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RSSCategory: Video

Apple TV surpasses the iPad for Netflix viewing

| February 2, 2011 | 2 Comments

Netflix are not doing too badly at the moment, for they reported, Apple TV has done very well for us, and in just four months has passed the also-growing iPad in Netflix viewing hours.’

This is added on top of their pretty-looking quarterly report.

(Via ZiggyTek Blog.)

How To Stream Video from Your Mac to Apple TV with AirFlick

| December 23, 2010 | 0 Comments

AirFlick

Enterprising developer Erica Sadun of TUAW fame has been reverse engineering Apple’s Airplay technology lately, and now she’s following up her successful Airplayer software for the Mac with AirFlick, a simple piece of Mac OS X software that streams any video or audio file to your second-generation Apple TV — no iTunes required.

If you have been disappointed by how Apple has limited Airplay to their own iOS apps, you’re not alone. That’s why we’ve got to give mad props to Erica Sadun, a TUAW blogger and app developer who has been locked away tinkering with Airplay lately and found a way to extend some of its limited capability.

Sadun’s first effort was Airplayer, which allowed compatible iOS apps (including Videos on the iPad and the iPod app on iPhone/iPod touch, or YouTube on all three) to stream video to the Mac, thanks to a small OS X application she created.

Now Sadun is back with AirFlick, which streams most any video or audio file from your Mac to the second-generation Apple TV, no jailbreaking required. It also doesn’t require iTunes — drag and drop a media file onto the AirFlick application and away you go. Here’s how it works.

Erica Saduns AirPlay utilities

1. First you’ll need to download AirFlick, a modest ad-supported 1MB alpha application that Sadun is offering free on her website for the rest of us to play with. The current version is 0.04 as of this writing.

AirFlick installed

2. Unzip the archive and drag the AirFlick program to your system’s Applications folder.

AirFlick searching

3. Double-click AirFlick to launch it. The app will immediately start seeking out any compatible devices to stream to, which includes other Macs running Airplayer as well as the second-generation black Apple TV. When it’s ready, you’ll see ‘Searching’ change to the name of the first device found.

4. Select the device you want to receive your media from the choices listed; if you have only one, it will select it by default and you should see the name pop up like in the screenshot above.

AirFlick file selected

5. Drag a video or audio file from anywhere (or type in a file path) and click the large Play button in the bottom right corner. Your media should start streaming to your selected device, although as you can see from Sadun’s how-to video, sometimes it doesn’t work on the first try. However, clicking the Menu button on your ATV remote and giving it another go will usually get things working as they should.

6. At this point, you can sit back and enjoy or click the Stop button if you’re finished.

AirFlick isn’t limited to just Apple TV-compatible files, either — if you have a newer version of the free, open-source VLC installed, AirFlick will use it to transcode your video into something that the ATV can play. The only caveat is there will be a 30-second delay before the video starts to play, during which Sadun slyly notes is a good time to ‘Get a cup of coffee.’

Keep in mind that this is early alpha software and bugs can be expected — we experienced one for ourselves while testing for this article after opening Airplayer on a secondary Mac and trying to refresh the available sources. Quitting the app and launching it again cleared things right up, and the problem didn’t occur a second time.

AirFlick and Airplayer show that there’s still a lot of untapped promise in Apple’s wireless Airplay technology, and thanks to developers like Erica Sadun, the best is likely yet to come.

Follow this article’s author, J.R. Bookwalter on Twitter

(Via Mac|Life all.)

BBC Launching iPlayer iPad App Outside UK

| December 2, 2010 | 0 Comments

bbclogoFans of BBC programming will appreciate this latest tidbit.  According to the Financial Times, the BBC is planning on launching its iPlayer app as a commercial subscription for iPad users outside the UK.  United States viewers are said to be the first target.  The report says that the news conglomerates plans are still being worked on.

As of right now, the BBC offers a free version of its iPlayer iOS app for UK users, who are already paying TV licensing fees in order to support BBCs programming.  Since the BBC cant charge for content in the UK, the organization is aiming to offer paid subscription access for its content in foreign markets, like the US.

The report is citing Luke Bradley-Jones, managing director of BBC.com, who says that the service would start out as a paid subscription app, ‘in part to get audiences used to using the service, but more importantly so we can generate additional value from the service in terms of the user data that it gives us.’

Bradley-Jones had said that the BBC was ‘planning for the Global iPlayer to initially launch just on the iPad platform, as it provides such potential to develop a truly interactive video-on-demand service, and also maps pretty nicely on to our core target audience for the service.’

Following that, the BBC would then expand outward to offer up a variation of subscription access, digital downloads and pay per viewing, and would also aim for chance to work with advertisers to sponsor free content.

Currently, the government in the UK charges residents an annual ‘colour TV’ license fee of about $227 US, which is then used for supporting television, radio broadcasts and production.  It also covers its online programming, such as mobile delivery via its iPlayer app.

So what do you think readers?  If this app does come to light, are you game?  Or pass?  Feel free to leave your comments below!

(Via Mac|Life all.)

Back To The Future 25 year reunion

| October 27, 2010 | 0 Comments

The cast of Back To The Future have reunited in New York to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the film franchise. Submit your videos at http://itn.co.uk/itndirect.html

NOOSY Offers HDMI Adapter For The iPad, iPhone 4 and iPod touch

| October 18, 2010 | 0 Comments

NOOSY China, an unauthorized third-party Apple accessory manufacturer has come up with a HDMI adapter for the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch (4G). The product claims to allow you to output the display of your device to your HD display, though it wasn’t clear if the adapter will support audio over HDMI. It also wasn’t mentioned if it would support DRM protected content over HDMI though the site does feature images of Star Trek being played on the iPad and on a connected TV. Pricing wasn’t mentioned, though hopefully it won’t cost too much.

