Yes, but many sites play music and video via flash controlled webpages
which don't always give you that flexibility.
I am well aware of the ability to download flash video's to my
harddrive. I have about 500 myself (of which about 1% would be
considered
on-topic).
With more and more webpages being filled with flash and javascript
content, it's getting harder to find sites that are actually viewable
on
Amiga's, C64's and other retro computers/games consoles (... trying to
drive it back on topic).
Regards,
Andrew B
aliensrcooluk at yahoo.co.uk
PS. Does anyone have Jay's email address at hand?
Almost every time I reply to a message via my yahoo
web-mail account it get's bounced back with the following
error message:
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>:
Remote host said: 550 5.7.1 time travel between hops [BODY]PPS. This is 3rd attempt. First
two attempts (Yahoo web-mail) failedso I am now trying via Outlook Express.
John Foust <jfoust at threedee.com> wrote: At 11:43 PM 2/27/2008, Patrick
Finnegan wrote:
"Streaming" tends to imply no disk cache
copy, more like listening to
a
radio station...
Browsers and other players might cache in order to give you the
ability to rewind and replay, for example. There are many ways
these days to save a YouTube video and convert to another format
(browser plugins particularly for Firefox, sites like
keepvid.com,
etc.)
- John