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	<title>Comments on: Sightspeed Goes TV</title>
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	<description>An outcome-driven leader, proven technology product developer, and  marketer with over 20 years of hands-on experience including start-up, small and large business environments, and the board room. This is my blog.</description>
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		<title>By: Digital Common Sense &#187; Update on SightSpeed - My Chat with Peter Csathy</title>
		<link>http://www.saunderslog.com/2006/07/10/sightspeed-goes-tv/#comment-3133</link>
		<dc:creator>Digital Common Sense &#187; Update on SightSpeed - My Chat with Peter Csathy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jul 2006 17:58:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] Yesterday, Om scooped everyone with his post about SightSpeed and their new placeshifting of video. Beyond Om&#8217;s post and mine, there was a real flurry of conversation about this new information. The Next Generation of SightSpeed from Andy Abramson pointed to Om&#8217;s article and set several of us in motion looking for more details. Sightspeed Goes TV from Alec Saunders showed the kind of interest we expect from Alec. He watches everything like a hawk. Bruce Stewart reinforced the broad support we all share for SightSpeed in&#160; SightSpeed Comes Out Slinging over at O&#8217;Reilly Emerging Telephony. Aswath gave his usual thougthful comments and comparisons in Place Shifting by IP Communications Clients. Aswatch went so far as to point out a great whitepaper from the SightSpeed team on their video codec technology, which is proprietary. He also points out the value of SightSpeed using a SIP URI to identify the â€œserverâ€, And he raises, what to many of us is a question, the issue of a proprietary codec rather than something like Ogg. I, for one, like the video quality well enough that I&#8217;m less concrend abotu the codec, particularly when it can been all wrapped in SIP. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] Yesterday, Om scooped everyone with his post about SightSpeed and their new placeshifting of video. Beyond Om&#8217;s post and mine, there was a real flurry of conversation about this new information. The Next Generation of SightSpeed from Andy Abramson pointed to Om&#8217;s article and set several of us in motion looking for more details. Sightspeed Goes TV from Alec Saunders showed the kind of interest we expect from Alec. He watches everything like a hawk. Bruce Stewart reinforced the broad support we all share for SightSpeed in&nbsp; SightSpeed Comes Out Slinging over at O&#8217;Reilly Emerging Telephony. Aswath gave his usual thougthful comments and comparisons in Place Shifting by IP Communications Clients. Aswatch went so far as to point out a great whitepaper from the SightSpeed team on their video codec technology, which is proprietary. He also points out the value of SightSpeed using a SIP URI to identify the â€œserverâ€, And he raises, what to many of us is a question, the issue of a proprietary codec rather than something like Ogg. I, for one, like the video quality well enough that I&#8217;m less concrend abotu the codec, particularly when it can been all wrapped in SIP. [...]</p>
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		<title>By: Digital Common Sense &#187; Update on SightSpeed - My Chat with Peter Csathy</title>
		<link>http://www.saunderslog.com/2006/07/10/sightspeed-goes-tv/#comment-3134</link>
		<dc:creator>Digital Common Sense &#187; Update on SightSpeed - My Chat with Peter Csathy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jul 2006 17:58:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://saunderslog.com/2006/07/10/sightspeed-goes-tv/#comment-3134</guid>
		<description>[...] Yesterday, Om scooped everyone with his post about SightSpeed and their new placeshifting of video. Beyond Om&#8217;s post and mine, there was a real flurry of conversation about this new information. The Next Generation of SightSpeed from Andy Abramson pointed to Om&#8217;s article and set several of us in motion looking for more details. Sightspeed Goes TV from Alec Saunders showed the kind of interest we expect from Alec. He watches everything like a hawk. Bruce Stewart reinforced the broad support we all share for SightSpeed in&#160; SightSpeed Comes Out Slinging over at O&#8217;Reilly Emerging Telephony. Aswath gave his usual thougthful comments and comparisons in Place Shifting by IP Communications Clients. Aswatch went so far as to point out a great whitepaper from the SightSpeed team on their video codec technology, which is proprietary. He also points out the value of SightSpeed using a SIP URI to identify the â€œserverâ€, And he raises, what to many of us is a question, the issue of a proprietary codec rather than something like Ogg. I, for one, like the video quality well enough that I&#8217;m less concrend abotu the codec, particularly when it can been all wrapped in SIP. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] Yesterday, Om scooped everyone with his post about SightSpeed and their new placeshifting of video. Beyond Om&#8217;s post and mine, there was a real flurry of conversation about this new information. The Next Generation of SightSpeed from Andy Abramson pointed to Om&#8217;s article and set several of us in motion looking for more details. Sightspeed Goes TV from Alec Saunders showed the kind of interest we expect from Alec. He watches everything like a hawk. Bruce Stewart reinforced the broad support we all share for SightSpeed in&nbsp; SightSpeed Comes Out Slinging over at O&#8217;Reilly Emerging Telephony. Aswath gave his usual thougthful comments and comparisons in Place Shifting by IP Communications Clients. Aswatch went so far as to point out a great whitepaper from the SightSpeed team on their video codec technology, which is proprietary. He also points out the value of SightSpeed using a SIP URI to identify the â€œserverâ€, And he raises, what to many of us is a question, the issue of a proprietary codec rather than something like Ogg. I, for one, like the video quality well enough that I&#8217;m less concrend abotu the codec, particularly when it can been all wrapped in SIP. [...]</p>
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