There's no question that comic books and magazines will eventually have a portable platform suited to them, just as the iPod took nearly four years to reach a saturation level as the de facto portable music player. The Kindle 2 might have been that device, had Amazon found color e-ink to be cost-effective. ������� ������ ����� ���������� here. For now, though, we're stuck with struggling innovations, and iVerse Media has made a big push to get theirs out. A photography of the Hexed cover as it appears on the G1 screen. Earlier this month, just in time for WonderCon 2009, the big comic book and media convention in San Francisco, iVerse launched its comic book-reading app for Android, following on the heels of its iPhone software that debuted in November of last year. The thought of cramming the detail-rich comic book page onto the tiny touchscreen of a smartphone seems ridiculous, because it is. Verse solved the challenge by chopping comics into panel-size chunks. On both Android and the iPhone, you slide your finger across the screen to move on to the next panel. Slide it in the other direction to move back. Reading the story is surprisingly clear and clean, and although it may seem counter-intuitive, there should be no concerns about eyestrain from squinting because it's one panel, presented in high resolution. From there, the iPhone and Android programs diverge in functionality, though the features remain largely the same. The Hexed was tested by me No. Phone and Android. Tap the iPhone, and an "i" appears in the bottom-right corner. It's small so it doesn't intrude on your reading experience, but it's also practically invisible. This Information button wasn't as responsive as I would've liked, but hit it enough times, and eventually, it shall open a window with a few details about the comic and the copyright info. You can also change your navigation method from Slide to Fade to Curl, with the last one simulating a page curling back. The print cover to Hexed #1. ����� �������� ��� �������. There's a page slider as well, so you can jump panels out of sequence, and the iphone app remembers your last page read when you return to it. Unfortunately, there are no advanced accelerometer features, nor is there a real way to bookmark specific panels or sequences. The Android iVerse software stars similar features, although accessing them is much easier because of the T-Mobile G1's Menu button. Electrogen 2000 ����������. Press it to bring up four options in the lower fourth of the comic. Information shows a screen with tiny text, telling you who the writer and artist was, the publisher with a link to their Web site, and the copyright information. Hit Menu again to be taken to iVerse's Android store for more comics. The Navigation button brings up a window with a slider and a text field. You can enter the page you want to jump to directly, or you can slide there. One of the problems on both platforms is that it's pretty clear that the panels are taken from a comic created for print, but there's no indication what the print page numbering is. Since most print comics tend to be 22-24 pages without ads, it can be much harder to jump around if you're buying familiar spot--this is like having text search on the Kindle. Contrast ������� ��������. The Preferences button allows you to adjust your page movement. Slide and Fade are on the Android, but instead of Curl there's Deck, where panels change like a card being slid from the top of a deck of cards. Bring on the Mac-versus-PC spoofs! read more. There's also a checkbox for toggle page numbers appearing, but note that these are the page numbers in the Android app, not the print comic. There's also a spot where you can register the your e-mail address with iVerse, which will enable you to copy the comic onto your SD card. A demo that iVerse produced can be seen here. The selection of comics available is pretty large, from 99 cent "Star Trek" comics to free comics starring Flash Gordon and stories from Boom Studios, a comic book publisher in Los Angeles. Frustratingly, though, each comic you installs as a separate app download. The comics run on iVerse Media's proprietary comic book reader software, forcing each comic to be configured separately. I'd like to see more of an jukebox-style database interface from iVerse in order that users can pick a comic to read from within a setting that keeps your comics together the way your music and movies are kept together. ������ ������ �������� here. It's not a perfect interface, but it is obviously legible and a sure-fire way to take at least some of your comics with you without trying to shove a longbox's worth in your backpack.
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What if you took the decentralized, distributed theory that powers torrent technology and applied it to live streaming? That question, or one similar to it, is what BitTorrent inventor Bram Cohen must've asked himself a few years ago. DownThemAll powers up to next version here. The answer is BitTorrent Live, and it's currently working its way through a series of weekly real-world tests at the BitTorrent headquarters in San Francisco. BitTorrent Live is a live-streaming technology that leverages the bandwidth of everybody watching the stream to lighten the stream's network load. It could be applied to everything from family weddings to corporate conference calls to multiday music festivals, says Cohen. Live streaming is a large challenge that people have been trying to solve," he said. Basically, BitTorrent Live is torrent theory applied to a live stream, but powered by different code completely. In its current buggy beta form even, it's attracted early interest from little-known local electronic music makers to movers and shakers like Hank Shocklee, founder of Public Enemy, current music producer, and president of Shocklee Entertainment. The concept is incredible," Shocklee said when checking out BitTorrent Live during an impromptu visit to the BitTorrent offices last Friday night. I come from marketing and promotion. blissstatya. How does it work? Pioneer Deh P55bt ���������� on this page. The way you utilize it is extremely simple and accessible. You download a small executable file for Windows, Mac, or Linux, run it, and then point your browser to a site that's powering its stream with BitTorrent Live. Neither your computer nor your browser shall have to be rebooted. But how does it do it? Founder of Public Enemy Hank Shocklee dropped by the BitTorrent offices when CNET was there for a surprise inspection of the new live-streaming technology. BitTorrent Live has to fix four problems simultaneously: low latency, high reliability, high offload, and congestion control. ���� ��������� �������� ����� ������� on this page. Basically, Cohen explained, the data blasts out in pieces from the source utilizing a "screamer" protocol that always uses the lowest latency path. The data gets blasted out to a subset of the peers, which get the advantages of high reliability and low latency, but at the very last hop it uses a nonscreamer protocol to ensure that it gains back congestion control and efficiency. corporateresurs here. High offload is the fraction of data coming from peers of the source instead. Cohen said that this is what creates a low-latency, high-reliability stream, and it only requires an upload capacity of five times the original bit rate on the original uploading machine. BT Live does its network congestion control based on delays, not packet loss, similar to uTorrent Protocol (uTP). BitTorrent Live product manager Stephen Collins keeps one eye on the BitTorrent Live Facebook page, and the other on the stream itself. Cohen also noted that BT Live scales very well, with projected modeling showing a 4- to 4.5-second delay for to 1 million peers up. BT Live uses the H.264 codec, in large part because of its broad support base. Google's WebM alternative to H.264, he said, just doesn't have the the sort of support that BT Live requires. standarthacks there. There's a few features left to include, Cohen said, most notably fixing stream glitches, adding encryption, and what he called "graceful failure," to ensure that it has higher tolerance for when the stream misbehaves. One of the biggest recent tests of BT Live has been from the Dean Guitar's NAMM Jam, and Cohen reported that there were no major hiccups there. However, BitTorrent continues to put the protocol through a scalability and latency gantlet with its weekly tests. If you want to check those out, they're available at live.bittorrent.com Fridays from 8 to 10 p.m. Pacific. If you're interested in using the streaming technology, BitTorrent has provided an e-mail for queries: [email protected]. ���������� �� ���������� ��� 83 read more. The ongoing company plans to release BitTorrent Live to the public later this year, with an SDK and a Web site sometime in the second quarter. It's likely, though unconfirmed, that it shall go with a freemium model not unlike with its mainline BitTorrent and uTorrent software. |
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