Archive for July, 2006
Actimagine (makers of Mobiclip) raises €3MM
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 31st, 2006 in Industry, venture capital, Mobile VideoWord is out that Actimagine - the European company behind the ultra-efficient mobile video codec “Mobiclip” - has raised €3MM from GRP Partners of Los Angeles.
There’s no question that the mobile video market needs a better solution than traditional MPEG codecs, particularly when you consider the constraints of processing capacity and power consumption on mobile […]
[Update] Sorry - light posting for a couple of days while.
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Published by ChiefViddler July 27th, 2006 in General
My apologies, and I hate doing this so early in this blog’s young life - but my posting will be a little lighter over the next couple of days as I’ve got company visiting from out of town. Please Stand By.
No new video iPod until 2007?
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 25th, 2006 in Gear, News, AppleReports are surfacing that Apple’s new widescreen video iPod may be delayed until 2007. I guess we’ll all know more in a couple of weeks once Apple’s WWDC takes place.
If true, it’s a shame that it is taking Apple so long to develop what some Asian manufacturers have been able to get into […]
Who’s responsible for “irrational exuberance” this time around?
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 24th, 2006 in Uncategorized, News, Industry, Rants, YouTube, venture capitalTim Arango over at the New York Post had a piece this morning, claiming that the YouTube boys think they’re valued at $1B. That’s right - say it in your best Dr. Evil voice - $1,000,000,000. Now I can’t claim to speak for Chad Hurley or the backers behind YouTube - but for […]
“Dabble” might be a fitting name
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 24th, 2006 in Industry, DabbleIn yet more news this morning, Dabble has officially come out of closed beta.
Don’t know where exactly they rank in the list of 170+ YouTube clones, but at first blush around their site, it’s extremely difficult for me to figure out where their differentiation or advantage is. They haven’t yet matched the list […]
How to Jumpcut a licensing deal
1 Comment Published by ChiefViddler July 24th, 2006 in News, Industry, Advertising, HollywoodWow… lots of industry news this morning, that’s for certain.
JumpCut announced this morning that it’s licensing its video editing application to FoxAtomic, who is using a private-labeled version of the app to allow people to create their own audition tapes for the new Revenge of the Nerds remake. As we’ve seen elsewhere in the […]
Gotuit sneaks out late Sunday night
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 24th, 2006 in General, News, YouTubeNice job on the stealth-mode prep work guys. Atlas Ventures-backed Gotuit Media launched late on Sunday night, complete with a substantial library of videos (lots of music videos) ready to go. Typical of the other YouTube clones it offers fast start Flash playback.
I’d say however that Gotuit’s UI is more friendly for […]
New Democracy Player available
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 23rd, 2006 in General, NewsCourtesy of our friends at Boing Boing, news it out that a new version of the Democracy Player is available. For those of you unfamiliar with Democracy, it’s an open-source player that lets you choose from over 500 channels of free videos - in just about any format. Some of the things I like about […]
Google rolls out click-to-play video ads in the UK
0 Comments Published by ChiefViddler July 23rd, 2006 in News, Google, AdvertisingExpanding on their early success in the US and Canada, Google this past week expanded their service the the UK. Unlike the typical cost-per-click text ads which then direct the consumer to the advertisers offering - typically their web site - the new video ads are billable when the user simply watches the […]
Make your webcam more useful
0 Comments Published by Thom July 23rd, 2006 in General, User generated contentHellodeo - an offshoot of Odeo - is offering video postcards that you can easily capture & create webcam images. It uploads them, transcodes them to Flash, and then outputs the HTML code necessary for you to paste into your blog, an email, whatever. Ultra-simple little utility — very few controls […]






