anyone used this or know anyone who has..?250 bucks for this box. It hooks to your tv and allows you to send a broadband stream to your laptop/desktop from any location.I wonder if I could hook it to espn, and then charge people who just want espn broadcasts to use it..... ... or not...But seems like a cool toy
1/2/2006 12:31:23 PM
buy a tivoand do your fucking job.
1/2/2006 12:39:46 PM
cheap tv or vcr, video capture card, internet connection, endless software options. And you're there for cheaper than that $250 box.
1/2/2006 1:11:50 PM
If that box does what it's supposed to do, that seems like a pretty decent way to not have to ghetto rig together your own solution.(course I know you Tech Talk people are all about your ghetto rigging) This should be a more professional solution, for a fairly cheap price. I wonder what the upstream requirements are. It just mentions a "broadband connection" on the faq page. I'm interested. I will definitely keep an eye out for reviews/improvements/price drops.
1/2/2006 1:26:16 PM
http://www.slingmedia.com/slingbox/Click on the "Geek Speak" section, it has specs and requirements. Says 256kbps upstream is required.What I want to know is what resolution it sends at. I can't find that information ANYWHERE.
1/2/2006 2:10:27 PM
Somebody has been listening to the Jim Rome Show
1/2/2006 2:14:25 PM
well that rules out a Road Runner connection.
1/2/2006 2:15:55 PM
i know math is hard ultra - but RR has a higher upstream than 256kbps256 / 8 = 32 i get decent averages of 40-50k most times
1/2/2006 2:56:45 PM
I am on a shared connection with roommate on the Bittorent network all day.
1/2/2006 2:58:28 PM
it's at 320*240 from what I can find. And it's going to look like shit on cable upstreams. It uses WMV9 compression, which is pretty good, but to squeeze that into a 30-50k upstream is going to require pretty heavy compression.If you don't mind blocky streaming video, it's a good way to see stuff at work or on the road.
1/2/2006 3:29:33 PM
do they make one for radio?i cant get some stations even online.im sure there's a way.
1/2/2006 4:36:00 PM
1/2/2006 4:47:41 PM
^I used a video capture card, VCR and some webcam software, watched TV at work. Only downside is you can't change the channel remotely, at least the way I had it set up.Right now I have an AM/FM stereo receiver connected to the line in on my soundcard, using a shoutcast stream so I can listen to the radio at work. Since I work in a room that can't get radio reception on anything. Again, only downside is you can't change the channel remotely. But I'll set it to 680am so I can listen to the State games if I have to work during a game.
1/2/2006 4:56:17 PM
1/2/2006 4:57:56 PM
^I believe Snapstream's BeyondTV software used to have that feature but I can't seem to find anything about it on their website.
my roommate bought it when it first came out but unlucky for him or lucky for his wallet, he bought one of the known defective ones...so i couldn't really tell you the quality of picture
1/2/2006 6:19:14 PM