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Legend has it that a bad GPU driver killed Intel's father. To this day intel can't bring themselves to write a good one. |
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#228 |
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If it "just works" with ANY device, people won't be attempting to conjure up an alternative solution. They already have plenty of airplay hardware out there, no one else does yet. Apple don't directly make money out of airplay, they make money out of the content that is streamed with it. If you can stream content out of say, itunes on your mac to your new TV directly, you might not bother to use some competing standard that skips the itunes store.
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MBP (early 2011) - Core i7 2720 2.2ghz, Hires Glossy, 16GB, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB Mac Mini (mid 2007) - Core2 Duo 1.8, 2gb, 320gb 7200 rpm iPhone 4S, iPad 4 |
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#230 |
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Yes.
http://airparrot.com http://www.knowyourmobile.com/featur...r_android.html http://tech.nocr.at/tech/airplay-on-linux/
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MacBook Pro 15" 2.2Ghz hi-res glossy, 16GB RAM, Logitech G700, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB iPhone 5 White 32GB Audiophile Photographer, videographer, audio engineer
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#231 | |
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#232 | |
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They also make their profits on these idevices(apart from Atv), so opening the standard would in fact lose them money.
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#233 |
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Excellent
We need this type of competition. Google go for it!
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#234 |
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The better question is, do you even need a license?
All of the above solutions have been reverse engineering AirPlay to achieve streaming.
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MacBook Pro 15" 2.2Ghz hi-res glossy, 16GB RAM, Logitech G700, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB iPhone 5 White 32GB Audiophile Photographer, videographer, audio engineer
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#235 |
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If you don't want a broken product because Apple changes the protocol, yes, you need a license
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There are four kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, statistics, and analyst projections. |
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#236 | |
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More details here : http://www.aorensoftware.com/blog/20...ing-internals/ The plain fact is : Airplay is not an open standard. Only Apple devices support it and vendors can implement receivers for video/audio under license, but no one can get a license for transmission as far as I know. That's the protocol's only flaw, it's not interoperatable.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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A protocol is meant NOT to change. It's a CONSTANT standard, so that all devices capable of using it can still use it. A computer running Win95 can probably open modern websites, albeit with only HTTP rendering abilities. Why? Because the HTTP protocol, although it has experienced some changes, is at the core the same thing it has been since its in 1995. That being said, AirPlay is also a protocol; it does not change, and if it does, it defeats the purpose of a communications protocol. And even if you have a license, if Apple changes the protocol, the fact still stands that you have to reprogram your app to work with it, so you end up SOL with a broken product with a license anyway. Quote:
One way or another, if people want things badly enough, they will use whatever methods necessary to gain it.
__________________
MacBook Pro 15" 2.2Ghz hi-res glossy, 16GB RAM, Logitech G700, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB iPhone 5 White 32GB Audiophile Photographer, videographer, audio engineer
Last edited by Prodo123; Nov 22, 2012 at 12:58 PM. Reason: add quote |
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#238 | |
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#239 | |
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The issue with Airplay is that it's non-open, not that it can't be hacked.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#240 | |
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We still have problems with broadband though - fibre optic connections are still rare outside of central London and most of the lines run off BT so they're able to charge a fortune and provide crappy service. Still, I'm happy using 3 as my broadband ![]() ---------- Yeah I went on holiday in Canada and tried to get a local SIM, the prices were insane and unlimited data seemed impossible to get even on the most expensive plans. |
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#241 |
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Great news!
I just hope it really is an open protocol (an improved dlna/airplay) that manufacturers don't feel the need to re-brand and tweak. I also don't understand the defence (and some of the over-the-top love) for airplay. It's an apple-only protocol that works as advertised... It does something that all mobile devices should do but is still nothing amazingly special. A decent, open standard that all devices support would be so much better for everyone. |
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#243 |
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I haven't seen "Miracast" on anything recently. I just bought a Yamaha RX-V773. Doesn't have anything to say about Miracast. I'm sure it may work fine. But, I've only heard of it on this forum. I will look into it more to see what it does. But, without it being used and familiar. I'm not expecting it to go very far.
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#244 | |
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I currently use Serviio to transcode my media to my BD (Sony) player. It sucked badly running on a Windows Box. Was very inconsistent in working, lets put it that way. I recently got an older Mac Pro (2006), and running the Mac version of Serviio. Its been VERY consistent in working well with the BD Player. Now, this could be a coincidence or just the app works better on the Mac then the PC. Who knows. But, that inconsistency is why Apple wants to control the experience. It simply has to work the way the intended it to work. If it doesn't everyone will complain. It's better to work RIGHT, and be limited (not licensed to everyone and everything and open). Then to work (claim to) on everything by everyone. Cause DLNA is a joke. Nice idea, but not a real answer to the problem. I have a DLNA NAS device. My BD player see's it fine. Just can't stream any movies from it, because it needs to be Transcoded. They don't tell you that part. You find that out the hard way when it doesn't work. So a feature that sounds great, does't do what thought it would do (completely). Just because all these devices can see each other. If they can't actually DO anything right, or are limited and or inconsistently working with each other. What's the point? |
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#245 | |
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TV exists because there are no app that could add any DLNA device as second screen to your mac.If there would be an app like that, no mac owner with any modern tv or stb would need TV...
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MyMacNeeds: 1eSata 2blu-ray 3usb3 4expandability(=ec or pci-e)to all Macs 5matteScreen&higherRez 13" 6lightport 7another fw(through ec ok) 8 10G-ethernet 9 xMac:desktopCPU+GPU,free pci-e,2 int. hdd |
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#246 |
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Why should google put extra effort into Apple devices? It won't help them at a,, why waste the time and money?
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#247 | |
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Regardless of what the HTTP protocol looks like now as compared to 1995, you're completely neglecting to consider how much HTML has been revised. Your idea only works in two scenarios: 1. The website is viewed using a browser from 95 and the website is HTML 2 compliant and contains no flash, java, no modern CSS, no modern media etc 2. You somehow get a recent browser working on Windows 95. Neither of these are practical. ---------- Not when for the most part Apple controls all portions of it, from the protocol itself to the sending and receiving devices. |
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