Streaming media and VoIP
Many existing radio and television broadcasters have provided
Internet 'feeds' of their live audio and video streams (for
example, the BBC). They have been joined by a range of pure
Internet 'broadcasters' who never had on-air licences. This
means that an Internet-connected device, such as a computer or
something more specific, can be used to access on-line media in
much the same way as was previously possible only with a TV or
radio receiver. The range of material is much wider, from
pornography to highly specialised technical web-casts. The
simplest equipment can allow anybody, with little censorship or
licensing control, to broadcast on a worldwide basis. Time-shift
viewing or listening is not a problem as the BBC have shown with
their Preview, Classic Clips and Listen Again features.
Web-cams can be seen as an even lower-budget extension of this
phenomenon. In this case the picture may update only slowly -
perhaps once every few seconds or slower, but Internet users can
watch animals around an African waterhole, ships in the Panama
Canal or the traffic at a local roundabout live and in real
time. Video chat rooms, video conferencing, and remote
controllable webcams have become popular. Some people install
webcams in their bedrooms that can be accessed by other voyeurs,
often with two-way sound.
VoIP stands for Voice over IP, where IP refers to the Internet
Protocol that underlies all Internet communication. This
phenomenon began as an optional two-way voice extension to some
of the Instant Messaging systems that took off around the turn
of the millennium. In recent years many people and organizations
have made VoIP systems as easy to use and as convenient as a
normal telephone. The benefit is that, as the Internet carries
the actual voice traffic, VoIP is free or costs much less than
an actual telephone call, especially over long distances and
especially for those with always-on ADSL or DSL Internet
connections anyway. The disadvantages are that it is still
difficult to initiate a call with someone, unless they also have
a VoIP phone or are at their computer and that there are still
several competing standards that are mitigating against
universal acceptance.
In all of these cases, existing large organizations, that have
grown accustomed to regular incomes for their services, are
finding increased competition in their service areas, coming
directly from the Internet. While newcomers strive to make these
inroads, the traditional industries have to adapt, adopt,
complain or suffer. Meanwhile the consumer in each case most
probably benefits from the increased range of services and
possible price reductions. Some worry about censorship and
control while others see a continuing globalisation of culture
and norms.
The most prevalent language for communication on the Internet is
English. This may be due to the Internet's origins, as well as
English's role as the lingua franca. It may also be related to
the poor capability of early computers to handle characters
other than those in the basic Latin alphabet.
Further information: Unicode
After English (32% of web visitors) the most-requested languages
on the world wide web are Chinese 13%, Japanese 8%, Spanish 7%,
German 6% and French 4% (from Internet World Stats, updated
November 30, 2005).
By continent, 34% of the world's Internet users are based in
Asia, 29% in Europe, and 23% in North America ([2] updated
November 21, 2005).
The Internet's technologies have developed enough in recent
years that good facilities are available for development and
communication in most widely used languages. However, some
glitches such as mojibake still remain.
From a cultural awareness perspective, the Internet has been
both an advantage and a liability. For people who are interested
in other cultures it provides a significant amount of
information and an interactivity that would be unavailable
otherwise. However, for people who are not interested in other
cultures there is some evidence indicating that the Internet
enables them to avoid contact to a greater degree than ever
before.
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