Home :: Newsletters :: RSS Feeds :: About Us :: Advertise     
The Industry Standard News and Analysis for the Internet Economy
NEWS
METRICS
BLOGS
JOBS
EVENTS
        Internet News for Internet Business Monday, 04th of April, 2005   

  TOPICS
Technology
Media
Money
Politics
Opinion and Blogs


  Newsletter/RSS
Sign up today for the daily email newsletter:





  BLOGS
Denise Howell
JD Lasica
Esme Vos
Scott Rafer
Ross Mayfield
Doc Searls
Seth Godin
Ashlee Vance
Matt McAlister
Tom Hespos
Mark Jones
Jen Muehlbauer
Cringe Worthy
Mark Frauenfelder
Declan McCullagh
Julene Snyder
Mark Glaser
Rafat Ali
Thomas Goetz
Mike Butcher
Jimmy Guterman

>> RSS Feed



  Archive

Recent Entries:
Few details in eBay's Shopping.com plans
Skype, VOIP handsets on show at Computex
Microsoft plans mobile e-mail push upgrade
EBay buys Shopping.com for $620 million
New .xxx domain will be reserved for porn



Previous Story: Mac, iPod sales bring Apple record earnings
Next Story: Intel employees put hotspot on the North Pole


Google launches video upload program
By Juan Carlos Perez

Google Inc. on Wednesday launched a program that lets its users worldwide store their digital videos at the Google Video service.

This new program, whose existence was disclosed by Google Co-founder and President for Products Larry Page last week, is aimed at anyone interested in making their digital videos available to a broad audience, according to a statement from the Mountain View, California company.

"We're actually going to start taking video submissions from people, and we're not quite sure what we're going to get, but we decided we'd try this experiment," said Page, speaking last week a panel discussion at the National Cable Television Association (NCTA) National Show in San Francisco

Those interested can go to https://upload.video.google.com and load their digital videos to Google Video, itself a relatively new service that, when queried, returns excerpts of close-captioning transcripts of television programs, still images from broadcasts and other programming information. Google Video doesn't return actual video clips that users can play back. Google Video is still in test, or beta, phase.

Although Google is accepting videos, it is not making them searchable yet. The plan is to eventually let users search, play back and purchase videos stored in Google Video. Owners will have the option of giving their videos away for free or charging for them.

The upload program is available to all types of video content owners, from individuals to corporations, according to Google.

The approach Google is taking to indexing video is markedly different from its approach to indexing text and still images on Web pages, said Allen Weiner, a Gartner Inc. analyst.

Whereas Google actively harvests text and images, it is instead relying on video content owners to send in their video files, and there are several reasons for the different approach, he said.

For example, this approach lets Google get a sense for the breadth and depth of digital video content out there, and tune its search capabilities accordingly, creating a taxonomy, he said.

After creating the index, Google can then sit back and ponder what it's going to do with the content. It could become a bridge between the content owner and the content consumer, providing the platform for delivering the video and for charging on behalf of the owners, Weiner said. Google could also adopt an advertising-driven approach, he said. The company could also generate revenue from hosting the videos, which take up a lot of storage space, Weiner said.

Steve Lawson in San Francisco contributed to this report

Posted April 14, 2005 03:56 PM |




FREE Email Newsletter RSS Feeds
Sign up today for the
daily email newsletter:








    ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:
    • Find reviews of digital cameras and download the latest graphics tools from PCWorld.
    • Astonish your colleagues with the latest technology news and trends from Computerworld.
    • Digital music that matters: chart-toppers and free audio files from Playlistmag.com.
    • Catch a daily glimpse behind the forces shaping the security business from CSOonline.com.
    • In-depth look at networking products, by Network World's team of independent reviewers.
    • Top reviews, analyses & evaluation of IT products by technology experts from InfoWorld.
    • Hot tech news with links to blogs and resources around the Internet on Lockergnome.

    MORE INTERNET NEWS LINKS


Home :: Newsletters :: RSS Feeds :: About TheStandard :: Advertise    
Copyright © 2004, TheStandard.com :: Terms and Conditions :: Privacy Policy