LiveStation

{{Short description|Former television and radio online distributor}}

{{Cleanup bare URLs|date=August 2022}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Primary sources|date=March 2012}}

{{Infobox website

| name = LiveStation Ltd.

| logo = Livestation_logo.jpg

| logo_size = 150px

| logo_alt = Logo (2010 - 2015)

| collapsible = "no"

| screenshot = Screenshot of LiveStation's front page.jpg

| screenshot_size = 400px

| founded = {{Start date and age|2007|09|07}}

| defunct =

| location = The Trampery
13-19 Bevenden Street
London, United Kingdom

| coordinates =

| country =

| area_served = Worldwide (except blocked countries)

| founder =

| chairman = Philip Rowley

| chairperson =

| president =

| CEO = Lippe Oosterhof

| services = Internet TV

| international = yes

| net_income = US$3 million (2015) {{Cite web | url=https://hired.com/companies/livestation | title=Busker Jobs, Reviews & Salaries}}

| employees = 10

| parent = Microsoft Research

| url = {{URL|http://www.livestation.com/}}

| programming_language =

| ipv6 =

| website_type =

| advertising = No

| registration = Mandatory (sign up / sign in via Facebook or Twitter); as of early-2015

| users =

| language = English

| launched = {{Start date and age|2008|09|24}}

| current_status = Defunct (as of 23 November 2016)

| native_clients =

| footnotes =

}}

{{Infobox software

| name =

| logo =

| screenshot =

| caption =

| author =

| developer = Skinkers Ltd
Microsoft Research
Livestation Ltd

| released = July 2007 (announced)
September 7, 2007 (IBC 2007 - Amsterdam)
February 12, 2008 (beta release)
September 24, 2008 (full release)

| latest release date =

| latest preview version =

| latest preview date =

| operating system =

| platform = cross-platform including iOS, Android

Former: Microsoft Windows, Apple Macintosh, Linux

| language = English

| genre = Internet TV

| license = Proprietary

| website = {{URL|http://www.livestation.com/}}

}}

Livestation was a platform for distributing live television and radio broadcasts over a data network.{{cite web | url = http://www.livestation.com/channels | title = Live television and radio |access-date = 2008-03-09 | url-status = dead | archive-url = http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20091007225144/http%3A//www.livestation.com/channels | archive-date = 2009-10-07 }} It was originally developed by Skinkers Ltd. and is now an independent company called Livestation Ltd. The service was originally based on peer-to-peer technology acquired from Microsoft Research.{{cite web | url = http://www.livestation.com/broadcast_platform?tracker=main_menu | title = Scalable High-Quality Solution | access-date = 2008-05-14}} Between mid-June 2013 and mid-July Livestation was unavailable to some subscribers due to technical issues.

In late 2016, the service closed down without notice.{{cite web|last1=N/A|first1=N/A|title=N/A|url=http://www.livestation.com|website=LiveStation|accessdate=23 November 2016|ref=N/A}}

Overview

Livestation aggregated international news channels online and offered them in some ways:

  • Free to watch: Some channels could be watched for free on the Livestation website or on their desktop player, a freely downloadable video application that presented all the channels through one interface.
  • Premium service: Some of the free channels were also available on a subscription basis both in higher quality (800 kbit/s) and in lower (256 kbit/s) delivered via an international content distribution network for higher reliability.
  • Mobile: Livestation launched BBC World News on the iPhone in 16 European countries and Al Jazeera English globally. The apps were available in the iOS AppStore and streamed the live TV channel 24/7 on both Wi-Fi and 3G connections.

Livestation broadcast streams are encoded in VC-1 format (Livestation is not currently using peer-to-peer). Playback controls were overlaid on top of the video stream. Unlike services such as Joost which offer video-on-demand channels, Livestation streams live broadcasts.{{cite web | url = http://soapbox.msn.com/video.aspx?vid=4da4263c-68a0-411f-8eec-58dc81bf22da | title = Livestation demonstration |access-date = 2007-07-05 | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070707053000/http://soapbox.msn.com/video.aspx?vid=4da4263c-68a0-411f-8eec-58dc81bf22da | archive-date = 2007-07-07 }}

Livestation provided a website, mobile website and native applications for the iOS, Android, Nokia and Blackberry handsets. Early models of Samsung TV were also supported. They also provided desktop software available for Windows, Mac (including PowerPC) and Linux. The cross-platform compatibility of the desktop software was facilitated by the Qt framework. Social networking features were later added that include the ability to chat with other viewers and also find out what others are watching through a user-generated rating system. You could search and select the available channels either from the website or from within the software.

In the first quarter of 2011 by 1047 percent, resulting in the first profitable quarter in its history.[http://blog.livestation.com/index.php/2011/04/the-livestation-revolution/ The Livestation revolution] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110416014305/http://blog.livestation.com/index.php/2011/04/the-livestation-revolution/ |date=2011-04-16 }}. Livestation Blog. 11 April 2011. Retrieved on 21 April 2011.

Between mid-June and mid-July 2013, Livestation suffered a prolonged series of technical issues and was unavailable to some users.

In early 2015, Livestation re-branded their entire site changing what channels were offered and bringing in an interactive feature. Some stations on the app were not on the main site and vice versa.

Available channels

Stations available until closure and former live TV news channels in the global offering (which comes with a default installation) included,http://support.livestation.com/customer/portal/articles/1842844-list-of-available-news-channels- as of 2016:

As of 2016, the Livestation site is closed.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}