The Birth of the Video Conversation

I’ve been touring viddler.com this evening and I am impressed thus far.

First-Night Observations:

  • The client is hot. It looks sharp and the site is surprisingly responsive. Paging through a user’s videos is instantaneous. Tagging, commenting and responding to a video take place inside the flash box. The fit and finish are exceptional.
  • Comments linked to specific parts of a video and video responses are the killer features.
  • The concept of video responses turn it from broadcasting to a video dialogue. The dialogue is reinforced by threading the comments.
  • A lot of the right people seem to be there. They appear to be compulsive taggers. Twitter seemed to really break out when Scoble got there. He’s not coming here, I would assume, but who else is out there?
  • The Obvious Corp influence shows up in the recording capabilities. Hellodeo, sister of Twitter and son of Odeo, integrated recording into their flash client long before similar capabilities came to YouTube. They’re in viddler from day one. I’ll be test-driving it in the next day or so and I’ll embed the results for your review.
  • Justin.tv and the live streaming sites that came with it are a curiosity, not a trend. Real-time is an inferior paradigm in a post-Tivo culture. I can only live one real-time life at a time.

UPDATE: Let’s see how this looks…

Posted on April 26th | 0 comments | Filed Under: TechnologyTelevision | read on

tumblelog.jerryr.com

Posts on the planet jerry! blog have been few and far between since I started my tumblelog on tumblr. I will still post here when I have something to say that exceeds the size of a reasonable tumble. With the feed combining capabilities of tumblr (incorporating blog posts, diggs, shared items from my google reader, twitter tweets and flickr photos), you can stay up to date with complete, unabridged contents of my cranium all in one spot.

Posted on March 18th | 2 comments | Filed Under: Technology | read on

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