Yeah, Frank Sinton posted this earlier and I thought it would get  
things popping and fizzing here but it hasn't yet.
As far as I can see, it'll take off quick as the all-purpose video  
podcasting aggregator and offline player for the masses.
Just not sure why Adobe/Macromedia didn't do it before.  Seems so  
obvious.

Rupert
http://twittervlog.blogspot.com/
http://www.twitter.com/ruperthowe/
http://feeds.feedburner.com/twittervlog/


On 16 Apr 2007, at 13:24, Heath wrote:

Check this out, interesting article

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070416/tc_nm/adobe_player_dc;_ylt=AqF8l.m
rZ2KqopCFainOFEjMWM0F

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Adobe Systems Inc. unveiled on Sunday video-
player software that lets consumers play back video online or
offline, a move that could help reshape an acrimonious debate over
video-sharing.

Adobe Video Player builds on the leading design software maker's
Flash player, already the dominant technology used to stream video
online by sites ranging from YouTube to MySpace to MSN to Yahoo Video.

The video player is due to become available to consumers over the
next several months, Adobe officials said.

Analysts hailed the new Adobe Video player as a technology
breakthrough by allowing consumers to download and carry video from
the Web to computers to mobile phones, while ensuring programmers can
deliver advertising and track video usage.

Rival video players such as Windows Media Player from Microsoft
Corp., QuickTime from Apple Inc. and RealPlayer from RealNetworks
Inc. run on a range of devices but have none of the offline tracking
features.

"Adobe has created the first way for media companies to release video
content, secure in the knowledge that advertising goes with it,"
Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey said.

"Control is something that media companies absolutely get high on,"
he said.

Fearful of piracy, media companies have been slow to release much of
their TV, film and video programming onto the Web.

Last month, media conglomerate Viacom Inc. filed a $1 billion lawsuit
against Google Inc. and its YouTube video-sharing site for failing to
thwart the piracy of MTV, South Park and other popular Viacom
television shows.

At root, the debate over digital piracy has been a case of digital
tools outstripping the power of copyright owners to decide who
watches what while also ensuring they can get paid.

The Adobe Video Player could ease such tensions by giving consumers a
convenient way to watch, and even, in certain instances, to edit,
video content, while assuring media owners they can retain ultimate
control over where the video ends up.

"Consumers think: I bought my media, I own it, I should get to carry
it with me from device to device. Adobe's video player works the way
consumers think about media by giving them the freedom to carry it
with them," McQuivey said.

Adobe officials said they have relied on a set of familiar, openly
accessible technologies to create Adobe Video Player and will
distribute the software, for free, using the same viral strategy that
made Adobe's Flash and Acrobat into the most popular ways to view
video or read documents, respectively.

It relies on open standards for syndicating content, synchronizing
multimedia and advertising tracking. Consumers disturbed that media
owners can track their consumption habits have the option of blocking
such tracking.

And because Adobe is already a primary supplier of the prior
generation of video watching and editing tools, the company may avoid
the classic "chicken and egg problem" that delays adoption of most
new Web technologies: Will consumers use the video player before
media owners embrace it?

Adobe Media Player offers higher-quality Flash video, full-screen
playback and the ability to be disconnected from the Web -- on
airplanes, for example. Viewers also can search for shows or share
their ratings of shows with other viewers and automatically download
new episodes of shows.

Mark Randall, chief strategist for dynamic media, said Adobe is
working with a wide range of media companies, and plans to announce
partnership deals next month.

The Adobe Video Player offers a way for established media companies
to securely offer ad-supported video but also independent video
producers, podcasters and home movie makers.

Adobe, of San Jose, California, timed the announcement for the start
of the National Association of Broadcasters show, a major industry
event, now underway in Las Vegas.

Will this help or hurt?

Heath
http://batmangeek.com






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