I cant find more info on the youtube side of things - certainly there
are press releases about deals they have done with different mobile
networks, to bring 'youtube mobile' to them. But I cant tell anything
about whether they are going to use AVC/h264 instead of flash,
although Steve Jobs hinted at that not too long ago in relation tot he
iPhone.

On the Nokia front Ive found a document with tons of info on how the
Nokia Video Center' works. Its not a new document but seems to have
mention of mediaRSS in there:

http://americas.forum.nokia.com/info/sw.nokia.com/id/6442fe0d-964f-40ac-8d94-89d4a17adfd9/RSS_Support_in_Nokia_Video_Center_v1_0_en.pdf.html

It allows downloads or streaming. I havent read it in detail, I really
need to get one of these Nokia devices to learn more, but they are
still only just emerging in the UK, always seem to be just round the
corner.

Also sounds like theyve built stuff in to enable subscription-based
content, and to enable network operators to restrict access (eg if the
network operator doesnt provide full internet access). This ties in to
what I am seeing with the youtube mobile announcements - that both the
web service providers and the mobile oeprators see money in this
stuff, and want to do individual deals with eachother to bring their
stuff to mobiles, and charge the users.

Cheers

Steve Elbows

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Mike Meiser"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Is there any more info on this!?
> 
> It's not clear that youtube is supporting open standards, or wether
> there is some sort of proprietary system. We already knew Nokia had a
> video blog aggregator that supported RSS... it definitely looks like
> they rolled out a major release based on the screen snaps. Love that
> it supports mediaRSS.
> 
> The questions are this.
> 
> 1) can you watch video OFFLINE, I.E. does it download and cache
youtube videos
> 
> 2) is Nokia supporting Flash videos or is youtube encoding to h264 or
> another format more suitable to downloads.
> 
> All I find is the following.
> 
> "Nokia Web Browser with Mini Map
> The Nokia Web Browser with Mini Map enables mobile discovery of videos
> in websites such as the YouTube Mobile site in a similar way as with
> PC web browsers. With YouTube Mobile now also compatible with the AVC
> video format which is the most common format supported in mobile
> devices, the single-click playback of videos is also possible in the
> same intuitive way as with PC web browsers. The Nokia Web Browser with
> Mini Map and AVC video playback are standard features in all the
> latest Nokia Nseries multimedia computers."
> 
> Basically this implies that you must be ONLINE on a wifi connection to
> view videos. Basically just support for flash in web pages. This is an
> alternative to the RSS video aggregator.
> 
> And then there's this.
> 
> "Nokia Video Center
> The new Nokia Video Center offers a comprehensive and user friendly
> mobile video RSS feed and video on demand consumption experience with
> an easy-to-use interface for discovering, viewing and storing one's
> favorite content on the Nokia Nseries multimedia computer. It combines
> branded video RSS feed services, internet videos and sideloaded videos
> from the PC into one single place such as the Nokia N95 and the
> recently announced Nokia N93i."
> 
> This implies some sort of simple editorial guide. It's VERY vague.
> But it seems to imply something like fireant... where you have a guide
> or directory and a piece of desktop software, probably windows only
> and SYNC to the nokia device. What's called a desktop hub model.
> 
> Interesting neither of these imply the third model mefeedia is a huge
> proponent of, though mefeedia is naturally 100% supported by the Nokia
> devices.  Our model is to route multiple video podcasts feeds through
> a single channel, also ussually RSS, directly to the device. Making
> the webservice a hub thus allowing media to bypass the desktop and be
> aggregated directly to the device, not only allowing media to be
> enjoyed anywhere there's a networked device without a sync cable but
> also allowing subscriptions and queuing anywhere you can browse the
> web, instead of tieing the subscription management to just one
> computer.
> 
> To recap, three models
> 
> 1) live web page browsing and viewing of videos
> 
> 2) the desktop computer as the center of a digital hub, with devices
> syncing to the computer
> 
> 3) the hub as a webservice
> 
> -Mike
> mefeedia.com
> mmeiser.com/blog
> 
> 
> On 2/12/07, Peter Van Dijck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
http://www.niallkennedy.com/blog/archives/2007/02/nokia-video-center.html
> >
> > Video podcatcher supports MediaRSS and h.264 videos. Can download from
> > wifi. That's very promising!
> >
> > Peter
> >
> > --
> > Find 10000s of videoblogs and podcasts at http://mefeedia.com
> > my blog: http://poorbuthappy.com/ease/
> > my job: http://petervandijck.net
> >
> >
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
>


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