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--- Forwarded Message from Ray Rojas <[log in to unmask]> --- >Date: Tue, 24 May 2005 09:25:23 -0700 >Subject: Streaming Media solutions >From: Ray Rojas <[log in to unmask]> >To: [log in to unmask] Hi everyone, I'm doing a comparison study and am looking into alternatives for media digitization and streaming online. In general, I would need something that could do the following: - digitize video, preferably MPEG-4 for size considerations, but any digital resource would be fine. - be able to cap bandwidth usage or at least manage it - no caching to the users computer, this would cause lots of additional copyright problems - needs to be robust, I'm anticipating 100-200 hits/day with higher peaks during midterms and finals (estimated 300-500 hits/day) - must be compatible with multiple platforms, with Windows, Mac and Linux support at least. - must be high enough quality to display at full-screen and, occasionally, for projection in classrooms Right now, we are using a little company called VideoFurnace as a pilot program and it works very well. The only problem is the cost (probably around $80,000 or more to start up and another $12,000 a year for licensing for our current configuration, double if we want to expand). The player that this system uses doesn't cache the video to the users computer so it was a unique solution as far as we could find. If we cache to the users computer then we are sending a copy to them and, for copyright reasons, this is not acceptable. Currently we are streaming class reserve videos on-campus and the students and faculty love it. Part of this comparison study is to justify the cost and part is simply to see what else is out there that may be easier or less expensive. I know that Apple's streaming server is good (and free) but it caches to disk, doesn't it? Same problem with Real Server and Windows Media Server (plus the problem of cross-platform support). Any information you can provide or point me in the right direction for would be very helpful. Thanks, Ray Rojas UCLA Media Lab 270 Powell Library (310)206-1211 *********************************************** LLTI is a service of IALLT, the International Association for Language Learning, and The Consortium for Language Teaching and Learning (http://consortium.dartmouth.edu). Join IALLT at http://iallt.org. Otmar Foelsche, LLTI-Editor ([log in to unmask]) ***********************************************