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- Date: Thu, 4 Mar 1993 00:26:59 EST
- From: mkovacs%mcs.kent.edu@KENTVM.KENT.EDU
- Subject: File 3--Internet Talk Radio (fwd)
-
- Originally from nis@cerf.net via Bernard.A.Galler@um.cc.umich.edu
- Reprinted with permission from ConneXions,
-
- ConneXions--The Interoperability Report is published monthly by:
- Interop Company
- 480 San Antonio Road, Suite 100
- Mountain View, CA 94040
- USA
- Phone: (415) 941-3399 FAX: (415) 949-1779
- Toll-free (in USA): 1-800-INTEROP
- E-mail: connexions@interop.com
-
- Free sample issue and list of back issues available upon request."
-
- Internet Talk Radio
- Carl Malamud (carl@radio.com)
-
- Over the past few years, two trends have come together to
- present an opportunity for a new type of journalism. On the one
- hand,
- the trade press has focused on marketing and product reviews,
- leaving
- an ever-larger gap for a general-interest, technically-oriented
- publication focused on the Internet. At the same time, the
- Internet
- has made great progress in supporting multimedia communication,
- through standards such as IP multicasting and MIME messaging.
-
- Internet Talk Radio attempts to fuse these two trends and
- form
- a new type of publication: a news and information service about the
- Internet, distributed on the Internet. Internet Talk Radio is
- modeled
- on National Public Radio and has a goal of providing in-depth
- technical information to the Internet community. The service is
- made
- initially possible with support from Sun Microsystems and O'Reilly
- &
- Associates. Our goal is to provide a self-sufficient, financially
- viable public news service for the Internet community.
-
- Head: Flame of the Internet
-
- The product of Internet Talk Radio is an audio file,
- professionally produced and freely available on computer networks.
- To
- produce these files, we start with the raw data of any journalistic
- endeavor: speeches, conference presentations, interviews, and
- essays.
-
- This raw information is taped using professional-quality
- microphones, mixers, and DAT recorders. The information is then
- brought back to our studios, and edited and mixed with music, voice
- overs, and the other elements of a radio program. The "look and
- feel"
- we strive for is akin to "All Things Considered" or other programs
- that appeal to the general interest of the intelligent listener.
-
- Our goal is hit the topics that don't make it into the
- trade
- press. Instead of SNMP-compliant product announcements, we want to
- present descriptions of SNMP. Instead of articles on GOSSIP, we
- want
- to describe the latest Internet Drafts and place them in
- perspective.
- Instead of executive promotions, we want to give summaries of
- mailing
- list activity and network stability. Instead of COMDEX, we want to
- cover the IETF.
-
- Head: Town Crier to the Global Village
-
- The result of Internet Talk Radio's journalistic activities
- is
- a series of audio files. The native format we start with is the
- Sun
- Microsystems .au format, closely related to the NeXT .snd format.
- This format consists of the CCITT Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)
- standard
- of 8 bits per sample and a sampling rate of 8000 samples per
- second,
- using the u-law [ed. use greek letter mu] encoding (a logarithmic
- encoding of 8 bit data equivalent to a 14 bit linear encoding). A
- half-hour program would thus consist of 64,000 bits per second or
- 15
- Mbytes total.
-
- Programs are initially spool on UUNET, the central machines
- of
- the Alternet network. Files are then moved over to various
- regional
- networks for further distribution. For example, EUnet, a
- commercial
- network provider for Europe with service in 24 countries, will act
- as
- the central spooling area for the European region. The Internet
- Initiative Japan (IIJ) company will provide the same service for
- Japanese networks.
-
- The goal of coordinated distribution is to reduce the load
- on
- key links of the network. Transferring a 15 Mbyte file over a 64
- kbps
- link does not make sense during peak times. On the other hand, a
- leased line has the attribute that a bit unused is a bit forever
- gone.
- Transferring large files at low priority in non-peak times has
- little
- or no incremental cost.
-
- Files thus move from the UUNET central spool area, to
- regional
- spools, to national and local networks. We anticipate most of this
- transfer to be done using the FTP protocols, but some networks are
- discussing the use of NNTP news groups and MIME-based distribution
- lists.
-
- It is important to note that Internet Talk Radio is the
- source
- of programming and does not control the distribution. These files
- are
- publicly available, subject only to the simple license restrictions
- of
- no derivative work and no commercial resale.
