Today in Tech History – January 16, 2016

20140404-073853.jpgIn 1969 – The Soyuz 4 and Soyuz 5 spacecraft successfully docked in orbit. Yevgeny Khrunov moved from Soyuz-5 to Soyuz-4 and Alexei Yeliseyev went from 4 to 5, marking the first time spacefarers went up in one craft and returned to Earth in another.

In 1986 – The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) met for the first time in San Diego to supervise the design and deployment of Internet protocol.

In 2007 – Blizzard released the first expansion to it’s wildly successful World of Warcraft game. The Burning Crusade raised the level cap and allowed players flying mounts, at least when they were in Outland.

In 2007 – Netflix announced it would begin offering a streaming movies service in addition to its DVD rental service. Movies would initially stream to Windows PCs for customers with at least 3 Mbps Internet service and roll out slowly to all subscribers by July.

In 2015 – The Royal Society announced that the Beagle 2 lander had been found intact on the surface of Mars. The European Space Agency had lost contact with it Dec. 19, 2003 and it had been thought destroyed.

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DTNS 2667 – The Mayor of Arby’s

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comFoursquare has a new CEO and a lower valuation. So what makes us keep using social service and once we stop can they ever convince us to come back? Peter Wells and Tom Merritt discuss. Plus Amazon aims to do to shipping what it did to the cloud.

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A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
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Today in Tech History – January 15, 2016

20140404-073853.jpgIn 1759 – The British Museum, in Bloomsbury, London, the world’s oldest public national museum, opened to the public. Entry was free and given to ‘all studious and curious Persons’.

In 2001 – Wikipedia, the free Wiki content encyclopedia, went online as a feeder project for Nupedia, an expert-written online encyclopedia.

In 2005 – Thanks to a solar flare, ESA’s SMART-1 lunar orbiter discovered calcium, aluminium, silicon and iron – in Mare Crisium on the moon.

In 2013 – Facebook announced its ‘Graph Search’ improvements to internal search and recommendations.

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DTNS 2666 – Snoop Dogg’s Blunt with Microsoft (Complete)

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comThe W3C is considering restrictions on who can set standards regarding DRM in HTML. Will this free your Web or chain it up? Allison Sheridan and Tom Merritt discuss. Also, one, two, three and to the four, Snoop wants to throw his XBox One onto the floor.
*Note: The original version of this file cut off the last two minutes. Apologies.

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Follow us on Soundcloud.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

Guest Post: HEVC Compression of Video Explained

During episode 2665, we mentioned the BBC research labs confirmation of HEVC compression. During the discussion Scott guessed correctly that Andy Beach would be able to explain this more for us. And Andy obliged. Here’s his response in full.

Like summoning a genie you say “bitrate” or “compression” three times and i appear!

I was literally already jotting down notes as I listened. here’s my thoughts:

The savings side viewed by the BBC team arent astounding – they are actually what was expected out of the codec – even taking the perceptive testing the did. What I am happy about is how quickly we’re getting to those numbers and seeing them in public press.

Let’s take a quick hop back – even back when H.264 was announced as an idea, the goal was to improve upon the current video defacto codec (at the time MPEG-2 part 2 i think) by 50% savings of bits to perceived quality. That was back in 1999 or 98. The spec was completed in 2003 and it was another two years before we really saw people start to take an interest (and really another 2 years before we started seeing real adoption). H.265 on the other hand was first ratified in 2013 (and version 2 which is what most would consider the viable useful version of the codec was only ratified in January of 2015) and here we are right at the start of 2016 and not only have we been seieng demos at shows like NAB for a year or two, but we’re already seeing early adopters like BBC with confirmation of what we expect to see from the codec.

I’m hopeful that we start seeing some software based (encode) support in the market this year (apps like VLC already include H.265 support) and next year a wider announcement of Hardware support decode support. It is the HW decode support that will become a blocker to adoption as it will be required for things like mobile handsets and tablets to take avantage of H.265 and the only really way for someone to get the true value out of encodes targeted to big 4K screens (Because of the nature of video compression, highly aggressive encodes are very resource intensive to decode – if all decode is SW based, its hard to optimize the content down to those very low bit rates we want – adding HW decode support enables improved battery life and performance on mobile and allows bigger screens to really crank those rates down while still keeping a decent quality).