(Via Ubergizmo.)

Stunning animated book papercraft

| October 14, 2010 | 0 Comments

DudeCraft comes this amazing piece of stop-motion animation (papercraft with lots of Photoshop support? All-digital faux papercraft?), done by Andersen M Studios for the New Zealand Book Council. It’s cool however it was accomplished.

How to Access Hulu and Other U.S.

| October 8, 2010 | 2 Comments

hulu.pngWe’ve covered several ways to access blocked stuff on the web, but most free proxies are problematic; namely, they go down, and they’re slow. Lifehacker AU explains how to set up a Squid proxy on your own server to avoid those problems.

Note: This tutorial is fairly technical, and requires that you’re willing to pay for server space of your own in the U.S. If you’re based in the U.S. and looking to access geo-locked content in other countries, you’d want to rent your server space in the appropriate place. For another great alternative that you control, check out Digital Inspiration’s guide to using Google App Engine as a free proxy server.

One of the perennial challenges for Australian TV enthusiasts is finding a way to use Hulu and other geo-blocked streaming services. Here’s how Lifehacker reader Luke Carbis solved the problem.

I realise that you’ve featured Pandora and Hulu access from overseas on your site before, but this way hasn’t really been done before. The beauty of it is that once you’ve got it set up, you don’t have to look at it or think about it ever again!

  • A server in the US (I use Slicehost, but any US server will do)
  • SSH access to said server

The premise

We’re going to set up the U.S. server to run a proxy (alongside Apache, because my server is a web server, too). Then we’re going to tell our computer to use that proxy for the web, but only if the URL is pandora.com or hulu.com.

Step 1: Install Squid

Squid is a fully-featured HTTP/1.0 proxy. Log into your server via SSH, and install it by using this command:

sudo aptitude install squid squid-common

Step 2: Edit the Squid config file

You can edit the file using vi or nano while you’re in the SSH environment like this:

sudo vi /etc/squid/squid.conf

Or you can just use FTP. The file you want is located at /etc/squid/squid.conf.

Now there’s two things that we need Squid to do, which we specify using this file.

1. Authenticate the user by checking their IP, and

2. Use port 8080 so we don’t have any Apache conflicts

You can download my squid.conf file here. Change lines 603-606 to allow your own IP addresses (instead of the two IP addresses I use).

Step 3: Restart Squid

First, correct your permissions with:

sudo chown -R proxy:proxy /var/log/squid/

sudo chown proxy:proxy /etc/squid/squid.conf

And then restart with:

sudo /etc/init.d/squid restart

Step 4: Set up your proxy settings

Sounds easier than it actually is. It’s not as simple as using http://your-server.com:8080, because we only want to use that as a proxy if the URL is something specific (pandora.com). Instead we need to create a custom .pac file with our specific proxy settings.

So, create a .pac file (it’s just plain text), and save it with the following:

function FindProxyForURL(url, host)

{

// variable strings to return

var proxy_yes = “PROXY your-server.com:8080″;

var proxy_no = “DIRECT”;

if (shExpMatch(url, “http://www.pandora.com*”)) { return proxy_yes; }

if (shExpMatch(url, “*pandora.com*”)) { return proxy_yes; }

if (shExpMatch(url, “http://www.hulu.com*”)) { return proxy_yes; }

if (shExpMatch(url, “*hulu.com*”)) { return proxy_yes; }

// Proxy anything else

return proxy_no;

}

You can save this to your hard drive for use, or you can upload it to your server and link to it that way. If you have multiple machines using this file, I would recommend the latter so you can easily update the proxy settings for all of them if you need to.

On a Mac, you can tell your computer to use this file for it’s proxy settings by opening System Preferences, clicking Advanced, clicking on the proxies tab, choosing Automatic Proxy Configuration, and entering the URL there (or choosing a file on your hard drive). I’m sure you can do it on Windows too, but I’m not sure how (you’ll figure it out, I’m sure).

Once those settings are saved you should be good to go. Enjoy Pandora and Hulu from Australia without having to open a special program or change your network settings!

Thanks Luke!

Access Hulu And Other Blocked Services Using Squid [Lifehacker AU]

Facebook Hooks Up with Skype

| September 29, 2010 | 0 Comments

Click here to read Remains of the Day: Facebook Hooks Up with Skype

Facebook and Skype may join forces to integrate video and voice chat with the social networking site, the iPad could be capable of running Chrome OS, and Firefox 4 may bring hardware acceleration to the Mac.

Facebook and Skype are working on a broad partnership that will include the integration of the two services through Facebook Connect, according to a person briefed on the plans, who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity because the plans were supposed to be confidential. The partnership will be announced in the next few weeks, the person said.

A Facebook spokeswoman and a Skype spokesman declined to comment.

Under the partnership, people who use their Facebook credentials to log in to Skype will be able to see their Facebook friends on Skype. They will also be able to see their news feed and to sent text messages and call their friends’ landlines using Skype.

News of the partnership, which was first reported by the blog AllThingsD, comes as Skype is getting ready for a public offering.

Facebook has sought to blend its social network with popular communications services before, for example tying its service with AIM from AOL in February. And Facebook has said recently that it is planning to integrate its service into some mobile phones, though it denied it was building its own phone.

The tie-up with Skype presents an opportunity for both companies to grow their usage, especially internationally, where Skype has a strong presence.

(Via Lifehacker.)