Media Mall Blog by Jon Leland

New media & online communication insights, Web 2.0, podcasting, Mac & Apple stuff, and small business internet marketing and search engine advertising.

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9.14.2008

Live Video Streaming for Cell Phones Hitting, well, the Main Stream


Last week, a friend on Facebook (or actually an acquaintance... someone who I've never met in person, but within whom I've done a little work via phone and email) offered a link (via Facebook) to a live video stream of a techie industry party on a rooftop over-looking Washington, DC. The amazing thing was that when I clicked the link, it actually worked. Instantly, I was face-to-face, in a virtual sense, with party-goers who were saying things like "I just thought you were taking my picture..." to which this guy says, "No, you're live on the web" and a quasi interview ensued.

The Video Web is expanding more rapidly than even I realized... and cell phone video, live streaming cell phone video, is to blame.

If you want a more widely-respected opinion, The New York Times wrote up the whole scene in a Sunday Business section column called "Novelties." The article, "Capturing the Moment (and More) Via Cellphone Video," includes some even more compelling examples from the likes of LA's NPR radio leader, KCRW and mentions two leading live webcam video streaming website platforms (which are enabling these feeds): Kyte.com which calls itself "The Universal Digital Media Platform," offers ideas for "monetization" and offers the image above as part of its self-promotion, and Qik.com which appears to be a bit more popular with the blogging/social networking crowd, including my pal in DC.

Kyte also offers among other things, "The Kyte Premium Facebook application (which) is more than a simple widget – it’s a branded social communications platform, featuring live video streaming, multimedia chat, viral distribution capabilities and monetization opportunities." Don't we all need one of those?

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1.10.2008

My Virtual CES Report

No, I didn't go to CES (the consumer electronics mega-convention) in Las Vegas, but here are a few tidbits from the web that I've found worthy:

Scoble's doing Qik videos direct from his cell phone including this interview with the guys from YouTube:



And CNET picked this astoundingly innovative and open source BugLabs platform as its CES Awards winner for "emerging technologies." I even like their video. Cool.

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10.22.2007

Set Cell Phones Free


The FCC's upcoming ruling on wireless bandwidth has raised the issues about cell phones and why that bandwidth is so tightly controlled by the giant cell phone companies (like Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, etc.) The Wall Street Journal's Walt Mossberg explains very clearly why this is VERY WRONG in his column, "Free My Phone" and I believe it is worthy of your consideration. At the very least, it's fascinating that no less than a senior writer for the Wall Street Journal compares these telco giants to “Soviet ministries.”

Mossberg says that the approach to controlling hardware and software that these companies have taken (or have been allowed to take) "severely limits consumer choice, stifles innovation, crushes entrepreneurship, and has made the U.S. the laughingstock of the mobile-technology world..."

Bottom line, our cellular bandwidth subscription should not tie us to specific hardware and software any more than our internet provider subscription should tie us to a particular kind of computer, operating system or sub-set of applications. Of course, we should pay for bandwidth. It costs money to build networks. But there's no reason that that should give the providers the right to tie our hands (within reason) regarding how we choose to use that bandwidth (with any kind of device we choose and any kind of software we choose) just like with the web.

Why does the American government keep letting the big companies get away with this stuff?? (rhetorical question)

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