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This post’s author, The Media Patriot, is a fellow consumer who enjoys music and television but condemns DRM. His pseudonym pays homage to the original participants of the Boston Tea Party.
Remember back in the Autumn of 2006 when the hotly anticipated “Venice Project” promised all that it’d do for television, what ebay and Skype did for auctions and phone calls? Well, here we are two years later and after much disappointment, Joost has released a new version of itself called…drum roll…New Joost.
New Joost is supposedly a “browser only” plugin that let’s you watch Joost content in the browser – but’s that’s a bit of a misleading statement. New Joost downloads and installs a 6MB version of Microsoft C++ Runtime Environment onto your hard drive.
As much as I would like to share my New Joost experience with all ZNF readers, I cannot since after installing the plugin, CPU usage spiked at 99% for several minutes and crashed the browser to an unrecoverable state. To add to insult to injury, after killing off the hung browser, the plugin was still running siphoning off my bandwidth to power all the other people using Joost.
The Joost blog promises an all Flash, no local anything version coming in October, but it may be a bit too late since Hulu has pretty much filled the niche market Joost hoped to dominate all those years ago.
Have you tried the New Joost? Write a quick note in the comments with your thoughts.
Jun 19 2008

This post’s author, The Media Patriot, is a fellow consumer who enjoys music and television but condemns DRM. His pseudonym pays homage to the original participants of the Boston Tea Party.
Are you getting all the sports coverage you want from your cable or satellite provider? Ever wonder if that UEFA Euro 2008 soccer match you have been waiting four years for will even be televised?
Last weekend was the annual 24 hours of Le Mans sports car race in France. This year’s broadcast was quite poor since Fox’s Speed TV inexplicably decided to televise only a few hours worth of racing, compared to years past when the coverage was nearly end-to-end.
Seeking a way to watch the race in its entirety, we turned to MyP2P EU and their people powered network of SopCast relays and excellent support for the Video LAN client (VLC) media player. The event was being broadcast in Europe on EuroSport 1 and just like Speed TV, they broke away several times for other sports coverage (soccer, cycling and rugby) – but then a quick visit to http://myp2p.eu saved the day. MyP2P provides a way for intrepid motor sport fans to share their home satellite signal with the world, using either SopCast or VLC built in media servers.
For the uninitiated, VLC media player functions as a streaming media player and a streaming media server of sorts, by relaying what you are watching back out to the world using P2P. You can use the VLC to record an incoming stream to watch later, or re-encode a stream to a different supported format type. The VLC media player is completely free, released as Open Source, supports streaming H.264 and is available for Linux, Mac and Windows. From the website:
The VideoLAN streaming solution includes two programs; VLC media player which can be used as a server and as a client to stream and receive network streams. VLC is able to stream all that it can read…
The tricky part is configuring the SopCast client to launch the VLC player, here’s how:
Now, when you click on any of the personal broadcasts at myp2p.eu, you’ll be able to watch using the VLC media player and record the stream to your local hard disk for play back later – TiVo without the TiVo.
“But I don’t want to watch on my computer, I want to watch on my TV.” You will be happy to know that the SopCast, VLC and Windows only TVU players all have the means to present streaming video with no chrome, filling 100% of the screen. Sound off in the comments with the best way to send PC video direct to your big screen TV.