I just got finished tinkering with a free program called Clipdiary I saw in Smart Computing (July 2008, Vol. 19, Iss.7, Pg. 26). It’s basically an “extension”, if you call it that, to the Windows clipboard. What’s so special about it? Well, it remembers everything you “RC & S” (Right-Click & Save) into a little .sql file on your PC. Once you install it, you can press Ctrl+D to open and close it. I find it handy if you’re doing things like uploading videos and/or images on multiple sites.
I have a question I’m sure anyone can answer. You know when you upload a music video you’ll get a notice from YouTube about copyright and all that jazz and they will basically do this to your video (circled in red). So, the question at hand is why does music videos get a copyright notice yet people who post mp3′s in a video with a single image don’t get one? You can’t go after one without going after the other, now. I mean, am I wrong for thinking this?
Ok, I posted some videos within the hour and i would say this is weird and impossible. The video called “Raining” already hit almost 300 views (287 to be exact). Maybe I’m missing something but… what made it get that many views?
Just so you know, I don’t mean the actual “TV.com” website in the title. It was supposed to be like a play on words kind of thing.
Anyway, on to the post.
Remember the good old days when we used to watch tv shows on that box called a “television”?
And, who could forget that addon that allowed you to record a show on a cassette tape?
Well, sorry to break your 97 year old hearts but, we don’t use those items anymore. They went out like dinosaurs. And, no, not the tv show. That was a funny show.
We all know the “wave of the future” for everything in life will revolve around high-tech methods such as computers and/or the internet. It wasn’t until the begining of YouTube people started watching tv on the net. Now, let’s not confuse streaming episodes and movies with downloading them (I don’t plan to go into details). Of course, what stopped that was all the lawsuits.
We have HD/DTV, Blu-ray DVD, TVio & DVR cable boxes and the rest of the crap that’s out. So, as I once asked before, if we can get our tv/movie content off the web off sites like Hulu and network sites and even file sharing, why bother even having a tv set? Why have a DVD player? What point is it to have cable, DVR’s, and TVio if we can just do all that in one box: the computer?
I can honestly say I only look at the tv for WWE’s Raw and some anime on [adult swim] (yay Inuyasha!).