-
- Distribution is controlled, as with all other data, by the
- individual networks that make up the Internet. We intend to work
- closely with networks all over the world to ensure that there is
- some
- coordination of distribution activity, but ultimate control over
- this
- data is in the hands of those people who finance, manage, and use
- networks.
-
- We don't believe indiscriminate use of anonymous FTP is the
- proper method for distributing large archives. Previous experience
- with ITU standards, with RFC repositories, and with large software
- archives such as the X Windows System indicates that setting up a
- top-level distribution hierarchy goes a long way towards
- alleviating
- network load.
-
- Even with a top-level hierarchy, however, there will always
- be
- anonymous FTP sites and there will always be people that go to the
- wrong FTP server. This behavior is largely mitigated by setting up
- enough "local" servers and publicizing their existence. Like any
- large distributor of data, we are mindful of the load on the
- transcontinental and regional infrastructures and will take
- aggressive
- steps to help minimize that load.
-
- Head: Asynchronous Times, Asynchronous Radio
-
- Once files have made their way to a local or regional
- network,
- they are moved to the desktop and played. Once again the
- individual
- users of the network decide how to present data. We hope to see a
- wide variety of different ways of having our files played and only
- list a few of the more obvious methods.
-
- The simplest method to play a .au file on a Sparcstation is
- to
- type "play filename." If the file is placed on a Network File
- System
- (NFS) file system on a central server, the user simply mounts the
- file
- system and plays the file. Alternatively, the user copies the file
- to
- a local disk and plays it.
-
- More adventuresome playing of files uses multicasting. A
- simple multicast program called "radio" for a local Ethernet is
- available from CWI, the mathematics institute of the Netherlands.
- A
- more sophisticated approach, IP multicasting, allows a program to
- reach far beyond the confines of the Ethernet.
-
- IP multicasting might be used on a local basis, or can have
- a
- global reach. There is a consortium of regional networks that have
- formed the Multicast Backbone (MBONE), used for audio and video
- programming of key conferences such as the Internet Engineering
- Task
- Force.
-
- Internet Talk Radio does not assume use of the MBONE for
- playing files. Needless to say, the operators of the MBONE are
- free
- to play Internet Talk Radio files (and we would be delighted if
- this
- happens), but it is up to the local network affiliates to determine
- how and when they distribute this audio data.
-
- In many cases, people will want to play files on a wide
- variety of different platforms. The Sound Exchange (SOX) program
- is a
- publicly-available utility that easily transforms a file from one
- format to another. Using this utility, the Macintosh, Silicon
- Graphics, DECstation, PC, and many other platforms can play
- Internet
- Talk Radio files.
-
- Head: Geek of the Week
-
- In the spirit of dignified, conservative programming, the
- first production from Internet Talk Radio is dubbed Geek of the
- Week.
- Geek of the Week features technical interviews with key
- personalities
- on the Internet. Some of the people who have agreed to appear on
- Geek
- of the Week include Daniel Karrenberg of the RIPE NCC, Dr. Marshall
- T.
- Rose of Dover Beach Consulting, Milo Medin of the NASA Science
- Internet, and Daniel Lynch of Interop Company.
-
- Geek of the Week focuses on technical issues facing the
- Internet. This initial program is sponsored by Sun Microsystems
- and
- O'Reilly & Associates. Their support makes it possible for Geek of
- the Week to be produced professionally and then to be distributed
- at
- no charge.
-
- One of the issues that Internet Talk Radio faces are the
- vestiges of Appropriate Use Policies (AUPs) that linger from the
- original ARPANET days. While Sun Microsystems and O'Reilly &
- Associates view Internet Talk Radio in terms of an investigation of
- on-line publishing, of multicasting, and other engineering issues,
- we
- feel it important that our sponsors are given due credit in the
- programs.
-
- At first glance, this smacks of the crass and commercial.
- Indeed, it smacks of advertising. Jumping to that conclusion,
- however
- would be a simplistic mistake. The Appropriate Use Policies were
- formulated to guarantee that networks are used for the purposes
- envisioned by the funding agents. In the case of an
- AUP-constrained
- networks such as the NSFNET, this means that use of the network
- must
- benefit U.S. science and engineering.
