human being on Mon, 30 Jun 2003 12:07:10 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> ~e; new electronic mediaworks |
// the idea of connecting video-phones to AV chat was a // new thought for me, and maybe it is not for others, but // want to know what others consider about the recent // developments, and what new media/tactics they may // foster. examples of free classes or conferences are // given below, but it could also be organizing around // issues, holding meetings, public online debates, etc. A few recent developments in personal computing signal a potential future for the industry that has not existed as readily, but may have existed in mid-90s prior forecasts of faster technological investment and broadband usage. While this message will mention the Apple Macintosh and related equipment, it is not limited to this platform, nor to the PC alone, but will be related to this for convenience. -- Articles are coming out on what the 64-bit multi-processor desktop (and laptop) computers may mean for the existing 32 bit computer chips and related software. Apparently the 64 bit consumer market may challenge graphic workstations used for more intensive graphics and computation. Plus, the networking of these multi-processors in clusters may also impact the super-computing market using these new systems. This may mean that the consumer market may become better prepared for 3D and other graphics and high-performance work, which may be for consumption and production of media, such as video, 3D animations, sound, multitasked HDTV even. -- With the introduction of high-quality audio-visual chat (such as Apple's iSight camera) and eventually more productivity- based applications (such as a common white-board feature, multiple users, etc) in a chat program (possibly iChat AV) the integration of this refined technology makes remote work and networking a possibility for a huge consumer market. The wish for videoteleconferences outside the corporate world (of internal networks configured to work together, worldwide or nationally) still exist in 'room setups' dedicated to around-the-table video- conferences, from what has been observed. There are few if any mentions of cafes with videoconferencing software in active use even in the era of broadband cafes. Yet, with wi-fi and a laptop, or a cellphone modem, it may be possible to sit in a park and chat with someone on another continent, or so this is the vision now being sold by Apple's latest technology. This is not just writing about the novelty of audiovisuals but their integral relation to other technologies. First, though, it is worth noting that private video or business over unsecured or unencrypted networks is basically giving someone a live feed of one's private communications, the more relevant the content to someone else, the more likely it is of value to some snooper. Say one wants to do a video-chat and send files about a private work project, in a competitive or political environment... this is equivalent to making one's thoughts a channel for Cable TV, as technically it is unlikely it is any more difficult to grab this data than it is other existing streams of e-mails, URLs, etc. And there may be good money in it, if it is made to pay off. That is why not only the encrypting of computer hard-drives and password management and proxies should be built into computers, but they are of little use if one is only going to be encrypting worms, trojans, or viruses injected through other weak points in the communications networks. Therefore it is imagined that without security, the barriers to invest and also to trust such platforms for working will prevent or hinder their development beyond entertainment. Also, without security in broadband networks and modems and hardware, with regard to these issues, their adoption could hinder new innovations, such as telework centers, telecommuting, wireless field work. It is mentioned in the news how camera-phones are becoming popular in areas like real-estate, to show houses or in other fields. Consider this with streaming audio-visuals and full computer access, which is also possible, but the data that is vulnerable seems to also increase, maybe it is related to how one networks, if it is outside a secured virtual network or if it is in the open-air to be sniffed. Basic security networks would help adoption of such technology, as the wider or more open the networks that can exchange data, the better, it would seem, for use in the cross-pollination of ideas, and networking people. An interesting point was made by Apple in their keynote, which I happened to watch at a local cafe via wi-fi because the power had gone out. It was streamed from San Francisco via Quicktime and was of a poor quality due to the available bandwidth, yet hearing the presentation and reading the followup, the part that was of interest seems to be getting little press. That is, with the broadband connection and the new software, free long-distance calls can be made (and received, if using a 56k modem) with out a dial-tone, when using the iChat AV software. It has been said that many 'phonecards' for temporary long-distance calls is sent over the Internet, and the quality is at times noticeable. Yet, if one were to have quality broadband, and this type of a new network were to begin adoption beyond specific software, then the computer and its mutli-processors and such may even rival a small business phone exchange system, again lots of audio-visual data, caller-ID, voicemail, which may be connected with a computer. That this would be opposite the phone company model is of note, as is the exorbitant cost and quality of broad- band, which hinders any such developments, even competition. Yet even further, when one sends a camera-phone picture or has voice-mail recorded, it is 'somewhere else', when the trend in many other areas is to have these systems miniaturized into the home network. Consider Movie Palaces and DVD Home Theaters. It may be transformational, the maturing of certain technological developments, or their control, such as with the broadcast media networks and centralization of information. With broadband, not only telephony changes, and video- conferencing, but also narrowcasting and net-casts could be better realized by web-ready production and reception systems (software and hardware) which exist on the edges of the current network, to redistribute information. Not in one way broadcasts alone, but also video-conferences where the forums now existing in e-mail and around certain disciplines could be further developed as working forums, activated by audio and video technologies and speed, to enable greater collaboration at-a-distance, and materialization of efforts. For instance, a 'conference' would no longer require a plane ticket and hotel but could be conducted by GMT scheduling, and private audio-visual communications, beyond current efficiencies of typed text (and the lost files associated