(What is video_search? - Edit Wiki)
Videos 1 to 18
Video search and tools. Lots of video search and Tools.
from My Videos July 24, 2008
Author: Films4You Added: Thu, 24 Jul 2008 14:55:29 -0800 Duration: 174http://www.acomputerportal.com Video search and tools. Lots of video search and Tools. Find the best videos lots of video search tools to find the top videos. Video Publishing links. How to make special effects and other how to tips.
|
Video search and tools. Lots of video search and Tools.
from Most Recent July 24, 2008
Author: Films4You Added: Thu, 24 Jul 2008 14:55:29 -0800 Duration: 174http://www.acomputerportal.com Video search and tools. Lots of video search and Tools. Find the best videos lots of video search tools to find the top videos. Video Publishing links. How to make special effects and other how to tips.
|
We have a winner in video search!
from New Media Minute July 01, 2008
Traditional search engines like Google and Yahoo are poised to win the video search business because almost one-third of traffic to online video sites originates from search engines, Hitwise says. In this episode of the New Media Minute you ll also learn about Feed Company too, which seeds viral marketing campaigns for brands like Ray Ban and Microsoft Zune.The episode also covers a partnership between the University of California at San Francisco and YouTube that could portend a new direction for Web video.
|
We have a winner in video search!
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) June 30, 2008
Traditional search engines like Google and Yahoo are poised to win the video search business because almost one-third of traffic to online video sites originates from search engines, Hitwise says. Also, this episode explains why viral marketing firm Feed Company is poised to grow. And you'll learn why a new partnership between the University of California at San Francisco and YouTube could portend a new direction for Web video.
|
Picsearch - image search, video search and web-tv
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) December 18, 2007
Picsearch AB (publ) is a premium provider of image search, video search, audio search and web-tv services. The web-tv and other video sharing services are built to be flexible and are today used in video communities, e-commerce portals, real estate market places, and for different video applications at news and corporate websites. Picsearch search services are market leading in relevancy and family friendliness. Picsearch powers several leading Internet sites as well as its own Internet properties. Picsearch was founded in 2000, is privately held and headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden. For more information please visit http://about.picsearch.com.
|
Timothy Tuttle
from Beet.TV August 16, 2007
Awesome: AOL's Truveo Launches New Video Destination Page for "All the Video on the Web" I was in San Francisco on Monday afternoon to meet with video search pioneer Timothy Tuttle to get a preview of a very impressive new video destination site from AOL's Truveo unit. It's based on the search and categorization platform developed Truveo a company founded by Tim in 2004 and acquired by AOL last year. The site went live late last night. Truveo has largely been a back-end search platform for AOL, Microsoft and hundreds of other companies. The Truveo platform powers searches by 40 million users per month. Tim said that after being a successful "solution," he is pleased that Truveo is now a destination. The offering of sources is enormous -- from entertainment and news from broadcast channels, to vertical broadband video to a vast amount of user generated video. Tim told me that the site has nearly all of YouTube has been indexed. The aim is to search and index "all the video on the Web," he told me. The site allows all sorts of personalization around themes, interests and sources. It's customizable with RSS feeds. Breaking news is organized really well -- the videos from the Peru earthquake went up really quickly. The videos are indexed with thumbnail images which link back to the native players with the existing in-stream ads unaffected. There are pretty simple tools that allow content creators to be more effectively searched by Truveo. I love this headline from Variety: "Mammoth Portal to Combat Google!" Brad Stone at The New York Times calls it a "One-Stop Video Shop." And, yes, the Beet.TV index looks pretty good! It's pretty interesting to see how the purple clips are organized in channels from our video sharing sites including Blip.TV, YouTube and Google Video. The details were just released by the company. -- Andy Plesser Posted on Thursday, August 16, 2007
|
Google Set to Search "All the World's Videos!"
