Capturing motion on the Web.Several software programs are available for streaming media See streaming audio, streaming video and digital media hub. . Each Webcaster uses one or more systems, choosing from programs like RealPlayer, QuickTime, NetShow, CosmoPlayer, Shockwave Player, InterVU, VivoActive and others. RealPlayer's features include the ability to automatically distinguish between audio and video, opening a movie window if it detects video. It doesn't cost anything to download To receive a file transmitted over a network. In any communications session, "download" means receive, and "upload" means send. The download/upload often implies a big/little scenario, in which data is being downloaded from the "big" server into the "little" user's computer. the software, but the more advanced version of RealPlayer costs $30. In any case, more than 100,000 copies of RealPlayer are downloaded by Web surfers
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Some 150,000 hours of live content are reportedly produced with Real/Audio and RealVideo each week. Currently, more than 30 U.S. TV stations use RealVideo for live Internet feeds. In addition, RealPlayer is currently used for more than 650 live audio Webcasts. Reportedly, there are now more than 1,300 audio broadcasters delivering streaming media via the Internet, more than 110 of which are dedicated solely to Internet delivery of content. ' Apple's QuickTime allows one to display Web sites in 3-D, and it also allows for virtual reality applications. It is a free streaming media product for Web users. The common frame sizes for Web-designed QuickTime movies are: 160 pixels See pixel. by 120 pixels for movies intended for download with conventional modems; 240 pixels by 180 pixels for movies intended for ISDN ISDN in full Integrated Services Digital Network Digital telecommunications network that operates over standard copper telephone wires or other media. download; and 320 pixels by 240 pixels for movies intended for download with cable modems cable modem Modem used to convert analog data signals to digital form and vise versa, for transmission or receipt over cable television lines, especially for connecting to the Internet. , T1 phone lines* and local networks. With QuickTime, one can achieve a frame rate of 10 frames per second with a conventional modem and frame rates of between 12 and 15 frames per second with ISDN and other advanced technologies. The VivoActive technology, used in NetShow, incorporates a timeline
Timeline may refer to:
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