with challenges of managing fast information in slow mediums). This is to say that, considering the technology of the audio- visual chat, and the improved and standardized web-cam, and many secured broadband wired and wireless networks, that these new electronic medias could begin working in the ways once envisioned during the optimistic 90s futurism. It is to connect the dots between a cellphone that current can web-browse and take a video-feed over a broadband network, or even just a snapshot with full voice and text capabilities, and to relate this to the issues of free long-distance calling from a main or primary computer system, in addition to the sharing of both instant messaging and remote video-teleconferencing capacities that the computer and cellphone may not only be useful for syncing data, but for calling eachother, and even as a videophone, or a work meeting while in the field. This is somewhat different than the visions heard so far in news about these developments, if only because it may not be immediately realizable, outside of highly-controlled and configured and managed corporate computer networks. And even then, it may not be possible yet, it is not known. What is known is the potential of this to usher in an era of increasing importance and necessity for the development and securing of broadband voice and data networks, and their affordability in relation to the markets they already are serving and how the costs of such basic services may be hindering the entirety of electronic media developments. If there were monopolies existing in areas of telephony, or radio, or cable, and their core markets were going to be affected by greater openness in communications it would be interesting to know if this would stop these new advances in flight, just to keep control of the markets. In the US today, broadband costs ~60-80 month with dial- tone it seems. And one is penalized if not keeping the service for 12 months straight (bad for renters) which costs 100-150 dollar service charge for dropping it. If anyone is has a website they develop, one can add to this the cost of domains and webspace, often another 30+ dollars, which is just for dial-tone and dial-up and a website using broadband, at roughly 100+/month, which makes producing information quite expensive for those who do it without support. If one were to add in this price, free phone calls, free long distance, and the use of audio-video chat and teleconferencing it is still expensive but begins to make sense. The cost for dial-tone could even be removed, eventually. it seems. Over the phone company's dead body, it would appear. Yet, to add another basic device, such as a wi-fi PDA or a web-capable phone, adds another section, and for those who TIVO, eventually this electronic access may cost more than financing of new car payments. The payoff would be if there was some return on the investment in audio-video chat, some big gain which it seems there could be. For instance, if a video-phone and computer service were bundled it would enable remote teleconferences, and even phone calls. This public 'utility' aspect of the infrastructure is becoming more evident, if only it were considered as such. The other devices now emerging for audio-visual hand- helds, such as the portable Archos videoplayer, or the iPod .mp3 player seem to be limited in current applications. Yet, considering an improvement in base computing power and also broadband and connectivity between devices, an iPod data-storage device (or media server, for that matter, such as the networked drives used by advertisers to store their commercials and video on networks, for sale on the fly) can become a way to carry a copy of an event, say it is a lecture from a professor across the world, or an HDTV show, or a rental movie. One could plug these devices into a TV, a monitor, an LCD projector, a computer, a radio system, or other devices and gain access to the content. It could be a slide-show from Keynote/Powerpoint, it could be a local band's DIY video of their sounds, it may be a poetry or a video card awaiting sending. It is this data storage device that, when combined not just with .mp3 music, or even the traditional aspects of e-commerce, but as audio-visual data storage, in addition to the aspects of streaming of conferences, ideas, meetings, presentations, and personal messages, calls, conversations, that it shows another utility, recording archival AV records. So if one is sitting at a terminal, on the network, and has a headset for privacy they may be able to work across the world with many people from all over, to meet in similar (but different technically) webplaces, to gather, discuss, share, work, think, invent, discover, and some may arrive via text, some phone, some by video, it may be any variety of formats, it could be distance education, it could be business meetings, interviews for a job, meeting with relatives over the holidays, a live concert, a narrowcast performance. Some of it already exists, but neither ubiquitous or outside of networks already configured for this, or so it seems to be this way. There are other things that can be added, such as the use of HDTV and radio-signals and GPS and other technologies in relation to these issues and also independently. Yet, peer-to-peer networks and broadband make possible DIY education and also university courses, outside of traditional structures, much of which is still tied to the landline institutions, air travel, and other ways of connecting with ideas. Yet if the value of content, and the realization that its value is often determined in external relations, would be to break a core tenet of current networks that are tied to traditional initiatives and controls. Independence of exchange, and entrepreneurial aspects of audio-visual broadband connectivity with computers that can leverage this much further than where things are today, could bring a new revolutionary aspect to internetworking ideas and communities around the globe, in proximity to one another as necessitated by the needs to evolve the current design's communications bottlenecks, in hardware, software, platforms, and networks. The demographic shifts, seen when people are not bound by the local communities when they are able to be online and pursue their ideas, is possibly capable of much greater expansion into realms of voice, visuals, and sharing of information that is not determined by record companies or movie studios or broadcasters, but by initiatives to share and organize in new electronic mediums. That's a guess. Without affordability, security, and recognition that the expansion of the network will allow much greater opportunities for much larger amounts of people, this all remains in the future. the electromagnetic internetwork-list electromagnetism / infrastructure / civilization archives.openflows.org/electronetwork-l http://www.electronetwork.org/list/ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net