At Neuros, just by virtue of the fact that we have an open device, we encounter so many interesting modifications and enhancements to our device. So I decided to create a little series of videos, where we talk about the technologies, social phenomenon, the trends and the hacks that are shaping television today and in the future. Some of the trends are the obvious ones that we know will come: The future will hold more choice, better time shifting, and access to content on more devices. But the future of television will be much more, and much more interesting than just that. Connecting the open internet to the TV will give us a lot more than a better, faster, cheaper experience. It will connect us in new, previously unimaginable ways.
One of those ways I call "crowd narration" and it's the product of a hack done on the Neuros OSD at a BBC sponsored event by Matthew Wild . What Crowd Narration does is to overlay two lines of text chat over the bottom of the TV image. In the attached video, we have a hypothetical chat room discussion superimposed over the state of the union address. In production, you can imagine that would be multiple chat channels to chose from, some professionally narrated, some by your friends, some that are open, some closed. All together, there might be dozens or hundreds of channels for each event or show.
The instructions are pretty simple, but do require you to telnet into the box.
Please see our live narration of the first US Presidential Election debate for details.
We live in a world where every minute technology is increasing our empowerment, increasing our ability to participate in every discussion, sales pitch, and political debate around the globe. It won't all be pretty, honest or kind, but if the history is any indication, we can expect that free communication will do a better job of bringing the truth out than an central gatekeeper ever could.

Comments
TAHNKS
The web service uses PHP, and (currently) BBC APIs. The OSD client
uses Qt. Both of them hook into a backend system using XMPP (an open
protocol for realtime data exchange), which is managed by an
open-source XMPP server implementation, ejabberd.
Great work thanks.
Great work thanks.
nice one
Hey MattJ, nice work! And how about entering the chat text via an iphone
For those interested in what's under the hood
From Matthew:
The application is open-source throughout.
The web service uses PHP, and (currently) BBC APIs. The OSD client
uses Qt. Both of them hook into a backend system using XMPP (an open
protocol for realtime data exchange), which is managed by an
open-source XMPP server implementation, ejabberd.
Congratulations Matthew
Matthew Wild is one hell of a hacker. He has spirit, imagination and more determination than anyone I know (even if he doesn't think so). Nice job Matthew and keep it going. I might buy myself an OSD if I get too excited about it.
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