In Avida, on the other hand, each program lives in its own address space.
A program, in fact, that lives in a computer.
Although 60 percent of the state receives the programs live, the remaining areas see the taped proceedings on public access channels.
Another problem was the inability to watch many programs live, or at least soon enough in the case of series TV.
Its operating system, programs and data all live in eight megabytes of built-in memory - a key to its speed.
But his "program," as he constantly refers to it, lived on.
Yet the program lives on through more than 30 competitions, some of which are only now getting under way.
That allows a customer to watch a program live while simultaneously recording three others.
Some subscribers will present the programs live, others via tape.
They hired full-time staff and created programs like the Selected Shorts live reading series.