One possible alternative is some national newspaper publish articles
about how parents are outraged 7 year olds can access inappropiate
programmes which are broadcast after the watershed and are full of
swearing and nudity. Like it or not, breach of the watershed always
makes newspaper editors
What puzzles me is that (a) there is a whole heap of kids content on the
iPlayer, (b) younger people = early adopters, (c) BBC has a relationship
problem with young teenagers (no Def II for example - I guess I would call
it BBC ZERO these days and stick it on Freeview 301/302 when there's no
sport
The code had digg missing too... another version then
?php
// Social bookmark code...
function showsocialbookmarks($strTitle)
{
$strPrev=brBookmarknbsp;with:nbsp;;
$strStyle=background-repeat: no-repeat; padding-left: 18px;;
$strThisURLnc= http://; .
New for Christmas 2007: Early Learning Centre presents Tomy's 'My First
Interactive Media Player'
£130's about average for those sought-after faddy kids' toys these days
anyway, isn't it? You know, like Pogs or Tracey Islands or what have you
I'm showing my age now
_
From: [EMAIL
But I presume they'll make a knock-off copy on Blue Peter out of
sticky-backed plastic and household waste?
On 22/08/07, Christopher Woods [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
New for Christmas 2007: Early Learning Centre presents Tomy's 'My First
Interactive Media Player'
£130's about average for
Can't recall seeing this posted here, but then again it might have
gotten lost in all the noise or I may have been too bone idle to
actually remember what I've read.
http://bbciplayerlinux.sourceforge.net/index.php/Main_Page
BBC iPlayer on Linux project Wiki
This is a project to bring the BBC
At 09:45 +0100 20/8/07, Andrew Bowden wrote:
If you are interested in that kind of thing there was a
fantastic 30 minute documentary about the number stations on
Radio 4 called The Lincolnshire Poacher around about Xmas.
I *cough* downloaded it from
*cough* UKNova whilst I was in Austria
At 10:43 +0100 20/8/07, Darren Stephens wrote:
content-class: urn:content-classes:message
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset=us-ascii
Yes, I too have certainly not downloaded this.
And I am not downloading right now...
In fact, I think somebody who resembles me hear it in 2006 on the
There's an error in your story, you say it's unavailable to under 18s, my
screen cap clearly shows that the BBC think they can enforce contract law on
under 16s.
If they had used under 18s, the clause may have had a point, using under
16s, just makes the clause redundant because if a 14 yr old
Doesn''t this break the TCs ?
On 22/08/07, Sean Dillon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can't recall seeing this posted here, but then again it might have
gotten lost in all the noise or I may have been too bone idle to
actually remember what I've read.
Exactly where in the T Cs does it say thou shalt not port iPlayer to
another platform?
(If someone point's out a clause in the EULA, I shall point and laugh).
Personally I'd think that Auntie would be glad for the help, the Beeb is
comitted to making iPlayer platform neutral, right?
Vijay.
On
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayerbeta/tandc.shtml ...
12. You agree:
to not attempt to, or assist any other person to *reverse engineer*, *
de-compile*, *disassemble*, *alter*, duplicate, *modify*, rent, lease, loan,
sub-licence, make copies, *create derivative works from*, distribute or
provide
Fair enough, though I still think that it's counter-productive, secondly,
and upon closer reading, I notice that the T Cs and the EULA are one and
the same; so my previous complaint about the EULA has been partly rendered
null and void. For once I could and should have read the EULA before
Err.
They are not 'reverse engineer, de-compile, disassemble, alter, modify, or
create derivative works from
AFAICS They are modifying Wine to correctly respond to the API calls that the
iPlayer makes.
Hmm... wonder what this does to the DRM
David
Brian Butterworth wrote:
That's an interesting approach, but I guess it's quicker than decompiling
iPlayer then rebuilding it from the ground up; I would guess that if WINE
works correctly, the DRM stays, afterall that's what WINE is meant to do,
implement all the features of windows, natively in Linux.
The days of MSDRM
Blasphemy! Where are the toilet roll inners?! I'll be damned if Health
Safety gets in the way of my toilet roll inners!
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Martin Belam
Sent: 22 August 2007 13:43
To: backstage@lists.bbc.co.uk
Subject:
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