2)
DRM does not give the people control, it gives the publishers control. And that control can far exceed the basic restrictions needed for copyright enforcement and be used to deny "fair use" rights - and inflate publishers' profits. Certainly anything that artificially limits the longevity of media is a Bad Thing(tm) and the DRM used by most commercial music download sites does just that (by limiting transfers to other computers - so after a couple of PC replacements you can no longer p
Remember children... (Score:3, Funny)
offcourse (Score:5, Funny)
great ! More pr0n... Now who said the BBC is conservative ?
Re:offcourse (Score:3, Funny)
So many channels so little time. (Score:3, Offtopic)
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:3, Insightful)
At least two of those three debuted on BBC3, one of those new digital channels, and it's hard to imagine that all three would have been made if the BBC still had only two channels.
So that's three great new shows and those only touch one genre (comedy). I think perhaps you're writing off the BBC
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:4, Insightful)
Radio 4 seems to be a last bastion of quality on the BBC.
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2, Interesting)
TV Knowing Me, Knowing You had it's moments, but the R4 version was still better.
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
Q.
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
Not exactly worth 114GBP/year.
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
The Office [bbc.co.uk]?
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
The Fast Show quality dropped and is gone, the last few Alan Partridge series were awful. Only Fools and Horses died a horrible, unfunny death. The last series of Red Dwarf had about three laughs in the entire series. The talent seems to be leaching out of the BBC. Even the Simpsons episodes they show are old ones that have been on a million times.
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2, Interesting)
And, 2 channels from the BBC?
TV channels: BBC1, BBC2, BBC3, BBC4, BBC News 24, BBC Parliament, CBBC, CBeebies.
Radio channels: R1, R2, R3, R4, R5 Live, R6 Music, BBC7, 1Xtra, Asia
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
Sunday home and gardens ist really great.
And The Million Pound Property Experiment was great.
And the Cookery shows are excelent! Saturdays kitchen, Ever wondered about food, Gary Rhodes and Delia's
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
BBC TV news has become very "dumbed down" in recent years and very tabloid. The news casters often have a very poor grasp of the language, unlike days of old.
BBC science programmes have been subject to dumbing down recently. I watched a Horizon a few weeks ago. It was about something nominally interesting. However, it was so bad
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:2)
I agree entirely about the serious science programs like Horizon being very dumbed down and non-informational. I think the only good science series I've seen on the beeb in recent years is Rough Science (and that isn't really a serious science show)
Re:So many channels so little time. (Score:4, Insightful)
No, not really. Memory has the effect of compressing things from the past together (like how you only remember all the good songs from the last decade, and not all the crap), so it probably just seems that way.
Yay for DRM! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yay for DRM! (Score:2)
I think there's un unsaid law or implication in British society that everyone must watch the TV, or how else would we be pacified. It's how we're controlled and told what to do and think. Our culture is prescribed, right the way up from the most trashy Radio 1 techno handbag disco music and TV soap operas through to serious politics , news and documentaries. The license fee is how this is funded.
Not to own or operate a TV set is subversive, a symptom of induviduality, free though, da
Good and bad (Score:4, Insightful)
The good point is, at last, somebody big understood what P2P could bring technically. As they are close friends with Real and its network, it means a lot for the future if this experiment works fine.
The really bad point is this MsDRM. It means no standard and even no cross-platform; it means no freedom for the player (I don't really appreciate WMPlayer and usually watch wm file using VLC which brings me many more functions I like).
When will big company understand that opening their offer to as many customers/users as possible is a good thing? If you've got a shop, you try to make it accessible to anybody, with or without a car, with or without disabilities; you try to be opened as much as you can!
Why the technical options are not the same (and it's so easier with the Internet and the standards than with real world places)?
Why consider all the Internet users/customers as thiefs? Imagine a shop where you are systematically checked walking out, will you come back?
