The press will definitely have to come to terms with the various components involved in a communications link. This one is an OMG moment for a few reasons:
NBN switch-on suffers tech glitch http://www.theage.com.au/it-pro/government-it/nbn-switchon-suffers-tech-glitch-20130505-2j0x8.html NBN Co spokeswoman Rhonda Griffin said the fault was to do with a glitch in the audio-visual software. "The connection was restored in seconds," she said. Aside from the drop out, the video conference's audio quality wasn't spectacular and there was about a three-second delay - but that didn't appear to wipe the smiles off of the children reading along with Mr Griffiths. The video itself was crystal clear and you could make out the book's front cover that Mr Griffiths was reading. ==== 1. video conference equipment does have software and if the handshake isn't properly made, it can drop out. The article doesn't say what system they were using. 2. 3 second delay? Are you kidding me? On a fibre connection????? That is just crazy time! We didn't have those sorts of delays on the ISBN network. My guess: the people doing the connection don't have the technical know-how for the equipment they attached to the system. I hope maybe someone on link can shed some light on this. I worked with a range of video conf equipment for a number of years and a 3sec delay didn't even happen on the WORST equipment back in the 1990s. What is going on here?? Jan Melbourne, Victoria, Australia [email protected] blog: http://janwhitaker.com/jansblog/ business: http://www.janwhitaker.com Our truest response to the irrationality of the world is to paint or sing or write, for only in such response do we find truth. ~Madeline L'Engle, writer _ __________________ _ _______________________________________________ Link mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
