0000001000000110010100011010010100010111101010010101001001010010111110101010
1010001010001001010111010111001010110111010101100101010010100110010100101001
1101011110100010010100111001001000100101110010100100101110010100101010010101
Wednesday, 15 August 2007
Thursday, 19 April 2007
....and sometimes more is less
Searching for nofnords on Google comes up with 4 entries and the message;
This being Google though, if you blinked, you have already missed it. Looks like it's back to normal calculations.
In order to show you the most relevant results, we have omitted some entries very similar to the 4 already displayed.
If you like, you can repeat the search with the omitted results included.
Strange, I always thought that something omitted would be less that something not omitted. 3 entries. Hmmm. Wonder where it's hidden the other.
This being Google though, if you blinked, you have already missed it. Looks like it's back to normal calculations.
Tuesday, 17 April 2007
Sunday, 15 April 2007
Doing more with less
Sometimes less is actually less. Like the title of this blog. Try clicking on it, go on; I dare you. Can you see the fnords?
Sunday, 8 April 2007
Friday, 30 March 2007
Zen Internet redefining size
How much is 100 Gigabytes?
100 GB is a vast amount of usage, enough to download 40 feature length movies, thousands of songs, and to browse the Web for as long as you want. In other words, 100 GB is more than enough for anything other than the kind of extreme usage described above.
Zen are restricting usage to 100Gb because some naughty users are actually using the Internet, and they believe that if they are "extreme users" they must be doing something like constantly downloading movies from illegal sites. A fair assumption. Or is it?
Let's do a quick calculation. Say you work from home and listen to Internet radio while you are working, cooking, playing. The BBC make feeds available in RTSP format for streaming. There are stereo feeds and very good quality, much better than you get over DAB. ~8 hours per day, 5-6 days per week, because a lot of time it's in the background, and you aren't really listening to it. And let's say that you listen to some of the shows with your partner when they get home and you are reading, and doing other things, or even watching Multicasts from the BBC and ITV. So let's say an average of 10 hours per day of legal, streamed content for a household. Ok. Make that 300 hours per month.
How big is a 30 minute radio show from the BBC's RTSP stream?
I know that a typical MP3 is about 1Mb per minute, but it's slightly harder to work out the RTSP feed size. Spooling it to a WAV file gives a staggering 10Mb per minute, which given that a 650Mb CD holds 80 minutes of audio, isn't that big a surprise. But if that's the case, how much bandwidth does that simple streaming internet radio actually take?
300 hours = 18,000 minutes
180,000Mb or 180Gb per month.
Ouch.
Which I only mention because I was thinking of signing up for:
100 GB is a vast amount of usage, enough to download 40 feature length movies, thousands of songs, and to browse the Web for as long as you want. In other words, 100 GB is more than enough for anything other than the kind of extreme usage described above.
Zen are restricting usage to 100Gb because some naughty users are actually using the Internet, and they believe that if they are "extreme users" they must be doing something like constantly downloading movies from illegal sites. A fair assumption. Or is it?
Let's do a quick calculation. Say you work from home and listen to Internet radio while you are working, cooking, playing. The BBC make feeds available in RTSP format for streaming. There are stereo feeds and very good quality, much better than you get over DAB. ~8 hours per day, 5-6 days per week, because a lot of time it's in the background, and you aren't really listening to it. And let's say that you listen to some of the shows with your partner when they get home and you are reading, and doing other things, or even watching Multicasts from the BBC and ITV. So let's say an average of 10 hours per day of legal, streamed content for a household. Ok. Make that 300 hours per month.
How big is a 30 minute radio show from the BBC's RTSP stream?
I know that a typical MP3 is about 1Mb per minute, but it's slightly harder to work out the RTSP feed size. Spooling it to a WAV file gives a staggering 10Mb per minute, which given that a 650Mb CD holds 80 minutes of audio, isn't that big a surprise. But if that's the case, how much bandwidth does that simple streaming internet radio actually take?
300 hours = 18,000 minutes
180,000Mb or 180Gb per month.
Ouch.
Which I only mention because I was thinking of signing up for:
Zen is pleased to be participating in the Multicast Technical trial where the BBC and ITV are testing the technical possibilities of streaming more of their TV Channels via Broadband.
Wednesday, 21 March 2007
Joker.com offline message
System Offline
System is offline due to a major software update. Sorry for any inconvenience!
to allow for.......maybe
but due to?????
Glad I don't write software that bad.
System is offline due to a major software update. Sorry for any inconvenience!
to allow for.......maybe
but due to?????
Glad I don't write software that bad.
Tuesday, 20 March 2007
Monday, 19 March 2007
Polite email reply to virus rejection
no idea how this one got through to you.
some labyrinthine loops in the email alias lists might be to blame
but I'll try to stop sending you any more viruses
There are no Funredes in the Advertisements
Googling the title of this blog, brings up the suggestion that Fnords should be replaced with Funredes. I checked. There may be no Funredes in the advertisements, except for those advertising the Networks-and-Development-Foundation in Spanish.
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