Why can a UK citizen rip/mix/burn as much BBC programs as he want from his TV plug but not from his IP plug?
I hope they will change their mind with the time (for example after the experiment!) but I know they have also to face the rights owners (producers, agencies) who are certainly a bit less interested in what final users experience
P2P: Media killer app after TV and Radio (Score:2)
The lines between fair use and "piracy" would be thin in this scenario, but I don't think most people want to
Re:P2P: Media killer app after TV and Radio (Score:2)
I don't think people would care about it as long as it isn't overly restricting or inconvenient. Not too many people complain about Apple's DRM due to this reason. Do the contrary, and a lot more people will be using the pirate networks. On the internet, Quality of service is more important than restrictions that will eventually be cracked.
When fair use is outlawed, outlaws will practice more than just fair use.
BBC and Redmond (Score:3, Interesting)
Remember when PalmOS devices where 'banned' from the network, they closed down Kingswood Warren and moved everyone to Maidenhead to be with the MS based content team, stopped the OGG streams...
Of course all the computers you see on live telly (non-current news items with phone-ins) always have those ever so pretty Apples rather than ugly PC's!!!
Re:BBC and Redmond (Score:2)
watchdog et al..
Re:BBC and Redmond (Score:2)
I can choose to watch the BBC or ITV/Ch4/5 or indeed sky.
If I choose to run a mac, then content providers shouldn't stop me from getting my content. Ok so maybe '*nix' is a bit special, but i can still get Real Media on it. I can't get Media player (with DRM) to stream to my Mac (I can with *nix!)).
It about choice, the content delivery system shouldn't lock me into buying my TV from Panasonic, not should an internet based system lock me into MS-Windows.
And no the BBC isn't 100% MS (
Re:BBC and Redmond (Score:2)
I don't want an internet with 100% (or even 90%) of the same thing attached to it. This leads to massive risks - eg virus/trojan attacks.
I'm arguing the case for choice of content receiver.
Sure some things needs push to get going, for example DAB radio; no content so no radio's, the BBC decided to start broadcasting in DAB to stimulate the market.
But once the market is there you shouldn't only broadcast for a single supplier, or that supplier should li
Re:BBC and Redmond (Score:2)
Like choosing a TV broadcast solution that will only work on one company's TVs.
Re:BBC and Redmond (Score:2)
They picked a Ford that will only run on Ford petrol, not a Ford that will run on BP, Shell, Sainsburys.... petrol.
IMHO they didn't pick a better product, they just picked the "easiest" product to pick, and bought into this whole DRM pack of dross.
DRM has it's own issues, that I shall leave as an excercise for the reader to investigate
Governments giveth, and taketh away... (Score:3, Insightful)
I always wonder how governments can complain about monopoly and unfair advantage on one hand, and then purchase from these "monopolies" on the other. Isn't that what's going on here?
Take U.S. v Microsoft. The United States government is a huge customer. If they decide to place a bunch of PC's on the desks of their departments, and all those PC's run Windows, that more than anything helps foster Microsoft's continued dominance. Why don't they standardize all documents in XML, or plaintext. No! See how many times you're asked to submit something in Word format.
Goverments could just as easily begin converting to open source, or begin a Linux initiative; they could require a certain number of computers be Macintosh; or they could choose to buy something other than the Microsoft Office suite. Now, the British government is going to switch to MS, dumping Real. All these actions encourage the same company they complain about.
Am I the only one who sees conflict and hypocrisy?
Re:Governments giveth, and taketh away... (Score:2, Informative)
Now, the British government is going to switch to MS, dumping Real. All these actions encourage the same company they complain about.
The BBC is not part of the British government. It may have funding provided by the government, but it is an independant body.
Hehe (Score:4, Funny)
Phew, for a second there I thought they where going to restrict the content.
Creative Archive a long way off (Score:3, Insightful)
Although there's been a lot of announcements recently about the BBC's Creative Archive, I can't really see it being launched for at least a couple of years.
