Agreed. This is good news.

----------------------------------------
Have a Better One,
Edward Crosby
http://about.me/edwardcrosby


On Tue, Apr 16, 2013 at 8:06 AM, Cary Preston <[email protected]> wrote:

> Such welcome news. Silverlight has always been a pain in the ass; sporadic
> updates that were awkwardly implemented and less-than-stellar support from
> Microsoft.
>
> http://www.slashgear.com/netflix-switching-to-html5-video-from-silverlight-15277927/
>
> Netflix switching to HTML5 video from Silverlight
>
> When Microsoft <http://www.slashgear.com/tags/microsoft/> announced that
> Silverlight <http://www.slashgear.com/tags/silverlight/> would be coming
> to an end in 2021, it gave companies that utilize the video technology less
> than a decade to gravitate to an alternative. Perhaps the biggest and most
> prolific user of Silverlight is Netflix, which takes advantage of its
> “high-quality streaming experience” for Watch Instantly. Today the company
> announced that in light of Microsoft’s announcement, it will be switching
> to HTML5 video.
>
> [image: netflix-logo]
>
> Netflix talks about the reality of video plugins, making specific mentions
> of browsers that don’t support them (Internet Explorer in Metro Mode, for
> example), as well as the security risk using plugins can pose. Moving to
> HTML5 from Silverlight will take care of these two issues, and will open up
> the ability to watch instant video via the service on a wider range of
> devices and browsers.
>
> For now, Netflix is waiting to make the switch on what it calls three
> “premium video extensions”: Media Source Extensions, Encrypted Media
> Extensions, and Web Cryptography API. The company says it is working with
> industry leaders, and that these initiatives will be the solution to
> current issues with delivering video in the absense of a plugin like
> Silverlight.
>
> The first iteration of this has been pushed out for the Samsung ARM-based
> Chromebook, which takes advantage of the Media Source Extensions and
> Encrypted Media Extensions in Chrome browser to deliver Silverlight-free
> video content. According to Netflix, Web Cryptography API isn’t in use on
> the Chromebook yet, instead being replaced with Netflix’s own Pepper Plugin
> API. The PPAPI plugin will be swapped out with WebCrypto when it is
> available via Chrome, at which point HTML5 video testing will start for OS
> X and Windows.
>
> [via <http://techblog.netflix.com/2013/04/html5-video-at-netflix.html>Netflix]
>
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