One new frontier will be interactivity. Until then it'll be a lot of commercial content repackaged online with limited commercial success. You can see Hollywood experimenting with 3D again because they need to, because most of their content is tired. Last time they did 3D, it was a failed gimmick. Then it got traction with IMAX. Now it's entering normal theaters again, and this time they'll do it properly. It's a good way of competing with online and TV. Online video content will have to differentiate itself too. In more than just style. I think interactive narratives and clickable videos will grow slowly and then become the norm.
On 18-Feb-09, at 9:16 PM, Stan Hirson, Sarah Jones wrote: --- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Jay dedman <jay.ded...@...> wrote: > ... > when people are working on projects on their own time, it's got to > feel fun or groundbreaking. > maybe online video has hit that next stage where it's not so new anymore. > its here and not obvious where it's going to go next. > > Jay I think the new frontier in online video is content. Not technology anymore. And frankly, that's fine with me because content is why I got into it in the first place a few years ago. Stan Stan Hirson http://PinePlainsViews.com http://LifeWithHorses.com Rupert http://twittervlog.tv/ Creative Mobile Filmmaking Shot, edited and sent with my Nokia N93 [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]