One of the consequences of having not one, but two, common names (Daniel is reportedly the 9th most popular first name in England and Wales and Taylor the 4th most common surname) is that you become more difficult to correctly identify online. Whilst at times this feels like a godsend, at others its a bit frustrating/bewildering. I recently received a friend request from a colleague on Facebook with the accompanying message "Any time I search for anything on the internet - music, dried locusts, the Great Vowel Shift - your name pops up as the fifth search result. If I hadn't worked in the same office with you, I might have decided you were some giant internet hoax..."
So, for the record, I am not Dan Taylor the American shotputter, or Dan Taylor the surfboard manufacturer, or Dan Taylor the Canadian designer, or Dan Taylor the animation supervisor, or Dan Taylor the managing director of the Mobile Enterprise Alliance, or Dan Taylor the genetisit, or Dan Taylor the character from the House of the Dead III video game, or Lieutenant Dan Taylor, the wheelchair-bound Vietnam vet in Forest Gump, or Dan Taylor the Sports Director at Channel 30 Action News, or Dan Taylor the president of the Wealth Capital Group.
That is all.
Friday, August 31, 2007
Would the real Dan Taylor please stand up?
Posted by Dan Taylor at 6:56 PM 5 comments
Blog Day 2007
In support of the 3rd annual BlogDay, which takes place today, I'd like to commend the following five blogs to you dear reader. Go bookmark!
Somewhat Frank - the musings of Virginia-based Frank Gruber who spends his days as a product manager at AOL (but don't hold that against him) covering Web 2.0, technology and life.
maxgadney.com - Witness a book being born as Max (a colleague at the BBC) talks through the illustrations for his work-in-progress Visual Miscellany of World War II.
James Cridland's blog - Ex-Director of Digital Media at Virgin Radio (now also at the Beeb) James posts on radio, digital platforms and occasionally, beer. Always worthwhile.
Roo Reynolds - Roo works as a Metaverse Evangelist (now that's what I call a job title) at IBM's Hursley Park lab in Hampshire and posts on a eclectic range of topics which pique his interest.
Wonderland - the brainchild of Alice Taylor (no relation) with a couple of other occasional contributors. If you only read one blog on gaming make sure it's this one.
Technorati tag: BlogDay2007
Posted by Dan Taylor at 8:03 AM 2 comments
Labels: blogging
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Round-up of DIY live video streaming services
The lowly webcam has been enjoying something of a renaissance of late, aided by increased broadband penetration, improved streaming codecs, more kit being bundled with webcam functionality (e.g. mobile phones, laptops) and a mushrooming start-up economy, hungry for the next big web thing.
Justin Kan, founder and 'star' of Justin.tv, must also take a share of the blame/credit. Launched in March of this year, the 24/7 'lifecast' streams continuous video from a mobile camera attached to Justin's cap and has attracted a significant amount of media attention. Whilst the concept isn't new (anyone remember JenniCam?) the services which have sprung up enabling you to easily do it yourself are. Below is a round-up of a few of the main players.
Stickam
http://www.stickam.com
Launched: February 2006
First out of the blocks (and actually predating Justin.tv by over a year) was Stickam, which bills itself as 'The Live Community' and offers a suite of tools including live video streaming via an embeddable player. Stickam recently hit the headlines over allegations that its parent company, Advanced Video Communications, also runs a substantial online porn operation, which hasn't been viewed by everyone as a particularly good fit with Stickam's predominantly teen user base. The teen user base also helps explain the site's scrappy, MySpace aesthetic and general incomprehensibility to an old geezer like me. Definitely one for the kids.
Ratings: N
Tags: N
Comments: N
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: N
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: N
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
Ustream.tv
http://ustream.tv
Launched: March 2007
Ustream.tv was the first of the new generation lifecast sites to appear post-Justin.tv, reportedly bringing its launch date forward to capitalise on the surrounding publicity. The interface is pretty slick with a decent chat client and some nice extras such as a 'shout meter' and live polls, set by the broadcaster. It's also possible to pause the stream, which is cached until you resume playing.
Ratings: Y
Tags: Y
Comments: Y
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: Y
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: Y
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
kyte
http://www.kyte.tv
Launched: April 2007
Like Stickam, kyte is something of a hybrid service of which live video streaming is just a part. Also in the mix are photos, music and polls which can all be packaged up within your embeddable 'channel.' However, kyte's key market differentiator is its mobile component which, assuming you've got a compatible handset and a sufficiently meaty data allowance, enables you to broadcast direct from your handset.
Ratings: N
Tags: N
Comments: N
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: Y
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: Y
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
Operator11
http://operator11.com
Launched: April 2007
Operator11's USP is letting more than one person into 'the studio' allowing the operator/director/net jockey controlling the video stream to cut back and forth between various contributor feeds. It's an interesting development of the single camera model which potentially moves the medium nearer to broadcast TV, although it also serves as a reminder that successfully editing video on the fly is a great deal harder than it looks.
Ratings: Y
Tags: Y
Comments: Y
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: Y
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: Y
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
blogTV
http://www.blogtv.com
Launched: May 2007
blogTV isn't short on functionality but suffers from a somewhat cluttered interface when viewed alongside the cleaner designs of Ustream and Mogulus. It's 7,500 channels are grouped into nine categories with 'My Life' predictably being the most populated. One nice feature for producers is the ability to pick a co-host whose video stream appears alongside your own with viewers able to interchange the two using a slider.
Ratings: Y
Tags: Y
Comments: Y
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: Y
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: Y
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
Mogulus
http://www.mogulus.com
Launched: June 2007
Currently in closed beta, Mogulus focuses more on the production side of live video, offering a fully featured browser-based 'studio' (requires Flash 9) to finesse your broadcast. In contrast, the viewing experience is pretty basic, eschewing chat, comments, ratings and the like in favour of a more classically televisual interface (on/off, mute, volume and, er, that's it). It even goes so far as to mimic static as the channel 'tunes in'. It's certainly the least cluttered of the sites discussed here and should provide a good platform for them to gradually introduce more functionality. I've got five beta invites to giveaway - mail me if you want one.
Ratings: N
Tags: N
Comments: N
Live chat: N
Viewer count: Y
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: N
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
Veodia
http://www.veodia.com
Launched: April 2007
Veodia is a distributed live streaming product for embedding in blogs and corporate sites and doesn't aggregate any content on its site beyond a couple of sample videos. Unlike most of the alternatives (which use Flash) it streams using MPEG-4/H.264. As a consequence the embedded video lacks any social media features such as comments or chat.
Ratings: N
Tags: N
Comments: N
Live chat: N
Viewer count: N
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: Y
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
YouCams
http://www.youcams.com
Launched: Unknown
Like Veodia, YouCams' focus is on distributed live video (via an embeddable widget) rather than aggregation, although it positions itself as a facilitator of social networking chat rather than as a provider of streaming technology.
Ratings: N
Tags: N
Comments: N
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: Y
Embedding: Y
Recorded shows: N
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
mystreams.tv
http://mystreams.tv
Launched: Unknown
The ugly sister of the live video streaming family, mystreams.tv is a UX disaster, plastered in large banner ads and forever opening new windows. Avoid.
Ratings: N
Tags: N
Comments: N
Live chat: Y
Viewer count: N
Embedding: N
Recorded shows: N
Design:
Navigation:
Features:
Overall:
Whilst it's ultimately a matter of horses for courses when it comes to choosing a live video streaming service, my personal vote would be with Ustream.tv with Mogulus the one to watch.
Posted by Dan Taylor at 9:04 AM 3 comments