Livestation adds more TV channels, Linux and Mac clients
It's been a while since we looked at Livestation, a video player that allows you to watch live streams of TV channels, with a heavy emphasis on news programming. While the channel selection was rather limited in February, there are now over a thousand channels to choose form, thanks to user submitted links to channels that stream live TV signals. Most are still news related, but there are also a handful of channels of music and other genres.
Another major change is that Livestation is now cross-platform. There are Windows, Mac, and Linux clients available. The Linux version works best on PCs with NVIDIA graphics cards, while the OS X version should run on any Mac with an Intel processor. The Windows version also no longer requires Silverlight to be installed.
The user interface has also been tweaked, making it simpler to search through the long list of channels or flip between channel presets. If the video window looks small in the screenshot, all you have to do is double click on any video to watch in full screen.
While Hulu, Joost, and other online video sites are focusing on offering video on demand, Livestation provides a decent way to watch live programming. And there are two things that most people would rather watch live than pre-recorded, news and sports. Since there's a lot more money involved in getting broadcast and webcast rights for live sporting events, I doubt we'll be seeing ESPN or similar channels on Livestation any time soon. But if you want to catch the latest BBC, CNN, or Bloomberg news, Livestation's got you covered.
[via MakeUseOf]
Another major change is that Livestation is now cross-platform. There are Windows, Mac, and Linux clients available. The Linux version works best on PCs with NVIDIA graphics cards, while the OS X version should run on any Mac with an Intel processor. The Windows version also no longer requires Silverlight to be installed.
The user interface has also been tweaked, making it simpler to search through the long list of channels or flip between channel presets. If the video window looks small in the screenshot, all you have to do is double click on any video to watch in full screen.
While Hulu, Joost, and other online video sites are focusing on offering video on demand, Livestation provides a decent way to watch live programming. And there are two things that most people would rather watch live than pre-recorded, news and sports. Since there's a lot more money involved in getting broadcast and webcast rights for live sporting events, I doubt we'll be seeing ESPN or similar channels on Livestation any time soon. But if you want to catch the latest BBC, CNN, or Bloomberg news, Livestation's got you covered.
[via MakeUseOf]













Comments
8
Subscribe to commentsVadim PeretokinOct 5th 2008 2:08PM
Well, finally something that works in Canada, heh.
Ubuntu installation was quite smooth, and it seems to be working okay. My only prob is that the window in non-fullscreen mode doesn't wobble :-/
miggols99Oct 5th 2008 1:54PM
You can probably fix that by turning off skin mode. Go to Options > Preferences and untick "Skin Mode".
Jash SayaniOct 5th 2008 3:01PM
Using it since months... Slow Buffering and very few channels !!
chrisarozOct 5th 2008 3:57PM
Wasn't there some Peer-2-Peer Live TV streaming software talked about a while back? Basically people with TV Tuners could offer up there channels to others... I still like that idea better since it would have every channel, but I can't seem to find it.
JohnOct 5th 2008 4:58PM
Mac OSX without intel proc's also work great.
Some stations will stop playing sometimes simply, click on play on the station again, it seems to startup again.
There is a european p2p tv tuner program called Zootoo or something like that...
samflutchOct 6th 2008 9:22AM
The Linux version works best on PCs with NVIDIA graphics cards, while the OS X version should run on any Mac with an Intel processor. The Windows version plus no longer requires Silverlight to be installed.
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Samflutch
internet marketing
ashoOct 6th 2008 1:11PM
I've used Livestation, and removed it. It seems to be just a collection of stream links. I'd rather just have the links so I can play them in my player of choice, rather than yet another crap player. And I found that once I figured out what those URLs are, they work fine in (e.g.) KMPlayer.
ashoOct 6th 2008 1:07PM
I've used Livestation, and removed it. It seems to be just a collection of stream links. I'd rather just have the links so I can play them in my player of choice, rather than yet another crap player. And I found that once I figured out what those URLs are, they work fine in (e.g.) KMPlayer.