Streaming Media - October 2008 - (Page 18) Standard Time mong all the resources Streaming Media offers—this magazine, the websites (U.S. and global), the conferences—the hidden gem just might be the discussion lists, where experts and novices exchange ideas, solicit advice, offer suggestions, and debate the hot-button issues in online video. Nowhere else online do end users and vendors alike have the opportunity to reach out to their peers and get quick feedback on a project or free troubleshooting for vexing technical problems. Moderator Dan Rayburn makes sure that they stay free of sales pitches, too, which keeps everybody honest. The email lists are terrific resources, and they’re only going to get better when we switch them over to online forums later this year. Of course, like any online community, they’re also the site of ongoing debates, usually goodnatured and on-point. And even though passions sometimes run high, the arguments rarely devolve into the flame wars and ad hominem attacks that have driven me from many an online discussion list. Not surprisingly, two topics ignite the most intense debates: DRM and video formats and players. The DRM debate tends to be philosophical in nature, a never-thetwain-shall-meet between those who think end users should be able to do whatever they want with content once they’ve received it through legitimate means and those who believe that the only way to protect intellectual property and financially reward its creators is to limit such use. The video format/player debates tend to be a bit trickier, with participants’ opinions dependent largely upon whether or not they’ve got a horse in the race. Usually, of course, the debate is over the relative quality— in terms of both performance and usability—of Windows Media/Silverlight and Flash, and occasionally the arguments get so heated that an observer will suggest a no-holds-barred wrestling cage match at the next Streaming Media show to settle the score. But those debates usually miss the bigger issue: Why have competing video formats at all? That question has long seemed polyannaish to those on the Streaming Media lists who are invested heavily in one proprietary technology or another, but now that Microsoft Silverlight has finally joined Adobe in supporting H.264 playback—QuickTime and RealPlayer were ahead of the game on this one—our industry needs to evaluate whether or not it’s time to agree upon H.264 as the standard for all online video. Too often the debate over video formats has gotten bogged down in disputes over video quality. Perhaps Streaming Media has been guilty of perpetuating that debate with articles comparing the major video formats, but as long as the formats are competing, it makes sense 18 STREAMING MEDIA October/November 2008 A for us to help our readers determine which one performs best. Jan Ozer’s tests have shown consistently that H.264 offers higher-quality video than Windows Media/VC-1, but that’s not necessarily the point. VHS didn’t beat Betamax because the video quality was better (it wasn’t) but in large part because Betamax’s 1-hour tape length precluded recording movies or offering them for rent or sale on a single tape. That a single format is better for consumers hardly seems debatable; could you imagine if TV viewers had to think about what format NBC uses versus what format is on ESPN? But on one of the discussion lists, Ozer made compelling arguments why an H.264 standard makes sense for other reasons: • H.264 has already been adopted by the International Standards Organization and International Telecommunications Union as a standard, which means it’s likely to become the standard for mobile devices. • It lets chip and board vendors focus on supporting a single encoding platform. • That, in turn, means Silverlight and Flash publishers can support both web and mobile with one server and technology. The big question, of course, is whether or not all the players in the market—some of whom have invested significantly in Windows Media Video, whether in the technology and services they sell or thousands of hours of content they’ve already encoded—can agree to move forward on a single, nonproprietary standard. That’s a tall order, and frankly, I don’t see it happening anytime soon. But if online video is to achieve the kind of success that we all think it can on all relevant platforms—PC, phone, and other connected and unconnected devices—we need to give consumers not choice but consistency and simplicity so that they won’t have to guess whether or not the video they want to watch will play back on the platform that best suits them. Eric Schumacher-Rasmussen (erics@streamingmedia.com) is editor of Streaming Media and program director for Streaming Media Europe. Comments? Email us at letters@streamingmedia.com, or check the masthead for other ways to contact us. Editor’s Note By Eric Schumacher-Rasmussen
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Streaming Media - October 2008 Streaming Media - October 2008 Table of Contents Standard Time Technology and Business Trends by the Numbers Encoding for Screencams Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 Brave New Platforms Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual Creative Suite Turns 4 The Future of Internet Radio Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production Educating the Next Generation of Online Media Makers ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! Streaming Media - October 2008 Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 1) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 2) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 3) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 4) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 5) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 6) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 7) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 8) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 9) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 10) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 11) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 12) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 13) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 14) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 15) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 16) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 17) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Standard Time (Page 18) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Standard Time (Page 19) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Technology and Business Trends by the Numbers (Page 20) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Technology and Business Trends by the Numbers (Page 21) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 22) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 23) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 24) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 25) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 26) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 27) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 28) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 29) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 30) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 31) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 32) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 32A) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 32B) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 33) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 34) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 35) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 36) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 37) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 38) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 39) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 40) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 41) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 42) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 43) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 44) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 45) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 46) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 47) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 48) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 49) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 50) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 51) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Brave New Platforms (Page 52) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Brave New Platforms (Page 53) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 54) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 55) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 56) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 57) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 58) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 59) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Creative Suite Turns 4 (Page 60) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Creative Suite Turns 4 (Page 61) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 62) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 63) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 64) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 65) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 66) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 67) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 68) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 69) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 70) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 71) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 72) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 73) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 74) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 75) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 76) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 77) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Educating the Next Generation of Online Media Makers (Page 78) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Educating the Next Generation of Online Media Makers (Page 79) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 80) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 81) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 82) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 83) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 84) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 85) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page 86) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page 87) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page 88) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page Cover3) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page Cover4)
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