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Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Virgin Media apologises in advance for Olympic issues

Olympic Route Network woesNetworking News By Patrick Goss Friday at 19:55 UTC | Tell us what you think [ 0 comments ]

Tweet virgin-media-apologises-in-advance-for-olympic-issues VM - advance warning

Virgin Media has apologised in advance to thousands of customers that live in London for delays that will be caused by restrictions on digging up the roads on the Olympic Route Network.

In a postcard apologising to users on the route, Virgin Media explains that any necessary repairs to its cable will take 'longer than usual' between March and September, because it will be limited on what it can dig up.

"Thanks to the team's hard work. It's really unlikely that you there'll be a problem with your service," wrote VM.

Dig it

"If it turns out that we need to dig under your roads, it might take us a bit longer than usual...we're really sorry for any inconvenience this causes," the note continued.

The Olympics is inevitably causing some major gripes to those in the areas likely to be affected, with already overloaded transport links likely to be hit hard by the Games.

Virgin Media is, in fairness, making sure that it is being clear about a potential problem, rather than predicting one.

But here's hoping that your cable doesn't go down in a whopping seven month period, or you could find yourself listening to the 100m final on the radio rather than watching it in HD.

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Do you subscribe to a film streaming service?

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Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Philips HMP2000 media streamer offers instant Netflix

Makes any TV a smart TVVideo News By Kate Solomon Friday at 16:24 UTC | Tell us what you think [ 1 comments ]

Tweet philips-hmp2000-media-streamer-offers-instant-netflix Netflix at the ready

The newly launched Philips HMP2000 is a dinky media streamer that adds internet connectivity to any television.

You can kick back and stream YouTube, Netflix and catch up TV from the BBC and Channel 4 using the HMP2000, although no mention is made of Amazon's LoveFilm streaming service. It's possible that you could stream Lovefilm movies through the browser though.

Taking on the Roku, which launched in a similarly tiny fashion earlier this month, the HMP2000 has two features that set it apart: a dedicated Netflix button and a dedicated YouTube button on the remote.

Super stream

These insta-buttons are welcome additions. We're often finding ourselves in urgent need of a Netflix fix: when lives are on the line there is just no time to be navigating through menus.

Random convenience aside, the HMP2000 offers 1080p HDMI output, built-in Wi-Fi and a tiny footprint.

Hitting the shops imminently, the Philips HMP2000 UK pricing is set at around £49.99.

Tags: Philips HMP2000, media streamer, Netflix, YouTube, iPlayer, streamingTweetreddit!StumbleuponComment on this article  Your comments (1) Click to add a new commentsimon_m


Friday at 16:53 UTC

1. This is a great idea - an enormous amount of functionality for £50! I will be having one for sure.

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How does the Lovefilm competitor measure up?

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Sunday, 22 January 2012

Storage Media Used for the Data Backup

In this information technology era everybody will have heart the term “Data Backup”. The backup of any data is not any thing it is the copy of the original data that will be used to recover the data back when corruption is made. Data loss is the very common problem in this technical age. According the survey 66% of internet users have suffered for the data loss situation.

There are many types of data backup on the basis of their uses, details contain, size and many more. Some of them are given below:

Unstructured BackupFull backupDifferential BackupReverse Delta BackupFull System Backup

Choosing backup type is totally depends upon the user, he/she will decide which backup is the best backup for his/her data. Unstructured backup does not recover complete data because it has very small details. Full system backup is the best backup to restore the complete data because it contains all information related to the data. It is very costly in comparison of any data backup.


Different types of storage media are available to store the data backup. These storage medias are used when the data gets corrupted by the any of reasons like virus attack, hardware problem, suddenly system shutdown, errors which storing the data and many more. Some of the popular storage media is given below:

Magnetic TapeHard Disk (Hard Disk Recovery)
Optical StorageFloppy DiskSolid State Storage


Magnetic Tape: It is mostly used for interchange the data, data storage and archiving. The main feature is it store data for the decade in comparison of others.

Hard Disk: The main advantage of hard disk is low access time. It is easily available and cheaper. Day by day the capacity versus price ratio is improving.


Optical Disk: Some optical storage media allows for cataloged data backup without any human contact with the disk. It allows longer data integrity.


Floppy Disk: It is used in the 1980 and early 1990s. Due to limited storage capacity it is used by the personal computer users. It is not more popular in comparison of others to store data.


Solid State Storage: It is also known as USB flash drives, thumb drives, flash memory and secure digital cards and many more. These devices are very costly in comparison of the other storage media.


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Monday, 19 September 2011

Tutorial: How to build the ultimate home media network

How to build the ultimate home media network | News | TechRadar UK Updated 12 hours ago

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Tweet Page 1: How to build the ultimate home media networkPage 2: Hallway, under the stairs and living room

how-to-build-the-ultimate-home-media-network Build your own home media network for enjoying your music and movies

<>

Discs are so yesterday. They get damaged, they get lost, they won't work with all your equipment and they need a player in every room.

For a long time, moving a whole media collection onto a central server has been the dream of many. But potential problems, including the inevitable mess of cables, complex switch configuration and living with a noisy PC next to the telly, have put some people off.

