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Miro - free open-source video platform: Internet TV, video blogs, video sharing sites

(http://stream-recorder.com/forum/showthread.php?t=2133)

Stream Recorder 12-04-2007 12:57 PM

Miro - free open-source video platform: Internet TV, video blogs, video sharing sites


 
Miro allows to watch FREE internet TV channels and play any video file (MPEG, Quicktime, AVI, H.264, Divx, Windows Media, Flash Video,...)

Miro works well for HD content, so you'll find lots of video that looks beautiful in fullscreen on even the largest displays.

Miro allows to search and watch videos from YouTube, Google video, DailyMotion, Bleep.TV, Yahoo! Video, Revver,...

Miro 1.0 is available for Windows Vista / XP / 2000, Mac OS X, Linux (Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian)

Stream Recorder 12-04-2007 01:00 PM

Re: Miro - free open-source video platform: Internet TV, video blogs, video sharing s


 
I really like that Miro is free and very stable. And now I can easily find and watch videos from sharing web-site like YouTube, Google video and DailyMotion. A I can also create channels from my searches easily.

But it is new to me and I haven't found the way to add more interesting Internet TV channels to it.

Do you have any idea how can I find more free Inernet TV channels that I can add to Miro?

arjunatwombly 08-13-2008 04:21 PM

Re: Miro - free open-source video platform: Internet TV, video blogs, video sharing s


 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Stream Recorder (Post 4636)
I really like that Miro is free and very stable. And now I can easily find and watch videos from sharing web-site like YouTube, Google video and DailyMotion. A I can also create channels from my searches easily.

But it is new to me and I haven't found the way to add more interesting Internet TV channels to it.

Do you have any idea how can I find more free Inernet TV channels that I can add to Miro?

i googled "video podcasts" and got a good result: <a href="http://www.videopodcasts.tv/">videopodcasts.tv</a>. I'm sure there's a bunch of overlap between miro's guide and all that's on vptv, but there's also gotta be some differences. I haven't yet had much time to explore it, but it looks promising. The one thing that concerns me is how <i>busy</i> it all looks... very... late-90s spam-site.

we'll see.


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