from Beet.TV August 05, 2007
The scope of videos found by searching Google Video has expanded in recent months from just clips on Google Videos to include YouTube. Since May, when the company announced the future of universal search, clips from Metacafe and Atomicfilms.com have shown up on Google Video searches. (Industry sources, outside of Google, tell Beet.TV that other major video sharing sites will be included shortly.) Thumbnail displays (that's me) of video images have become increasing evident on Google Video search pages. According to spokesman Gabriel Sticker, Google is working hard to expand the scope of its "universal search" of video. He says that Google will search and index "all the world's videos."He makes the point that most of the world's videos are not yet digitized, and that vast universe will be searched and organized. So, this universal search program will be far more extensive than just effectively searching video sharing and other video sites. Wow! Notwithstanding progress with video search by Google, the Web-based search of video works extremely well right now. How's that? If a video clip sits on a Web page that is properly maximized for Web search, the Google spiders that discover text, will deliver a page with the video. Beet.TV has very good "googlejuice" -- so our clips are found through conventional web search.I was at the Googleplex on Tuesday for this chat with Gabriel. No Beets in the Google Garden :(Among all the new activities on "campus," is a beautiful vegetable garden which supplies the corps of in-house chefs who feed all those clever workers. I was disappointed to learn that they don't grow beets -- seems that most of the veggies are growing in pots and shallow beds -- not much room from root vegetables, one of the gardeners told me. See this video on Beet.TV: http://www.beet.tv/2007/08/bulletin-from-t.html
|
Jason Pontin, editor in chief of MIT’s Technology Review, explains one of the most important aspects
from Beet.TV July 27, 2007
The Beet was in Beantown and stopped in to query Jason Pontin, editor in chief of MITs Technology Review, about searchable video in his Cambridge office. The feature, says Jason, means search has moved beyond the realm of text and into image, thanks to the use of meta tags, ala Flickr. Anyone content creator, viewer, marketer can imbed in the image and then find in a search. This feature has revolutionized video on the web, particularly with the explosive growth of Google Video, which was launched in the second half of 2005, and when iTunes began selling videocasts of TV shows. LeeAnn Prescott, at iMedia Connection shares some compelling statistics about video search and hypothesizes where it might be going in 2006: Higher broadband penetration and smarter devices like video phones and video iPods mean there will be a greater demand for searchable video content in 2006. From October 2005 to December 2005, visits to Google Video increased by 169 percent, and visits to upstart video search service YouTube shot up 873 percent, mainly due to a video of a Saturday Night Live skit called "Lazy Sunday" that aired in December. Yahoo! Video Search remains the leader among video search services, and its market share of visits grew by a more modest 18 percent in the October - December period. Lazy Sunday tipped, in the words of the Tipping Point, and it clearly illustrates the inherent power of video to drive traffic and create buzz for a website or company. See this video on Beet.TV: http://www.beet.tv/2006/04/mits_jason_pont.html
|
Defense Contractor has Analyzed, Transcribed and Organized 1.5 Millon YouTube Clips
from recent posts tagged youtube - blip.tv (beta) July 05, 2007
A major defense department contractor, BBN of Cambridge, Massachusetts, has applied a national security technology application, developed to fight terrorism, to "crawl" the audio tracks of public Internet videos through its PodZinger subsidiary. PodZinger has analyzed, transcribed and organized some 1.5 million YouTube clips since December and is crawling many thousand every day, according to Alex Laats, who heads the unit. PodZinger's speech-to-text technology has evolved from its post 9/11 work on behalf of the Department of Defense and other U.S. government agencies. Since the terrorist attacks, the company has received some $50 million in government funding. Beet.TV has learned that the technology has been used by government agencies to analyze electronic media in part by determining if audio is in English, Arabic or Chinese. Similarly, PodZinger analyzes the language of clips and determines whether they are music or have speech. If there is speech, a transcription is created which is nearly 80 percent accurate, company executives say. BBN has retained the rights to apply this technology to search public Internet video. It has been seeking to monetize this business through a "white box" solution. Selling a customized search engine for Web sites. It is also seeking to monetize this technology through contextual advertising. Last month, the company launched a public portal organized around various topics including sports, politics, lifestyle, etc. It is on the public portal where much of the YouTube clips can be found. Ads are placed around the YouTube players. PodZinger does not insert ads into the clips. Search queries find moments within a video which match the specific search term. When the video is found, a transcription brief of that point in the clip is displayed. The development of effective video search is critical to the success of online video. BBN is not the only company in video search to bring national security work to this effort. Similarly, Blinkx, another video search technology firm has its roots in the national security work of Autonomy, a company closely associated with it. Superstar VC Jim Breyer of Accel Partners is a board of member of BBN. It was Accel and General Catalyst Partners who bought BBN from Verizon in 2004. See this video on Beet.TV: http://www.beet.tv/2007/03/exclusive_defen.html
|
Podzinger Crawls YouTube and Creates a New Contextual Ad Environment, a Demonstration from Alex Laat
from recent posts tagged youtube - blip.tv (beta) July 05, 2007
Here is the second part of my interview with Alex Laats, head of Podzinger, the division of defense contractor BBN, a Massachusetts company which is utilizing anti-terrorism technology to "listen" to the audio tracks of millions of YouTube clips. My earlier post reports on how a government-funded program has lead to an effective means to search and organize public Internet video. In this post, Alex explains how clips are organized on Podzinger's new public portal and how this creates a valuable contextural advertising environment. See this video on Beet.TV: http://www.beet.tv/2007/03/podzinger_crawl.html
|
Timothy Tuttle - AOL
from VON April 24, 2007
Timothy Tuttle from AOL presents on "Video Search" at Spring '07 Video on the Net in San Jose, CA March 2007.
|
Steve Rosenbaum - Magnify.net
from VON April 24, 2007
Steve Rosenbaum from Magnify.net presents on "Video Search" at Spring '07 Video on the Net in San Jose, CA March 2007.
|
|
Log in or sign up to leave comments.
0 comments on video search:
(No comments yet..)
get widgets
RSS feed for video search:
To add your video to this page, just add this code in your video blog post:
|