From: M.Eisenstadt@open.ac.uk (Marc Eisenstadt)
Subject: ANNOUNCE: UK Open U Virtual Stadium Dec 11 5PM GMT
Date: Wed, 06 Dec 1995 18:37:19 +0000
Organization: Open University


From: M.Eisenstadt@open.ac.uk (Marc Eisenstadt)

Cogger/Cornell gig continues KMi Stadium telepresence events 
using RealAudio & more; Monday 11 Dec 5PM GMT

The Open University's new Knowledge Media Institute is hosting a
monthly series of on-line interviews with top research personalities,
using a medium it refers to as "KMi Stadium".  KMi Stadium is billed
as an experiment in very large scale telepresence, and aims to host an
event with 100,000 attendees by the end of 1996*.  The stadium uses a
mixture of audio and images, combined with a custom-built software
suite based on Sun Microsystem's Java language.  A prototype non-Java
version is up and running at:

            http://kmi.open.ac.uk/stadium/welcome.html

The next event [December 11th at 5PM GMT] features "Maven of the
Month" Richard Cogger, Cornell University computer scientist and
educator, and leader of the team that developed CU-SeeMe Internet
Videoconferencing.  This event follows the successful KMi Stadium
launch on 18th October which featured Henry Lieberman from the MIT
Media Lab [available as an on-demand replay from the above URL].

Live attendees will have the opportunity to discuss current research
issues with the guest speaker in a "talk radio with graphics"
format. Visit early to preview the relevant research issues by
following the 'info button' links. KMi Stadium will phone you during
the event, if required, and your discussion will be broadcast live
over the net using RealAudio's live encoder technology from
Progressive Networks.  You'll need to obtain the RealAudio player from
http://www.realaudio.com to listen to the KMi Stadium audio channel.

                    -------------------------------

*100,000 participants???  Yes: by doubling current attendance figures
every month, we can do it.  The three keys to scaleability are (i) the
distributed server environment, (ii) local cacheing of all 'special
effects' such as laughter, applause and slide shows, and (iii) a
simple hierarchy of moderators and meta-moderators to field audience
questions and comments.  If you're interested in helping us
(particularly experimenting with alpha releases of our linked
servers), please contact our Java wizard, Adam Freeman
<A.J.Freeman@open.ac.uk>

--Marc

*  Prof M Eisenstadt (Director)      M.Eisenstadt@open.ac.uk
*  Knowledge Media Institute         http://kmi.open.ac.uk/
*  The Open University               Tel +44 (0)1908 65 3149
*  Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, UK         Fax +44 (0)1908 65 3169
