Archive for the ‘Streaming Video’ Category
Posted by Michaela B., VeriSign
These landed in my computer and I thought they were interesting and positive for both online video and .tv.
Internet Video Viewing to Eclipse Broadcast TV Viewing by 2020.
A forecast by The Diffusion Group (TDG) in one of their recent reports. According to Colin Dixon, senior partner and co-author of TDG’s new report, despite the fact … [Read more]
Tagged .tv, online video
Posted by Michaela B., VeriSign
First…who knew there were so many CDNs in the world (OK, OK, I guess I knew…but all in one place it seems more impressive).
Second; trolling the booths, attending the panels, and talking to the participants last week I was struck by how much is going on with video and how diverse the community is. Again, … [Read more]
Tagged html5, ipad, mobile video, revision3, streaming media east, youtube
Posted by Michaela B., VeriSign
If you guessed YouTube.com, you’d be wrong according to recent statistics.
Here at Watch.tv we’re proud to say that honor is reserved for the live streaming sites like Justin.tv and UStream.tv. YouTube has about 24 hours of video uploaded per minute. But, Justin.tv claims 30 hours and Ustream.tv claims over 53 hours per minute according to … [Read more]
Tagged justin.tv, ustream, youtube
Posted by Michaela B., VeriSign
Our guest blogger today is a repeat visitor – Professor Karthik Shyamsunder. As HTML5 is in the news a bit lately, we thought we’d follow up with some more thoughts on the topic.
In my previous blog post, I discussed the new tag, its usage, and how we are going to have native tags … [Read more]
Tagged codex, google, html5, video
Posted by Michaela B., VeriSign
Google TV in the works? — The Wall Street Journal (and about everyone that guesses on these things) thinks so. They may (or may not) show it off at their I/O conference May 19 and 20 for developers in SF. It’s expected to be on Android and will leverage the wider development community for applications. … [Read more]
Tagged google, Intel, justin.tv, Logitech, NewTeeVee, Wall Street Journal