Hi again, Yes, the HTML5 video codec situation has done an amazing job at breaking this part of the Web, with the negative side-effect that one has to do "content negotiation" on the client-side now when dealing with Web video.
It is a complex story of codec licenses, browser vendor preferences, and politics (things I am _not_ at all qualified to judge). I am just interested in dealing with this situation from a codec-agnostic semantic video annotation standpoint. Cheers, Tom -- Thomas Steiner, Employee, Google Inc. http://blog.tomayac.com, http://twitter.com/tomayac -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux) iFy0uwAntT0bE3xtRa5AfeCheCkthAtTh3reSabiGbl0ck0fjumBl3DCharaCTersAttH3b0ttom.hTtP5://xKcd.c0m/1181/ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
