Importance

March 12, 2004

First Broadcatching App Available! (And Related News)

Andrew Grumet, who has been the leader in developing BitTorrent + RSS technology, has announced the arrival of the "an initial version of a RSS+BitTorrent integration tool for Radio Userland's news aggregator" (Announcement: RSS+BitTorrent Integrator for Radio Userland). Visit the project website here: Getting started with BitTorrent + RSS in Radio [BETA]. Grumet promises to write more about the idea in the coming days and asks for bug reports, comments and etc., here.

Damn the luck! I'm not a Radio Userland user - just might have to become one.

In related news, David Shipp writes about Chris Pirillo's IT Conversations interview (Chris Pirillo: March 1, 2004) in which Chris discusses the concept of BitTorrent + RSS (Future Web). Shipp summarizes thus:

Chris goes on to talk about the fusion of RSS and BitTorrent. This is where things get interesting and controversial. BitTorrent is an excellent technology for P2P downloads, and one of it’s emergent properties is that newly available files become widely available through BitTorrent far quicker than on traditional P2P networks. The disadvantage is that users have to trawl the web for BitTorrent pointer files that direct them to the downloads. He suggests that RSS can provide the delivery mechanism for these BitTorrent links, so for example, users can be presented with links to all the new episodes of their favourite TV series. Chris steps away from the legalities of the issue, and rightly so, but highlights the concept that RSS + BitTorrent is essentially a TiVo (or Sky+ for my fellow British).

Lucas Gonze is working on what I consider another element of broadcatching, RSS + Playlist Format, which he is calling RSS + Time (Analysis of RSS+Time as a playlist format). Exactly. Wouldn't it be great if one could receive a playlist from a trusted source in RSS format? The playlist would automatically play the songs already available on your system and launch a BitTorrent download of those not available.

Bonus: the RSS+Time format includes some primitive client-side remixing capability. I like to call this a remixing "recipe" (A History Palette for Music and The Grey Album - No Copying Necessary).

C|Net News reports on the public unveiling of Red Swoosh, a new P2P entrant which has adopted BitTorrent-like technology for distribution of large files for commercial companies (Legal P2P networks gaining ground):

In part, that's why the company's CEO is now reaching out to the broad community of people using BitTorrent, an underground file-trading application using similar technology that has exploded in popularity among people distributing or downloading video and software programs.
Red Swoosh CEO Travis Kalanick said he wants to tap that energy. He's offering free use of Red Swoosh's content distribution services to noncommercial filmmakers, game developers or other publishers.
"I don't want to fight BitTorrent," Kalanick said. "I want to have a relationship with that community. That's not just about cutting a deal; you have give to that community."

Interesting. I'll have to give a try (I hope they don't use spyware). Wonder when they will adopt broadcatching?

For more information on Broadcatching, see also:
BitTorrent + RSS = The New Broadcast
Broadcatching - Not Broadcasting
Broadcatching - The Early Days
RSS + BitTorrent Announcement Soon?
BitTorrent, RSS and Broadcatching, Catching On

Posted by Ernest at 3:01 PM
  Comments and Trackbacks (http://www.corante.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/1620)
Grumet's Integration Tool

Excerpt: Andrew Grumet's idea for BitTorrent + RSS broadcatching that I wrote about on Monday has produced the first working tool -- one that ties into Radio Userland's news aggregator. Extremely beta, but the beginning of an interesting experiment.

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Trackback from Outside The System, Mar 12, 2004 9:32 PM
RSS+Time

Excerpt: Fascinating look at what adding RSS to BitTorrent means: playlists from trusted sources with remote retrieval for things you don't have local. Tivo on demand for video, transparent DJ publishing without the need for massive media servers for audio. Int...

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Trackback from Descriptive Epistemology, Mar 12, 2004 10:33 PM
Auto-trackback from memigo.com

Excerpt: News.com article found in memigo. Follow trackback to find related articles...

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Trackback from memigo, Mar 14, 2004 5:06 AM

Hi Ernest,

Webjay playlists can all be read via an RSS feed. This is handy for playlists like 'Song-a-day', at http://webjay.org/by/webjaybs/song-a-day.

RSS is a little awkward because the only events it's interested in are reverse-chronological additions, but it's good enough to do the basic job.

Posted by Lucas Gonze on March 14, 2004 08:18 PM | Permalink to Comment

That's cool, but I want a playlist that will download and play automatically for me. I think that RSS can be adapted for playlists ... or else just send the playlist as an enclosure or something.

Posted by Ernest Miller on March 15, 2004 03:06 AM | Permalink to Comment
Broadcatching

Excerpt: First Broadcatching App Available. Broadcatching is basically Adam Curry's delivery of large objects via RSS and down-time downloads coupled with BitTorrent. It's a great idea, and something like what I've been thinking about with a scraper of Suprnova...

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Trackback from Rage on omnipotent, Mar 22, 2004 8:53 AM

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