-
- We feel that an in-depth interview with Internet architects
- clearly falls within the purview of all AUP policies. However, we
- understand that certain networks may not accept certain types of
- programming. For this reason, our central spool areas are
- carefully
- picked so they are AUP-free. This way, if a network feels the
- programming is inappropriate, they can simply inform their users
- not
- to obtain or play the files.
-
- It should be noted that one advantage of supporting the
- professional dissemination of news and information up-front is that
- the user is not directly charged. Somebody has to pay for
- information
- to be produced, and the sponsorship model means that copy
- protection,
- accounting, security, and all the other complications of a charging
- model are avoided and that high-quality news and information
- becomes
- increasingly available on the Internet.
-
- Head: The Medium is the Message
-
- While Geek of the Week is our flagship program, we intend
- to
- intersperse mini-features throughout. The Incidental Tourist, for
- example, will feature restaurant reviews and other travel
- information
- for sites throughout the world. The Internet Hall of Flame will
- highlight non-linear behavior on mailing lists, and we will have
- periodic book reviews by Dan Dorenberg, one of the founders of
- Computer Literacy Books.
-
- The logical extension to Geek of the Week is to begin
- coverage
- of industry functions. To date, we have received permission to
- tape
- for later rebroadcast sessions and presentations at the European
- RIPE
- meetings, the IETF, and at the INTEROP Conferences. We are
- negotiating with other industry forums to try and establish
- permission
- to cover additional conferences.
-
- Our hope is to begin providing news summaries of these key
- conferences. If you can't make it to the IETF, for example,
- Internet
- Talk Radio would like to provide a half-hour news summary
- describing
- what happened on each day.
-
- The next logical step is to begin producing analysis of key
- technical topics. Here, we look at in-depth (e.g., 15 minute)
- summaries of technical topics such as MIME, proposals for the next
- IP,
- SNMP v. 2, or the architecture of the Global Internet Exchange
- (GIX).
- We would also furnish analysis of political topics, such as the
- POISED
- effort to reorganize the Internet standards process, or the
- background
- of the IPv7 debate.
-
- Eventually, our hope is to combine all these reports
- together
- and form a daily news broadcast to the Internet. When you walk in
- and
- start reading your mail, you simply click on the "radio" icon and
- listen to Geek of the Week while deleting messages from the more
- hyperactive mailing lists.
-
- Head: Tomorrow is the Future
-
- The "radio" metaphor was carefully chosen. We wanted an
- alternative to plain ASCII files, yet did not feel that the
- Internet
- infrastructure was ready for regular video feeds. Production of
- video
- or true multimedia required an order-of-magnitude higher investment
- in
- production facilities. After all, we know bad TV since we see so
- much
- of it.
-
- Eventually, Internet Talk Radio wants to go beyond the
- confines of the simple radio metaphor. Already, we describe the
- service as asynchronous radio, recognizing that our listeners can
- start, stop, rewind, or otherwise control the operation of the
- radio
- station.
-
- As a multicasting infrastructure gets deployed throughout
- the
- Internet, we see the opportunity to expand the radio metaphor and
- begin the creation of a truly new news medium. Multicast groups
- and
- videoconferencing tools allow the creation of an Internet Town
- Hall, a
- moderated forum with a very wide reach or games shows like Name
- That
- Acronym where everybody gets to play.
-
- Because we are on the Internet, we can add a wide variety
- of
- different programming techniques. While listening to a series of
- interviews about MIME messaging, for example, you might also scroll
- through a series of Gopher menus that hold more information about
- the
- MIME standards, or search a WAIS database for a biography of the
- speakers.
-
- We hope that Internet Talk Radio will be the first of many
- such information services on the Internet, supplementing the random
- anarchy of news and mailing lists with professionally produced news
- and information. Indeed, we hope that Internet Talk Radio forms
- the
- first of many "desktop broadcasting" efforts.
-
- Internet Talk Radio debuts at the Columbus IETF at the end
- of
- March. Stay tuned for more information.
-
- Head: For More Information
-
- Guido van Rossum, FAQ: Audio File Formats,
- ftp.cwi.nl:/pub/AudioFormats2.10. An excellent introduction to
- audio formats, encoding, and other information about sound files
- on different platforms. This same site also has copies of the
- SoundExchange (SOX) program for translating files into different
- audio formats, and the Radio program for playing a sound file on
- an Ethernet.
-
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