LiveStation delivers live TV to PCs
Livestation built on Microsoft’s Silverlight will bring Live TV to your PC.
The project, currently in beta, uses technology from Skinkers, a UK based company and rebroadcasts the BBC live. It could also be expanded to other TV stations.
Don Dodge writes, “LiveStation is delivered on Microsoft’s Silverlight with extraordinary quality and crispness. The video is like watching a DVD on your PC — no jerky motion, no buffering — it is just like watching live TV. What is different? There have been several ways to watch TV on your PC, so what is different here?”
* LiveStation uses Peer-to-Peer technology to distribute the TV signal, so it doesn’t require a big server infrastructure and lots of bandwidth. The P2P technology was developed at Microsoft’s Cambridge research lab and functions similar to BitTorrent.
* Silverlight allows the video to be displayed in very high quality, and with amazing speed. Silverlight was unveiled at MIX07 earlier this year to rave reviews. LiveStation shows off the power and elegance of Silverlight.
* Live TV, this isn’t recorded TV being re-broadcast…it is live, without delay. Of course the technology could be modified to stream recorded shows or other types of content.
* TV on your cell phone? Silverlight runs on cell phones, so in the future it could deliver Live TV directly to your cell phone or mobile device.
* LiveStation is built on two research technologies, Pastry and SplitStream, from Microsoft’s Cambridge Research Lab. Pastry is a type of P2P system called a ‘distributed hash table,’ which makes it easier for computers to find and store information, and to organize themselves for collaborative tasks.
* Splitstream is an application built on top of Pastry which allows real-time streams such as live video to be robustly distributed peer-to-peer.
This could be big.






