Posts tagged with “internet”
9
Dear Google
Hey Google, it’s me Basta. Just wanted to drop in and give you a little advice.
You see, there’s this huge “war” over HTML5 video formats going on. Apple and Nokia are pushing H.264 (which is a beautiful format, don’t get me wrong) and Mozilla and Opera are pushing for Ogg Theora (which I have very little experience with, mostly because I have zero reason to interact with it). We all know Microsoft is going to vote for Windows Media Video format or uncompressed AVI or some dumb shit like that, so nobody even asked for their two cents. So now it comes down to you. Sure, you share a bunch of code with Apple and Nokia (WebKit) and you probably won’t end up paying the five million dollar licensing fees to use H.264, but everybody loves open source! And Theora is free regardless!
Now internally, you’ve got your YouTube guys saying that Theora would crash the internet, but at the other side of your offices, you push for open standards and a more open web. That’s a tough choice to make: on one hand, you’ve got a beautiful, efficient codec, and on the other, you’ve got your principles and community-centric values. Tough choice indeed, my friend.
Ah, but wait! Didn’t you just spend an exorbitant amount of money on…what’s that…a video codec company? Google! You sly bastard you! Now, you’re sitting here with the format that you could only hope to ever possess; the holy grail of video codecs! VP6! It’s the same guy that powers Flash (flv), which just so happens to be the driving force behind YouTube, Vimeo, Viddler…hell, even Xtube uses your new toy.
Back on track: I’m certainly not the first person to think of this, though I may have foolishly assumed I was. It’s simply genius. You’ve suddenly come into possession of THE SINGLE MOST POPULAR CODEC EVER TO BE CREATED, and you just so happen to be in a war which will effectively DETERMINE THE FUTURE OF VIDEO ON THE INTERNET FOR THE REST OF THE CENTURY. Now I’m no Howie Mandel, but I know a deal when I see one. Here’s the plan: make VP6 an open source codec. No charge to consume it. You’re already charging boatloads to implement encoders for it; why charge to actually consume it?
And not only do you have VP6, but you also have VP7 and VP8, On2’s latest codecs. They apparently do a kick-ass job (Skype is using VP7 for video conferencing and ABC and Fox are using it in their episode players) so far, so I wouldn’t doubt that they would make good choices for open sourceability. Let people use them. Consider how quickly you’d become the dominant force in online video! Adobe would surely implement VP7/8 if given the right to freely. Now you’ve got Adobe using the codec of your choosing in practically every browser on the planet. Apple and Nokia would KILL to have those codecs made available to them, so you can count on their video element tags supporting your new toy.
Mozilla and Opera will likely be more wary. Mozilla is a big fan of “open” stuff. Theora is “open”. Somebody owns a patent for it, but they promised not to sue anyone. Did you know, though, that Theora was once actually On2’s [now defunct] VP3 codec? That’s three versions behind what Flash uses (and tweaked to hell by open source devs), but it’s still a load of once-On2-now-Google code! Convincing these two guys that the new formats are better to use than Theora shouldn’t be a problem at all
So what would happen here? Well, first off, you’d have all the HTML5 goodness that you could possibly want (well, there’s still IE…but come on. it’s ie). Second, you’ve got yourself a stake in practically every browser on the planet. Third, every video production platform suddenly wants a license to encode the ON2 codecs. Sure, Apple’s going to be a little pissed now that H.264 is done, but it’s not like they have bigger problems or anything.
Anyway, good luck with your decision, Google, and give me a call when you get a chance.
With love,
Basta
26
I never thought I’d see the day
Many of you remember my BFF Carrie from a while ago. Well, I never thought I’d see the day, but she now has a Twitter. And we have a black president. Who would have ever seen this coming? Get it? See it coming? COMING? LOL.
19
OOOOHHHHH BURRRRNNNNNN
So out of complete curiosity today, I found out that http://bing.travel/ redirects you to Yahoo! Travel. Wow. That’s a real slap in the face for Microsoft. In fact, it’s so much of a slap in the face for Microsoft, I would bet that something like this could result in a pretty hefty lawsuit. Granted, Microsoft would easily win (with their trademark on “Bing”), but it’s still interesting to see that there’s still a strong competition even though Microsoft and Yahoo! have apparently joined forces in the search market.
12
AOL
I think I might be one of the last few survivors of the 1990s, because I seem to be the only one that remembers the plethora of free AOL (then America On Line) CDs.
I remember that they were EVERYWHERE! You’d get them in the mail, they’d be in boxes of software, they’d be in cereal boxes, they’d be everywhere you wouldn’t expect to find a CD. As a child, I saw them more as collectors’ items than free hours on the internet. I remember I had a disk worth 60 free hours at one point. Towards the end, I remember finding 1000 free hour disks. I think that’s great.
As kind of a prospect of the future, I saved a bunch of them, then later threw them out. I figured that I’d find something cool or useful to do with them, but I never did. Oh well.
7
My 2000th Tweet
That’s right folks, I’ve officially broken the 2000 tweet mark. I officially talk way too much.