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Why 2006 Will Be The Year Of Internet Video

Filed in archive IPTV by Creative Weblogging on December 22, 2005




  • P2P Television.

    p2p_network_100.gif

    Just like Napster and later Kazaa started the P2P music file-downloading, a bunch of new tools, most of them created in China, will give way to access most any commercial television channel out there directly from your personal computer. HBO, CNN, ESPN, Star Channels, Sky, you name it. If you want to see it you will not be needing anymore to have a TV set, a set-top-box, a decoder or anything of that nature. Downloading a small free software tool(be careful with what can come within these) and selecting the channel you want to watch is all tat you will be needing to do. Tools that already do these have been around already for a few months and they are just being tested and refined at the moment. 2006 thus looks like the year that some of these, or new entries in the same field wil provide the QoS, reliability, packaging and polish that this early pioneering tools generally lack.




  • Micro-TV.
    micro_tv.gif
    Micro-TVs or nano-TV stations will make their debut. These are not just podcasts or videoblogs but very small independent TV stations with their own programming. Many of these though will not adopt the outdated and inappropriate programming approach of traditional network TV, but will be offering on-going live direct from the streets reporting of news and events with mobile news reporters equipped with digital camcorders, as well as ample archives of thematic and historical recordings of their own programming to be seen at any-time and on many different devices. That's the Micro-TV future format.




  • New monetization opportunities for video-makers.
    grant_dollar_100.jpg
    Many, many new opportunities for independent video-makers, producers, movie entrepreneurs and anyone with the skills to well communicate with video as well for those who own access and rights to uniquely characterized video and film content archives. Publish, resell, license, re-distribute and benefit from multiple possible revenue streams: contextual advertising, clip sponsorship, subscription, direct sales of premium material, and more. The upcoming Brightcove launch will open up the eyes for many.




  • Video content sold to and among content publishers.
    video_content_for_sale_135.jpg
    Photo credit: The News Market
    Video-based content will increasingly be part of the stories, article and reviews that bloggers and other online independent publishers will use online. It will be increasingly easy and inexpensive to do so with seemingly good results and new companies, large and small, will enter the market offering themselves as clearinghouses for such based and much in-demand quality video content. In the end many mainstream publishers may be able to provide unique video news content, editorials and technical reviews to small independent publishers (I see myself buying excellent tech reviews from PC Magazine Labs) while video bloggers may be able to soon leverage some selling power to established mainstream media if their reporting and content is credible and well-produced.




  • Video mashups.
    supervixen1_video_mashup_100.jpg
    Photo credit: Boing Boing
    New tools and online services will make it very easy to capture, edit, remix and dub much of the huge quantity of video content that will be freely accessible on the Internet. Set yourself for lots of mashups, remixes and artistic montages of all kinds of content. Beyond the initial surprise, video mashups and remakes will become by itself a new genre of communication for many, and from my viewpoint, a highly effective one applicable to many different realms.




  • Citizen-TV.
    girl_with_camcorder_140.jpg
    Though some recent launches and promotion campaigns have had us believe that participatory, grassroots, citizen-television was already here, these initial experiments, while innovating on many aspects of the traditional TV paradigm have remained attached to too many traditional programming schemes and top-down vertical programming approaches are yet far from giving a good idea of what citizen-TV will be truly like. But I do think that you will not need to wait beyond 2006 to see the first examples of such new television model. How to tell genuine citizen-TV from unrealized early attempts? Look for two things:
    1) how much video content is actually "live"
    2) how much of that video content is originated by true grassroots citizen reporters.




  • The value of video archives.
    filmreel_120.jpg
    Photo credit: Pam Roth
    Selling access to commercial TV content archives, including ads, will be one of the most extraordinary discoveries that the universe of traditional television stations will finally realize. This will be a godsend for many financially troubled television groups and commercial networks. By leveraging paid or advertising supported access to their own video archives these commercial stations will be able to fund and support the deep and inevitable transformation that any TV station will need to start planning soon next to the maintenance of its traditional content programming.




  • Video search.
    Google_video.gif
    Video search engines, which are already an interesting bunch, will increase in number, features and usability in 2006. The ability to search vast quantities of video-based content in effective and innovative ways will pay back handsomely those what will be able to do so.




  • Flash video.
    flashlogo_80.jpg
    Flash video is just unstoppable. Adobe-Macromedia Flash technology makes it possible to embed video both within web sites as well as within custom applications such as RSS readers and aggregators as well as within customizable widgets of any kind as well as within traditional desktop applications. Flash is everywhere, and with its own set of idiosyncrasies and limitations Flash video does work. Flash technology is the most powerful enables for the adoption and distribution of video online and if you hadn't yet noticed, next year you will.




  • Home as a media hub.
    mobile_by_ocarre_130.jpg
    Anyone will be able to buy technology that allows them to broadcast out to their own portable media devices all of the video, television, DVD, and any Internet-based media that is accessible at home. That is: from my preferred mobile device I will be able to access any rich-media content that I would normally be able to access if I was at home. The first set of tools doing this are already out there.




  • Video integration in many applications and services.
    video_presentation_production_Vlog_it_200.jpg
    As I have written before video will intersect and infect existing online services and tools that have yet made little use of this technology. Explosive growth of video on the web will be connected with product reviews and demonstrations, matchmaking, real-estate, training, presentation-making, personal entertainment and many other information areas where little use of video had been done until now.




  • Screencasting.
    screencasting_screen_150.gif
    Screencasting, which is the ability to record screen-based demonstrations, presentations and tutorials and to offer them as online streaming videos has demonstrated to be an extremely useful application of video and one that can enable more effective results when needing to demonstrate a new software or how to use a online system. Small and large online publishers will start adopting screencasting as an effective and highly efficient video-based content delivery format.




  • Interactive Real-Time Video.
    child_playing_video_game_100.jpg
    Photo credit: Sherry Smith
    Interactive real-time video will finally show some of its amazing opportunities. Initially these will be in the area of personal entertainment and education/training. New tools will allow you to immerse your live video self within gaming environments and to interact with other objects and players in real-time. You will also be able to exercise and test physical skills, moves and steps while being provided with a training virtual partner within your same video space. Possibly hard to visualize if you haven't seen one yet, but such tools have been out there before and are now being refined by media and entertainment giants as Sonylinks to be initially sold through home entertainment consoles.




  • Web Conferencing and Collaboration.
    robinmic_70.gif
    Web conferencing will continue to drive further significant attention and interest to video, which thanks to Flash-video based technology will be more easily and inexpensively embedded in a greater number of videoconferencing tools and services. Video is already at the core of many of the newer conferencing and collaboration tools available out there, and those not yet integrating it will positively make significant steps to add some video-based features next year.

What do you think?

This post has been contributed by our 'STAR' Creative Reporter - Robin. Robin Good is a new media researcher and an inependent online publisher covering the intelligent use of new technologies for effective communication. He publishes a new media daily magazine at www.masternewmedia.org.

Thanks Robin!


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