I thought Skype users and potential Skype users might find the following 
article of interest.

 

Feed: Skype Blogs
Posted on: Thursday, March 13, 2008 8:55 AM
Author: Villu Arak
Subject: Skype "a good thing" for CNN

 


The Hollywood Reporter has done a nice story on how quick-thinking CNN tech 
staff in the US helped the network out of an equipment crunch by using Skype to 
carry a video interview. 

This isn?t the first time a major network has done so, as the article also 
points out. But it could help open the rusty floodgates. We?re all used to 
seeing journalists in khaki-colored vests filing reports from the world?s 
distant hotspots over the videophone 
<http://www.globalcoms.com/video%20streaming%20solution.asp> , and strangely, 
the choppy quality of these reports does add a layer of raw believability to 
what is being transmitted. (Similarly, AM broadcasts to me feel more 
?radio-like? than the squeaky clean FM signals or the kills-bugs-dead sterility 
of satellite radio)

However, at some point producers and viewers alike will begin to wonder if 
there?s a better way to stretch the equipment budget. Skype video won?t yet 
replace satellite-linked videophone reports from an Afghan mountaintop, but in 
more hospitable locations (with wireless or cable broadband) a laptop with 
Skype and a webcam will be economically more viable for skeleton crews on a 
tight budget. And aesthetically much more pleasing to the viewer. 

Things get even better with High 
<http://www.skype.com/intl/en/allfeatures/videocall/#high-quality-video>  
Quality Video, which requires Skype, an optimized Logitech webcam 
<http://www.skype.com/go/dc.shop.webcams> , a computer with a dual-core 
processor, and a reasonably fat internet connection. Nothing extraordinary for 
2008, but it?ll deliver up to 30 frames per second at 640x480 pixels. With 
proper lighting and micing, the experience isn?t too far removed from regular 
TV. Little wonder, then, that broadcasters are experimenting with Skype. 

I have a feeling that things won?t end with CNN using Skype to interview a 
vacationing analyst in Maui. More exciting stuff is bound to happen on this 
front, that?s for sure. If only content could keep pace with technological 
advances..


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