Comment Re:welleee (Score 1) 888
Comment Re:Wishful thinking (Score 5, Funny) 249
This just in - they got a response:
Dear Earthling,
Hello! I am a creature from a galaxy far away, visiting your planet.
I have transformed myself into this text file. As you are reading it, I
am having sex with your eyeballs. I know you like it because you are
smiling. Please pass me on to someone else because I'm really horny.
Comment Re:LogMeIn (Score 3, Funny) 454
Comment Re:And this is on slashdot why? (Score 2, Interesting) 253
Comment Re:k (Score 2, Informative) 62
We have one index with that's updated every 20 minutes, but only has about 50k documents and a combination of Solr cache auto-warming and squid's stale-while-re-validate logic works there.
In another system where updates need to be faster, we had to do some custom work to make it perform where there is an in memory index for recent changes, an on-disk index of previous changes, and process for moving from one to another. Hopefully these improvements will make their way back to Lucene in the future.
Comment Re:k (Score 4, Informative) 62
Comment Re:Mis-Informed Article (Score 1) 220
Comment Re:Mis-Informed Article-No End Of Analog (Score 1) 220
http://connectedhome2go.com/2009/04/20/project-cavalry-in-philly-and-beyond/
"Independent of the broadcast digital transition set to take place on June 12th, Comcast is making the all-digital shift in about half of its markets this year. (All Motorola markets so far) In fact, the Comcast move is taking place in my own Philadelphia backyard at the moment. As part of a âoemarinationâ period, Comcast is deploying digital set-tops and DTAs for basic subcribers during already-scheduled truck rolls. After new hardware is the field, Comcast aims to move roughly 40 analog channels to its digital tier - all as a way to free up bandwidth for more HD content and DOCSIS 3.0 channel bonding."
Comment Mis-Informed Article (Score 1) 220
The reality is that most of the content that offered on cable today won't make its way to the web for free under the current revenue models of content providers (not cable cos). Currently half of the revenue that channels like TLC get is from cable subscriptions. The other half is from advertising. These channels aren't interested in cutting their revenues in half on the hopes that on-line advertising somehow doubles in profitability. This is especially the case when it's currently only about 10% of what the same ads get you on TV.
Hulu is an experiment by major networks (FOX/NBC) (who already provide their content for free and get most of their revenues from advertising) to see if they can make the online advertising model work and capture more eyes than they are currently getting. While the site is successful in terms of traffic, the advertising dollars aren't there yet. As long as it doesn't undermine the real money of TV advertising, it's a useful experiment. (There is some cable network content on Hulu from Viacom ala Comedy Central/Sci Fi but its the content that is so mainstream that the advertising experiment may pay-off).
While the Economist was missing the boat they decided to also throw in the al-a-carte pricing myth as well. That model doesn't work either since not everyone wants the same 15 channels. If you move to that model then today's 100 channels would be tomorrows 20. Hope you like Home Shopping Network more than BBC America.
As to why DOCSIS 3 is so slow to make its way out? First cable cos are large companies that have basically been monopolies for long enough that their culture reflects that. They are slow to do anything. Second, they are waiting for the end of analog signals so they can reclaim some bandwidth. Third it's expensive. When you have 30 million customers, $100 a pop is real money. Under these conditions, there is little incentive to rush to market. That said, cable cos are starting to roll out this service and increasing the bandwidth of existing customers.
So what will happen? I think content providers will partner with cable cos to provide their content online. It will be on a different part of the pipe, just like phone service is so you get good quality of service for HD even when your neighbor has his torrents at full throttle. You'll see reasonable network caps like comcast's 250GB a month but your video viewing (on that separate pipe) won't count towards that so you mostly won't care providing you have a job or something else to do other than watch torrent content all day. Will you suddenly get all the good content you want for free? Unlikely. Will your most affordable (and legal) option for getting content still be from a cable co/tele co? Probably. Hopefully as more options become available: Cable, Fiber, Netfix, iTunes, the pressure will be on cable/tele cos to provider a better experience.
Comment Re:If you are asking this question (Score 1) 372
Comment Re:CableCard not disappearing.... (Score 2, Informative) 216
You summary is mostly accurate (and much more so than most other comments).
The Tivo software that Comcast has rolled out in Boston is actually built on the OCAP stack so you won't necessarily be stuck with the cable companies crappy interface. Reviews of that service have been mostly positive so it appears that the OCAP/tru2way platform is flexible enough to built a reasonable interface. This should also allow better integration with VOD service as well as switch digital which have been the problems for Tivo users so far.
One of the other motivations for this is now cable companies don't have to be the sole provider of set-top boxes. I'm don't think that slashdot readers get what it's like to deploy software to millions of homes on hardware that is made as cheap as it possibly could be. Diversity in this environment is a support nightmare and cable companies pay all the upfront costs for those boxes (hence their cheapness).
Tru2way should allow a lot more diversity in the market for people who want high-end boxes. If this is bundled with your several thousand dollar HD TV the impact is far less noticeable.