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#1
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I am interested in using BBC iPlayer but I'm a paranoid git and don't want a
PC than can connect to the rest of the world on the same network as my home PCs. So I was considering putting a firewall between the "iPlayer PC" and the other PCs but the question is then... Q/ Is there a way for one of my secure PCs to play the content stored on the iPlayer PC? This would also be a way of using a laptop to play the content but leaving a regular desktop connected for downloads. And clearly the only reason to do this is to get the hi-quality playback so please, not suggestions to use the "live" feeds ;-). Thanks, Paul DS. |
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#2
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Paul D.Smith wrote:
Q/ Is there a way for one of my secure PCs to play the content stored on the iPlayer PC? This would also be a way of using a laptop to play the content but leaving a regular desktop connected for downloads. Not possible. The "hiqh quality" download file will intentionally only play back on the Windows Media machine that downloaded it. -- Adrian C |
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#3
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In article , Adrian C wrote:
Q/ Is there a way for one of my secure PCs to play the content stored on the iPlayer PC? This would also be a way of using a laptop to play the content but leaving a regular desktop connected for downloads. Not possible. The "hiqh quality" download file will intentionally only play back on the Windows Media machine that downloaded it. That seems a bit like only being able to read a book in the bookshop where you bought it. Thank goodness old-tech still works as it always did. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
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#4
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In message en.co.uk,
Roderick Stewart writes In article , Adrian C wrote: Q/ Is there a way for one of my secure PCs to play the content stored on the iPlayer PC? This would also be a way of using a laptop to play the content but leaving a regular desktop connected for downloads. Not possible. The "hiqh quality" download file will intentionally only play back on the Windows Media machine that downloaded it. That seems a bit like only being able to read a book in the bookshop where you bought it. Thank goodness old-tech still works as it always did. Unless I'm misunderstanding things, you want to download and save a BBC iPlayer TV programme on one PC, and play it back on another? I have no problem doing this. Download on this machine, transfer to wife's laptop via CD / DVD / memory stick, and play it on DRM-enabled WMP11. Of course, it still expires in the usual way. -- Ian |
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#5
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"Roderick Stewart" wrote in message .myzen.co.uk... In article , Adrian C wrote: Q/ Is there a way for one of my secure PCs to play the content stored on the iPlayer PC? This would also be a way of using a laptop to play the content but leaving a regular desktop connected for downloads. Not possible. The "hiqh quality" download file will intentionally only play back on the Windows Media machine that downloaded it. That seems a bit like only being able to read a book in the bookshop where you bought it. Actually it's the same as only being allowed to read the book in the library that you borrowed it from HTH tim |
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#6
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In article , Ian Jackson wrote:
Unless I'm misunderstanding things, you want to download and save a BBC iPlayer TV programme on one PC, and play it back on another? I have no problem doing this. Download on this machine, transfer to wife's laptop via CD / DVD / memory stick, and play it on DRM-enabled WMP11. Of course, it still expires in the usual way. What demented mind invented the concept of technology that is deliberately designed to stop working after a time limit, and only to work in a restricted way while it does? Have we room for this nonsense in our world of waste? I have a copy of a book published in 1832 and with the beautiful copperplate signature of one of my great^n grandmothers written in the days before the railways, before electricity, before photography, and a great many other things. It's still perfectly readable and hasn't "expired" after more than a century and a half. I daresay I will expire myself before it does. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
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#7
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In article , Tim..... wrote:
That seems a bit like only being able to read a book in the bookshop where you bought it. Actually it's the same as only being allowed to read the book in the library that you borrowed it from OK... but whichever it is, isn't technology supposed to enable us to do things better? If not, what's the point of it? Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
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#8
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In message en.co.uk,
Roderick Stewart writes In article , Ian Jackson wrote: Unless I'm misunderstanding things, you want to download and save a BBC iPlayer TV programme on one PC, and play it back on another? I have no problem doing this. Download on this machine, transfer to wife's laptop via CD / DVD / memory stick, and play it on DRM-enabled WMP11. Of course, it still expires in the usual way. What demented mind invented the concept of technology that is deliberately designed to stop working after a time limit, and only to work in a restricted way while it does? Have we room for this nonsense in our world of waste? I have a copy of a book published in 1832 and with the beautiful copperplate signature of one of my great^n grandmothers written in the days before the railways, before electricity, before photography, and a great many other things. It's still perfectly readable and hasn't "expired" after more than a century and a half. I daresay I will expire myself before it does. Rod. iPlayer downloads were made to expire in order to set a challenge for the hackers to come up with something to stop them expiring (which, I believe, was done soon after the BBC started iPlayer). -- Ian |
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#9
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On Tue, 09 Dec 2008 22:49:54 +0000, Roderick Stewart asked:
isn't technology supposed to enable us to do things better? If not, what's the point of it? It appears that you do not understand the philosophy behind the ill-named Digital Rights Managment system (DRM), or as Richard Stallman better calls it Digital Restriction Management http://www.youtube.COM/watch?v=8p9IU4zp7mU Another reason why Open Source Software is preferable to proprietary closed source software. |
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#10
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Paul D.Smith wrote:
I am interested in using BBC iPlayer but I'm a paranoid git and don't want a PC than can connect to the rest of the world on the same network as my home PCs. So I was considering putting a firewall between the "iPlayer PC" and the other PCs but the question is then... Q/ Is there a way for one of my secure PCs to play the content stored on the iPlayer PC? This would also be a way of using a laptop to play the content but leaving a regular desktop connected for downloads. And clearly the only reason to do this is to get the hi-quality playback so please, not suggestions to use the "live" feeds ;-). Thanks, Paul DS. If you are running Vista or Media Centre on the downloading PC then you could run a Media Centre Extender to play the downloaded file (such as an XBox360) on their own network. However - it does seem you are being overly cautious, presumably you are behind a router (firewall #1) and you could put another firewall on the PC, providing you configure them correctly and update them and your AV/Spyware software regularly then the chances of you getting 'hacked' are minute (assuming you are not running Symantec). |
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