On 06/07/2020 20:16, Dave Liquorice wrote:
It has potential to be a good litte earner but managing what content was
available to which parts of the world and that the consumer was really where
they claimed to be would be horrendous.
The last bit is fairly easy. Rights holders don't require
On Mon, 6 Jul 2020 11:14:48 +0100, CJB wrote:
> Then there are VPN services - free v.v. paid for. If the Beeb offered
> such then folks would surely pay to watch or listen from overseas.
Trouble is the BBC does not hold hold the rights to world wide distribution
on all of their content.
>
ROKU Smart TVs and sticks have an app called FoTV which allows
streaming and recording of BBC, ITV and Channel 4 and 5 shows,
and there is also an Android app (and probably an iPhone app) No
shortage of legal (and illegal) ways to get BBC programmes.
Most BBC shows eventually end up on other
Not only does the BBC not want to exploit a market that people are
currently using for free through the back door, they are wasting their
time spending a fortune on a competitor to Amazon Alexa, Google
Assistant, Apple Siri, Microsoft Cortana, Samsung Bixby and god knows
how many more AI
v2 - Add newly created Raspbian repo information
---
I noticed in the Release Notes for v3.26 the announcement of the demise
of the get_iplayer PPA. I have, for a number of years, been packaging
and publishing my own software for Debian and Ubuntu. So far I have
done the same for get_iplayer on
Interestingly the Genome service has an \Explorer option whereby it is
supposed to allow you to search the Archives. However I've not yet got
it to find anything.
When doing a search on Genome itself sometimes there are links to
recordings on iPlayer.
There are indeed quite a few OTR enthusiasts
In article
,
CJB wrote:
> I would love to hear the programmes made by such pioneers as Charles
> Parker, A.L.Lloyd, Ewan MacColl, Michael Mason, Charles Chilton, Alan
> Lomax, and many others. But their works have all been consigned to the
> 'dusty archives' never to be heard again - that is
Then there are VPN services - free v.v. paid for. If the Beeb offered
such then folks would surely pay to watch or listen from overseas.
Anther revenue stream it does not been to want to exploit.
But I would opine one demand would be for archival recordings audio
(sorry 'sounds') and video. Once
In article <77065296-bede-4f1c-a6a2-f774c580b...@gmail.com>,
VeniVidiVideo
wrote:
> Boy, the hypocrisy here is stunning. The BBC allows time-limited
> downloads, but does NOT allow downloads without an expiration date.
> Every single license payer here is violating BBC's terms of service by
>
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