Forget all that negativity. It's now possible to build a discreet, powerful system that will neither cost the Earth, nor need your family's approval for cable tethering. Best of all, you won't need to make compromises for quality.

Networks and hardware are now easily capable of streaming high-definition 1080p content. You probably already have the streaming client sitting underneath your television, or in the palm of your hand. Whether that's a PlayStation 3, a Nintendo Wii, an Android phone or an iPhone, linking all these devices together to create a home mesh of media is a great solution for people with large media collections – or children with sticky fingers.

If you're after the perfect living room experience, you can now buy devices that will grab data from numerous sources and push it through an HDMI cable straight to your television. The trick is knowing what goes where.

We're going to move from room to room, building the perfect solution for your home. We'll travel from the study, with its loading bay PC, to the modem and router in the hall, past the stairs with their hidden NAS box and on to the living room, where you'll be able to enjoy the fruits of all your hard work: lag- and stutter-free access to your entire media collection from the comfort of your sofa.

The study

Welcome to the content generating control room

study

This is where your content metamorphoses from a physical liability into a series of files sitting on a network-attached storage box hidden under the stairs. This transformation must happen within a PC, because it involves a lot of number crunching to sort everything out neatly.

Whether you're turning an audio CD into MP3 and FLAC files, or transcoding a home movie into high-definition MKV, the more raw processing power you have, the less time you'll need to spend acting as disc-tray nanny.

Central powerhouse

As a result, the study needs to house an all-powerful computer. It's going to run Windows 7, and it will need to be as brawny and power-efficient as possible, switching into a low-power standby mode when not in use and enabling network devices to have the on-demand option of using it for transcoding one video format to another, if the need arises.

The CPU needs to be of the full-fat variety, with as many cores as you can reasonably afford. AMD processors are currently top of the pile when it comes to price and performance, but we've found that Intel CPUs are generally better behaved, suspend easier and use less power.

For that reason, we'd recommend opting for a Core i7 model with as much speed and as many cores as you can happily pay for. The Core i7-875k is a good choice in this instance, because it balances this performance with relatively decent value now that its price has dipped below £300.

You'll need to combine this with plenty of memory, because video compression and transcoding will eat as much as you can throw at them. Consider 4GB of fast RAM as an absolute minimum.

If you're intending to record live television, you'll also need room for the Freeview card and plenty of hard drive space – although your NAS is going to be the archive for your data, so space on the PC is only going to be needed temporarily.

GPU processing

You might think you can skip the expensive 3D graphics card in favour of a machine that's meant only for 2D video, but there's an interesting technology that might make you reconsider.

The GPU within a 3D graphics card is itself a powerful number cruncher, and manufacturers are just starting to catch on to the idea that a GPU can be harnessed for desktop applications as well as gaming.

Nvidia, for example, has created a technology called CUDA, which will enable developers to use the power of your GPU to accelerate mathematically intensive processes – which is exactly what video encoding is.

Nero's Move It software encoder can use CUDA for video conversion, and Daniusoft's DVD Ripper claims that CUDA helps it attain a 500 per cent conversion speed. For this reason, it's worth trading some of your CPU budget for a decent Nvidia card.

The EVGA GeForce GTX 460, at less than £150, is an excellent choice for GPU acceleration.

To complete the PC, you'll need decent networking provision. Your PC is going to be both the encoder and the transcoder, constantly shuttling data across the network, so the only realistic options for connectivity are physical – either with an Ethernet cable between this machine and the router, or a Powerline unit to pass the Ethernet through your home's power grid.

Wireless is fast enough in theory, but not in practice – especially when slower devices are also connected or other people are consuming the bandwidth. We recommend a wired Powerline backbone for data streaming, and because nearly all motherboards include Gigabit Ethernet, this is all you're going to need here.

Software

Finally, with the system configured and Windows 7 installed, you'll need some software to perform the transcoding magic. This will help platforms such as Nintendo's Wii and Apple's iPad access your entire media collection without the media being encoded into the formats those devices specifically support.

The best we've found is TVersity, which can cater for a vast number of players and understand almost any media format you throw at it. The basic version is free, and it's easily installed, automatically detecting all your media files stored locally. For remote files held on your NAS, you'll need to mount the remotely shared folder onto your system and make sure this mount point is connected each time your computer boots.

TVersity

If you want to access your media collection from the internet, try downloading Orb. This uses a web portal to stream your media from your PC to any compatible and connected device on the web – the only limit being the upload speed of your home connection.

Next Page: Hallway, under the stairs and living room

Tags: tutorial, home networking, home cinema, video streamingTweetreddit!Stumbleupon12Next >   Your comments (3) Click to add a new commentoliveir


January 23rd

3. I like your recommendations. I have set up a four Pc wired network under windows 7, one of them serving as NAS as well, with 5 TB storage necessary for 4tv tuners. All of them use Windows Media Center except my wifi tablet that I use as universal remote, with Media Player and its fabulous "play to" function.

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allosunshine


January 9th

2. Is DNLA the new DLNA then?? LOL.

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wyliecoyoteuk


January 9th

1. That's rather like my home system, with one large difference, no Microsoft software.

I use Ubuntu and MythTV in various configurations to pipe media including music, video and Live TV to several devices.

Oh, and I don't have a TV, just TV cards in one PC and monitors on the others :)

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