But Andy, does this mean my H.264 archive is useless? Not at all – we’ll continue to see it used and supported for a number of years. Too many devices are out there that already support it and at this point it does what it does really well. Like new TV adoption, we’ll see H.265 support creep out slowly through a variety of expected names (think olympics, superbowl, netflix, etc). Effectively, anyone really wanting to do streaming 4K content will be an earliy H.265 adopter. As they teach us all lessons for how to do large operations at scale with this codec, we’ll see others migrate over. If I were to put on my guessing hat (aka analyst) I’d say between now and late 2017 is early adopter world. Then we’ll see wide expanding support from early 2018 to 2021 or so and by then the market should be well saturated and we’ll be discussing its successor.

What else? There are two obstacles that stand in H.265s way – well maybe three if you count itself and its royalities as an problem to deal with. If the numbers are too high, neither content producers or technology companies will be able to make it a viable solution.

The other major technologies in the works though are Google and their VP9 codec and the AOMedia Alliance. If you talk to Colleen Henry, she’ll tell you VP9 is already the greatest thing int he world and you’d be an idiot for using anything else. The test results I’ve seen put VP9 as a ver close second to H.265 in most cases (and maybe in front of it in a narrow few) but the reality is studios just have a hard time trusting Google and I’d be surprised if they’d willingly adopt it as the “go to” codec. also what DRM capabilities VP9 will support have been unclear and all broadcasters and studios will require (demand) the ability to protect their content or control the licensing and viewing. the AOMedia is a group of big technology companies (amazon, microsoft, intel and the like) who have all loosely gotten together and are working on a spec that would be similar to H.265 but royalty free. From what I’ve seen, it does look like they are potentially using VP9 as the starting framework here, but its unclear how much the eventual product would look like the current one. It’s also fairly early days and honestly this seems to me like a gambit (read as threat) to keep the MPEG-LA (licensing group of MPEG group) at bay when negotiating (meaning “charge us that and we’ll just build it ourselves!”)

Well, that was super long winded, so let me try to summarize a podcast friendly sound bite:

  • The numbers were good and what we would have expected.
  • Its great to see big companies like BBC already going down the H.265 path and it Indiates it may see quicker adoption than its predescessor.
  • Hardware decode support will continue to limit wider deployment and use, but expect to see more and more announcements for it in the next 18 months.
  • Just because H.265 is the new hotness, don’t expect H.264 to dissapear overnight – it’ll be around for a good long time.
  • Keep your eye on Google/VP9 and AOMedia/whatever they come up with as potential competitors to H.265

Did I miss anything? Feel free to ask questions, as you know, i love this stuff!

Today in Tech History – January 14, 2016

20140404-073853.jpgIn 1878 – Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated the telephone to Queen Victoria at her Osborne House estate on the Isle of Wight. He reached out and touched her, a faux pas which made him the first commoner in years to lay hands on the royal person.

In 1973 – Elvis Presley’s concert, “Aloha from Hawaii” was broadcast live via satellite, and set a record as the most watched broadcast by an individual entertainer in television history.

In 2005 – The Huygens space probe landed on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. It was the first landing in the outer solar system, and the furthest from Earth.

In 2014 – US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled in favor of Verizon regarding two FCC net neutrality rules that prevented blocking of applications and discriminating against traffic.
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DTNS 2665 – Counterfitbit

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.com
The PC market declined by 8-10% in 2015. Can gaming revive it? Can anything? Scott Johnson and Tom Merritt discuss. Also a customs seizure shows the wearables market has made it.

MP3

Using a Screen Reader? Click here

Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

Today in Tech History – January 13, 2016

20140404-073853.jpgIn 1910 – The first public radio broadcast took place with a live performance of the opera Cavalleria rusticana sung by Enrico Caruso and others was broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. The transmitter had 500 watts of power.

In 1928 – Three television sets were installed by GE in homes in Schenectady, New York, in order to demonstrate the first home television receiver. The picture was 1.5 inches long by 1 inch wide and 24 lines at 16 frames per second.

In 1976 – Raymond Kurzweil and the leaders of the National Federation of the Blind announced the Kurzweil Reading Machine, the first text-to-speech machine. Walter Cronkite used it to deliver his signature sign-off, “And that’s the way it was, January 13, 1976.”

In 2014 – Google announced it would acquire smart appliance maker Nest.

Like Tech History? Get the illustrated Year in Tech History at Merritt’s Books site.