Sorry if I wasn't clear, but I meant IP-based STB's, like those made from Amino, Entone, i3 Micro, Motorola's Kreatel, Cisco's Scientific-Atlanta, Wegener, Sentivision and middleware from vendors such as Infogate, Microsoft, Minerva, Orca Interactive, and Siemen's Myrio. And now that content providers are starting to require encryption, none of these earlier pairs can actually be used unless they include conditional access solutions from the likes of Irdeto, Latens, Nagravision, Verimatrix, Widevine. DIRECTV does not use an IP-based STB, AFAIK, and delivers their content to consumers via satellite, not using AT&T last-mile's infrastructure, which initiated this thread. Frank -----Original Message----- From: Matt Ghali [mailto:matt@snark.net] Sent: Saturday, April 01, 2006 6:05 PM To: Frank Bulk Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: AT&T: 15 Mbps Internet connections "irrelevant" On Sat, 1 Apr 2006, Frank Bulk wrote:
Yes, there are quite a few MPEG4-capable STB vendors with lots of middleware vendors standing behind them, but I challenge you to document one STB/middleware combination in GA. I haven't seen it. Talk to me in six months, and it will be a different story.
err. directv? matto --matt@snark.net------------------------------------------<darwin>< Moral indignation is a technique to endow the idiot with dignity. - Marshall McLuhan