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« Wi-Fi Pulls into Amtrak Stations...Again | Main | Boingo for Nokia and the State of Boingo »
The BBC has partnered with The Cloud to make its online services available free at the network’s 7,500 hotspots: BBC offers a variety of programming, including TV program (programme) downloads, through its Web site. A special Windows-only player will be supplemented with Mac OS X and Linux versions later this year, and Flash streaming will be offered, too. Downloaded programs can currently be kept on a computer for up to 30 days. At The Cloud locations, streaming and downloading will be available at no cost, but will require a laptop. They’ll expand to portable devices like the Nokia N95 multimedia smartphone in the future. The BBC says they have 250,000 regular users of the iPlayer software.
Posted by Glennf at October 16, 2007 3:25 PM
Categories: Hot Spot, Media, Streaming
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