One of the major issues with distributing BBC aired programmes, via the Internet, is rights management. A lot of BBC produced programmes use material that is not actually owned by the BBC. It may have been commissioned from independant produces who retain some rights over it, or even purchased from other broadcasters. For example, the BBC archive has no World War II footage. That's because the BBC didn't start broadcasting until the 1950's. So every time you see a documentary on the BBC that has original WWII footage incorporated, that material has been purchased from a 3rd party (say Pathe [britishpathe.com] for example). So clearing all material from all BBC shows is going to be a total headache! This may be in part why only a portion of the archive, and not the whole thing, is going to be initially available online.
The other issue is of course digitising all that content. It's a big ask and not going to happen overnight. The whole process of getting the tapes from the Windmill Road archive, selecting the content that you want to use, encoding that content (let's hope for MPEG4 but most likely to be MPEG2. Although Creative Archive doesn't have to be broadcast quality for personal use, only VHS quality, they'd be crazy not to encode at a higher quality so that content could be re-used in a digital format for other projects), cataloguing that content with all relevant keywords and metadata and then publishing the content. As for storage we're talking several (tens) terabytes at least.
I think building the website itself if going to be the easy bit!
Creative Archive is a project I'd love to work on as I think it's going to be quite exciting, but the shear scale is also quite enormous.
Here's a million dollar idea (Score:2)
Of course you could use your PC for this, but who wants their stereo clutered with a keyboard, mouse, and monitor?
Of course you would need a way to get the mp3s on the HDD. Network?
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
This explains the other article (Score:2)
So, about the same time this comes out, the BBC publishes a whitewash of Microsoft's security problems (also available here on Slashdot.)
Is this a coincidence? Or are they hoping to make everyone feel better about their support for Microsoft?
Re:Microsuck DRM... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Microsuck DRM... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Microsuck DRM... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Microsuck DRM... (Score:2)
Where in your linked document does it say that all BBC content is supposed to be free?
It doesn't. Nor is that document the BBC's public service agreement, it's an update to the original document (copies of the new Charter (Cm 3248) and Agreement (Cm 3152) are available from HMSO, priced 4.50 each!)
Your assertation that all content be free is bogus. Otherwise the BBC could not sell content abroad, provide DVDs and Videos of shows, partner books and so on. They do.
The only thing the BBC has to do is (ap
Re:The TV license fee and the BBC (Score:3, Insightful)
The TV license provides a broadcaster that is not dependant on advertising for revenue. In theory it can broadcast programmes that are not popular with advertisers. It doesn't always work, but when it does it works very well.
Re:The TV licence fee and the BBC (Score:2)
Having a license fee makes the BBC totally dependant on government goodwill. It's no surprise that it has a perpetual left-wing slant, while kowtowing to the government in power when political needs demand.
If you want a left-leaning government propaganda station, how about you pay for it out of your own pocket and let other people watch whatever they want to watch?
"If it were funded through advertising we'd lose out - the output would be geared to mass marke
Re:The TV licence fee and the BBC (Score:2)
People pay their own money for Sky: no-one is forcing them to do so just because they have a TV, like the British Propaganda Corporation.
"Without public services there would be no balance."
If people _want_ a lefty TV station, they'll be able to pay for it out of their own pocket. If people don't want a lefty TV station, there won't be one.
What problem do you have with that?
Re:The TV licence fee and the BBC (Score:2, Insightful)
So - without the BBC we would all be free to "choose" to watch all of the wonderful American crap on Sky, the lowest common denominator pop-idol crap on ITV or the absolutely top-notch house-buying and top tens content that they have on Channel 4. And then there's the radio, with no more Radio 4 we would all be free to choose to listen to Virgin, Capital Gold and News Talk - all complete and utter shite.
What a wonderful vision of British broadcasting the way it could be!
Re:I already have all the DRM'd BBC content I need (Score:2, Insightful)