Mar. 2nd, 2007

selenay: (Thoughtful)
Last night, I was sitting at my computer watching some videos on YouTube to get myself ready to write a fic.

It occurred to me that, six years ago, that simply isn't a statement that I could have made and it got me to thinking about just how much progress has been made with Internet technology and computers.

When I first started getting into Stargate, it was mid-season 4 in the USA and I needed to catch up on the episodes to have some clue on what people were talking about. I was able to borrow seasons 1-3 on video from the library, but catching up with S4 was more tricky. At that time, I was on a 56K modem and broadband had barely been mentioned yet. It certainly wasn't something that was actually available to my area.

There was a download site where you could get Stargate episodes at that time. I had to use a download manager in case my connection dropped and it took me over two hours to download a 45MB .avi episode file. As you can imagine, the quality of the video wasn't great and could be viewed in a window larger than 4inch x 4inch without degrading unviewable. There were artefacts all over the picture and the sound and it was 'affectionately' known as squinty-vision. The idea of watching a video of that length streamed over the Internet? Pretty much impossible.

What I was watching last night was a much higher quality video file, it could be expanded to full screen without too much degredation and there were no sound artefacts. My 2MB broadband connection kept well ahead of the viewing speed, meaning that there were no random pauses as the download attempted to catch up. If I wanted a really good quality video, it would only take me a couple of hours with BiTorrent to download a 500MB file that's pretty much as good as analogue TV.

When you actually think about things in those terms, the way they've affected us, the changes in technology have been quite incredible over the last few years.

In completely unrelated news, [livejournal.com profile] paranoidangel42: it's lucky you don't listen to Radio 2's drive time. They were discussing how to cook and eat rabbits. Poor bunnies.
selenay: (bad day)
Some of you may remember that I saw my rheumatologist at Christmas and he declared that he was at the end of his knowledge on helping a hypermobility patient. He was nice enough to admit it, though, and although he wants to keep monitoring me he also wants me to go to a specialist clinic where I can see consultants and physios who actually specialise in the thing.

In which Sel gets nowhere fast while being told off for seeing the wrong doctor )

This rant brought to you by a large glass of wine and the wonders of the NHS.

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