Videos are coming soon on Wikipedia
Wikipedia- The Free Encyclopedia- is the most popular free web encyclopedia. Wikipedia users will be getting new tools for uploading, editing and viewing videos very soon. From a Beet.TV interview with Erik Moller, the deputy director of the Wikimedia Foundation, news showed up that the expected changes will be available very shortly.
Wikipedia has been working on video support for years. They are putting major effort into making it easier for users to upload video,specifically to bridge a video format divide.
Wikipedia is still planning to use Ogg Theora (an open-source video codec that can be played back natively inside the latest version of Firefox, and will be available soon to Chrome and Opera). Wikipedia also suggested users to convert their videos to Ogg Theora format on their end using FireFogg, a Firefox plug-in which can transcode user videos to Ogg.
Videos on the site are uploaded and watched in a format called Ogg Theora. It is a Flash-like program which is completely open-source. Video producers can render Ogg files in FinalCut and other editing programs by using various plug-ins. Once in Ogg, these files can be uploaded to Wikipedia. said Erik Moller, the deputy director of the Wikimedia Foundation.
Wikipedia’s choice of video format will have a big impact on the web and its standard because of the popularity of the site. Wikipedia’s choice to go for Ogg Theora will put stress on browsers and site creators as HTML 5 video, which is emerging as a hotly-contended Web standard.
Ogg Theora allows for downloading, remixing and re-uploading without licensing fees unlike the H.264 codec, which has been used in both Google and Apple’s product and services.
Microsoft, Apple, and Google seems to be least interest about promoting the Ogg Theora format in their browsers, and have put resources behind H.264 instead. Google’s Chrome supports both Ogg Theora and H.264, however Google has gone on the record as saying its quality was not as good as desired. Google has also used considerable resources into re-encoding YouTube’s entire library of videos into H.264, making the company less likely to switch camps.
The competing formats and standards are still a big question for start-ups. Lengends such as Adobe with its Flash format, and Apple with its streaming QuickTime standard have helped pave the way for many start-ups that rely on the latest codecs to create new and salable parts of their businesses.
Whether open-sourced codec like Ogg Theora will have the same kind of attraction that other pioneers like Adobe, Apple etc had, is still a question mark.
| