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E-book InformationGoogle Creates Video "Vending" Machine Online
by:
Jim Edwards
© Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
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It's actually no private secret that search giant, Google.com, wants to own the entree to all media online.
They operate the Web's most popular search engine, largest free blogging service, and one of the largest news services online.
Recently, Google started offering video from their website. Google's video offerings so far, comprised mostly of documentaries, news, and daytime talk TV programs, depicted a testing device to get the kinks out of their video delivery and search system.
Now, thanks to widespread availableness of high-speed Net
access, bargain-priced desktop video editing, and the emergence of portable video players, Google is steady
ramping up what wish for sure become the Web's 1st video "vending" machine.
Log on to Video.Google.com and search a limited number of accessible TV shows.
Curiously, most do not allow you to play video, only to see still screen shots of the show and see a transcript taken from closed captioning for the hearing impaired.
However, based on the fact that Google recently started acceptive
video submissions through their website, this format is simply about to change drastically.
Originally, speculation simply about Google's new video service centered squarely on video "blogging, " wherever
online pundits would-be share their thoughts in video rather than written form.
However, after cathartic more details, it appears that Google maintains more grander plans for online video than simply allowing folk with a tv camera
to rant and rave.
Currently Google is in the "gathering" stage. This means they are acceptive
video submissions from content providers with really few restrictions.
Basically, Google says they want innovational content, no creative activity or offensive content, and they want it in a really specific video format (mpeg2 or mpeg4 with MP3 codec).
Other than that, the sky is virtually
the limit. For specifics, log on to https://upload.video.google.com/ and click the "Find out more" link.
Right now it appears that Google distinct to gather as more content as possible before offering any of it to the public, so you presently
can't view any videos.
Google likewise states that they wish allow content providers to either charge for their videos or allow viewers to watch them for free.
Google states they wish collect the money, take a small fee, and pay the content provider. This alone should excite anyone who sells content online because the barrier to entry (high-speed servers, video delivery, credit card processing, client service) simply got a lot lower.
Plus, it's a safe bet that Google wish find a way to integrate revenue producing videos into their pay-per-click program.
Combine all this with the recent emergence of truly portable digital video players (Sony PSP, Creative Lab's Zen Media Center), and beginning of video-on-demand through the Net
simply arrived. Now this doesn't mean growing pains won't occur.
The biggest disadvantage
to searching for and finding online video is that each video file must have a text transcript associated with it in order to get properly indexed by a search engine.
In the beginning, this wish slow the creation of new material.
Despite these and else growing pains, plan on Google opening up the 1st and largest video "vending" machine online inside
12 months.
Just simply about the author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper editorialist and the co-author of an amazing new ebook that wish teach you how to use fr^e articles to quickly driving thousands of targeted visitors to your website or affiliate links...
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