In my experience, the RSS is not the hard part. It's supporting the video codecs at settings we're accustomed to. Frequently, it also varies from codec to codec. Sometimes the problem isn't supporting the codec itself but instead not being able to support a given codec at a given frame rate, etc.
I've seen some good mobile video RSS devices. My PSP does REALLY well at it. The new PSP firmware is a lot more compatible with different video standards than past PSP firmwares. Then again, the PSP has a ton of hardware dedicated for stuff like that and doesn't have to maintain a network connection while it does it. -- Rhett. http://www.weatherlight.com/freetime > Do we have any positive examples of mobile video rss? > > joly > > At 03:15 PM 1/3/2007, you wrote: >>Well, we only have so much we can work with, and it's worth remembering >>that most mobile devices are intended to serve other purposes first and >> be >>browsers and video players second. If the goal was just to make a great >>mobile browser and video player, it'd be easier, but hardware, battery >>power, etc, has to be dedicated to other purposes on the device (like >>maintaining a connection to a cellular network, etc), and that means >>constantly being between a rock and a hard place on the design phase. >> >>-- >>Rhett. >>http://www.weatherlight.com/freetime >> >> >>> It's too bad it appears that most mobile is one or two steps behind in >>> browser and video tech. >>> >>> -- Enric >>> > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------- > WWWhatsup NYC > http://pinstand.com - http://punkcast.com > --------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >
