Forum: Poser - OFFICIAL


Subject: Off topic but bloody cool!

praxis22 opened this issue on Oct 26, 2000 ยท 3 posts


praxis22 posted Thu, 26 October 2000 at 9:28 AM

Attached Link: http://verdi.research.att.com

Hi, I work for AT&T labs, and I've just got hold of something I just have to share... http://verdi.research.att.com It's some kind of streaming media player, not sure if it'll work outside of our network, but in quality terms it's streets ahead of real, etc. I'm told it's a bandwidth hog, and the interface is basic, but even so... If you can't get to the page let me know.

dethblud posted Thu, 26 October 2000 at 11:11 AM

I can't get to the page.


praxis22 posted Thu, 26 October 2000 at 11:44 AM

Yeah, it looks like you have to be behind the corporate firewall for it to work, I'd give it out, but A) it's proprietary software, and B) it needs access to a NAP (Network Access Point) which it will only find on this side of the fiewall too. Basically it's a form of MP3 streaming, but without QOS requirements, so I'm getting a 96kbps stream with no loss from Germany, and 112kbps from several NY stations, the encoding is called +AAC, the white paper say it needs at least ISDN to function properly, but if you've got a permanent connection (and they're probably thinking of using it via ADSL) then you can get streaming audio and video at a greatly improved quality than is available today and still surf. It says you need a Pentium with an FPU (100Mhz or more) to really be able to decompress on the fly without slowdown. You might want to ask your AT&T rep if you can get access, one server is apparently capable of serving 500 clients at 128kbps (unicast) and the base spec is a Pentium Pro with 64Mb of RAM running Linux (or some other UNIX with access to pthreads) so you could throw one up easily... I shall enquire of the types that wrote it and see what they say. later jb