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View Full Version : Streaming Music & Streaming Videos, Oh My!


Jason Dunn
12-12-2005, 05:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20051208.html' target='_blank'>http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20051208.html</a><br /><br /></div><i>"The first event was MP3tunes.com's announcement of Oboe, its music locker service. MP3tunes is one of the companies owned by Michael Robertson, who founded MP3.com back in the Internet boom years and sold it for a ton of money. Robertson, a serial entrepreneur, has Linspire (formerly Lindows) and SIPphone and probably other companies, too, in addition to MP3tunes. Daring and willing to spend money if he has to, Robertson is a force to be reckoned with. The Oboe music locker is a simple concept: For $39.95 per year, you can upload your entire music collection to an MP3tunes server and listen to it anywhere in the world you can get an Internet connection. There are no storage limitations or extra bandwidth fees. The system is legal because the MP3tunes server can only be accessed by you, so it is no different than ripping your CDs on your home PC. Of course, you have to bother to do the uploading, but special software makes that fairly painless if lengthy. Music is encoded at a maximum of 192 kbps, so this isn't really DVD-quality, but I don't generally get along well with the kind of people who can hear the difference, so it doesn't matter to me."</i><br /><br />Oboe sounds like a neat concept, although given the lack of always-on 'Net connectivity, I wonder if this idea is ahead of it's time. When I have an EVDO card built into my laptop and unlimited access for $10 a month I'll gladly keep everything up "in the cloud", but until then hard drives are my preferred storage location. What about you?

myrampar
12-13-2005, 09:38 PM
I haven't really looked at Oboe, but I've been pretty happy with my Orb account. I don't have to bother with uploading my music and it also supports photos, video and recorded or live TV if you have a TV Tuner card. I guess the downside to Orb is that the PC needs to be on and connected to the internet.

I just wish that we could get more useful upload speeds from our ISP's. This would allow us to stream our videos through services like Orb w/o the sacrifices. I'm not expecting to be able to stream HD quality video anytime soon, but I'd like to experience smooth playback with videos I've encoded to work on the PPC.

And with more and more applications requiring increased upload bandwidth (Video messenging, VOIP, video sharing, etc) it is going to be more of an issue.

Just my 2 cents!