...more recent posts
Server just arrived. It is rather bad ass looking.
Man I have so many posts brewing but I'm just not sure when they will come out. I feel like everything has been on hold for so long, and now it is all starting to happen at once.
The new server is our way of playing a little part in this next phase of the internet. Disk space has plunged in cost, bandwidth - both fixed and especially mobile - have soared in speed, and new protocols - especially BitTorrent and RSS/ATOM - are allowing for new applications that will create a significantly richer media experience.
Here's one example. If you're a Mac user (Windows and Linux clients are on their way,) go download DTV. It's an RSS reader that pulls down feeds that contain video clips. You subscribe to different "channels" (which are like different websites,) and your DTV client polls them at a selective interval and downloads any new content. It's a program you just keep running in the background all the time, and then whenever you want you can open it up and there will be tons of new video clips that you watch right in the DTV program. And the downloads can themselves be torrents, in which case the DTV client is also a BitTorrent client - except the user doesn't see any of this, nor needs to know what any of these protocols are or how they work. Very very slick.
The DTV client looks and works much like iTunes. Click on 'Channel Guide' at the top of the left hand column (like clicking on your 'library' in iTunes) and you get a listing of different channels they think you might like to subscribe to. But the channels are just RSS feeds, so anyone can make a feed that can be shown (this is an open system - not a walled garden.) Just click 'Add Channel' at the bottom of the left hand column and you can enter any URL. Here are two to start with:
http://del.icio.us/popular/system:media:video
http://www.commonbits.org/rss/tag/daily-show
The first is a feed of popular video clips from the group site del.icio.us. The second are daily short clips from the Daily Show.
Now nothing here is completely new. We've been reading RSS feeds for years now. And downloading with BitTorrent as well. But it's never all been easy enough to reach critical mass. Now it is. And the way they have baked BitTorrent into this thing is just mind blowing. It solves the bandwidth bottle neck of being a content producer. And that means it levels the playing field significantly in terms of who can distribute the media.
What blogs have done for the written word, and what is generally called "news", which is much like what P2P networks did to the music industry, BitTorrent and RSS combos like DTV will now do to television and movies. It won't destroy them, but it will completely change everything, creating a lot of opportunities for new comers and a lot of disappointment for entrenched players who don't see it coming.