"This server is configured to support only multicast connections. Please contact the content provider for more information on listening to this broadcast."

It seems that JANET doesn't extend to the university accommodation, although I don't see why it wouldn't.

Duncan

Jason Cartwright wrote:
Sounds like (pun intended) you should checkout the multicast goodies at
http://www.bbc.co.uk/multicast/

Most (all?) UK unis are on JANET, who are on the BBC's multicast trial

Cheers,
J

________________________________________________
Jason Cartwright
Client Side Developer - Content Management Culture - New Media &
Technology
E: [EMAIL PROTECTED] A: BC4 C5 29, Broadcast Centre, 201 Wood Lane, London, W12 7TP Personal site: www.jasoncartwright.com "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in
awhile, you could miss it." - Ferris Bueller


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Duncan Barclay
Sent: 17 May 2006 16:14
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [backstage] All streamable programmes

The BBC's detecting of my bandwidth has been annoying me recently.  It
seems to think that I am on narrowband, and doesn't give me the option
to go for something better (although it is possible to get around it, so
that I can at least watch things at a size that is viewable).  I should
point out that I have a 10mbps connection courtesy of the University of
Bath, and really shouldn't have any bandwidth issues.

Any chance of this being improved upon sometime?

Thanks
Duncan Barclay.

James Cridland wrote:
(Apologies: this is almost wholly off-topic.)

On 5/16/06, Gordon Joly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
At 22:46 +0100 15/5/06, James Cridland wrote:
I can't speak for the BBC, but certainly when you make the Virgin Radio player appear ( www.virginradio.co.uk/listen on any PC)
Ahem. The "live.pls" file was (correctly?) sent to iTunes from Firefox. I am listening as I type this:-)
The plan works. And yes, correctly, sent to iTunes from Firefox since you're on a Mac; while our internet radio player works just fine on a Mac with Windows Media Player installed, we can't check if it's installed and therefore don't serve it to you. Shame.

NumberOfEntries=3
File1=http://mp3-vr-32.smgradio.com:80/
Title1=Virgin Radio 1215AM, LIVE from London [HBR](peered -
8x.1xxx.1xx.3x)
The other thing that our player does is it does a quick bandwidth-check, and serves you the high bitrate stream if you can cope happily with it. We can't do that otherwise, so you've got the dirty 32k mono thing. Change the '32' to '128' and Bob's your uncle.

Incidentally, this is one (the only?) benefit of the BBC using Real Player - trying to drag this thread back on-topic. Real includes some nifty bandwidth-sensing, and the same stream can serve anything from 8k to 800k. The BBC's are configured this way; also our only native Real streams auto-sense from 8k-32 to allow you to listen on a device over GPRS.

Microsoft Windows Media does do some auto-sensing too, though these streams aren't very backward-compatible; our high-bitrate stream is auto-sensing from 20k up to 100k, from memory.

I don't get much text in the iTunes window with from Virgin
I don't think iTunes supports the in-player "now playing" text; oddly,

Winamp does, so you do get some text there. Real can support this, kind of, using some odd format or an inbuilt browser window; Windows Media Player can send scripting events which is what we use for our radio player (in MSIE).

compared with text on my handy DAB radio.
Glad you like it; that's my department too.


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