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marie-antoinette
Joined: 18 Sep 2005
Posts: 4136
Location: Ottawa, Canada
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Posted: Tue Nov 22, 2005 12:08 pm
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Wow, that sounds rather useful. Though there are downsides with anime not being scheduled for specific times, which means some people may not get a chance to watch what they want to see because they didn't know when it would be shown. But it really is an interesting idea.
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m5l111
Joined: 22 Jul 2005
Posts: 6
Location: San Gabriel,ca.
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Posted: Tue Nov 22, 2005 2:09 pm
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Maybe anime expo could look into this and see if they can use this system next year.It could save them time and money .Plus the volunteers could be shifted to other duties besides being in the video rooms. Something to consider at least.
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Nekotaku
Joined: 23 Nov 2005
Posts: 1
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Posted: Wed Nov 23, 2005 5:25 am
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Heh. UK anime cons have had a similar system to this for the past several years. It's called AEGIS and plays back digital video according to a predetermined running schedule, including automatically fitting AMV's, adverts etc into the gaps between programmes.
At AyaCon 2005, the whole system was controlled remotely from a single location in the operations room, streaming video across the building's CAT5 network to remote modified VLC clients running on Mac Minis. No runs of coax cable required (ick :-p).
AEGIS was developed by Ben Carter and Peter Chan.
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danj2k
Joined: 18 Nov 2005
Posts: 8
Location: Cambridge, UK
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Posted: Mon Nov 28, 2005 3:40 pm
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Heh, looks like this story just hit Slashdot, though they didn't link here. I was actually searching for information about AEGIS on the net but couldn't find anything that wasn't related to Gatekeepers or Gundam other than this page. Does the AEGIS project have a website?
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Hunter Sopko
Joined: 05 Mar 2003
Posts: 259
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Posted: Tue Nov 29, 2005 2:56 pm
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marie-antoinette wrote: | Wow, that sounds rather useful. Though there are downsides with anime not being scheduled for specific times, which means some people may not get a chance to watch what they want to see because they didn't know when it would be shown. But it really is an interesting idea. |
I've gone to MetroCon for the past few years, and here is how it works:
There are 3-4 video rooms that are on a schedule. The projectors in these rooms are tied into the network and show what they're supposed to on those scheduled times automatically, no person needed to run it unless there are technical problems. Standard convention video room setup, just no one required to run it.
1 video room is ad-hoc, consisting of several TVs tied to the network where people can just wander in, grab an open one and select whatever they want to watch that is on the network. It's a great system.
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