jay you are SO wrong.
its a 12 year old kid, not a 17 year old kid!
get your facts right.
free john johansen!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Johansen
On 9/1/07, Jay dedman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think people want, more than anything, the choice.
The thing people hate about DRM is it
jay you are SO wrong.
its a 12 year old kid, not a 17 year old kid!
2007 - 1983 = 24 doh!
Jon Lech Johansen (born November 18, 1983 in Harstad, Norway)
:-)
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Irina [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
jay you are SO wrong.
its a 12 year old kid, not a 17 year old
For the record, I would be opposed to ANY sort of DRM, or any other sort of
tech road block for distributing my content. Please Blip.tv don't spend your
time and energy making it more difficult for people to get to my content.
The problem is, of course, that the DRM makes this assumption that the
Don't worry, Richard. There's no DRM on our road map. However, your concern
about DRM is that it has the unfortunate side effect of impeding your actual
target audience. So you seem to be against crude, inexact DRM, and not the
ideal type which would only be noticed by violators of the
I think people want, more than anything, the choice.
The thing people hate about DRM is it being forced on them and
limiting their fair use rights.
I think that letting content creators choose how to publish their
content is the way forward. DRM is never going to be a one size fits
all
Charles,
I don't really want perfect DRM. First, of course, it's hard to imagine it
can be done, since the ones who want to violate it are really good at
breaking it. But that's not a real argument, of course, since the perfect
is hypothetical and, in any case, you are infinitely more expert and
I think people want, more than anything, the choice.
The thing people hate about DRM is it being forced on them and
limiting their fair use rights.
I think that letting content creators choose how to publish their
content is the way forward. DRM is never going to be a one size fits
all
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Jay dedman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The main features of this release is being able to play Ogg video with
the included cortado Ogg player. And on wordpress you can share the
embed code of your videos so viewers can embed the video on their
sites.
That's an excellent point. Do we have specs on setting up Compressor
for ogg output? Data Rate, etc? Or do you use the same settings as,
say, MOV, but just switch the codec?
we need to do some testing using the QT plugin:
http://xiph.org/quicktime/download.html
the default settings look
I see. You're right. Default looks good.
I used export - movie to ogg from Quicktime player. It
introduced a slight lag, maybe 1 or 2 frames with the video trailing
the audio. That may have something to do with the FPS reading 48.01,
or it may have something to do with watching it in
I used export - movie to ogg from Quicktime player. It
introduced a slight lag, maybe 1 or 2 frames with the video trailing
the audio. That may have something to do with the FPS reading 48.01,
or it may have something to do with watching it in Quicktime player,
because it had to load
not sure if this means what i think it means but:
...the big seller for Adobe is the ability to include in Flash movies
so-called digital rights management (DRM) - allowing copyright holders to
require the viewing of adverts, or restrict copying.
from
DRM is understandably unpopular, but lets not get too carried away
with its implications.
DRM mechanisms are already present in many of the formats people use
today. It causes no problem at all for unprotected media. Its only a
restriction if the content creator/distributor chooses to use it, so
I think some vloggers here would appreciate DRM technology that thwarts
disreputable aggregators who disregard Creative Commons licensing.
Steve Watkins wrote:
DRM is understandably unpopular...
Well yes its a good thing to support formats that are apparently
unimpinged by patents, and where encoding and decoding stuff for the
formats is available as open source.
I dont think the example of DRM is a very likely future nightmare
reason why people would abandon flash or quicktime, as
An example of people wanting to switch away from h264 in future would
be if they put some silly licenses costs on content creators who use
h264, when these terms are updated in 2010 or something.
Or yeah if Adobe went insane and did something to flash player that
made people not want it
Share button ROCKS!!! :D
--
billcammack
http://realfans.tv
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Enric [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The main features of this release is being able to play Ogg video with
the included cortado Ogg player. And on wordpress you can share the
embed code of your
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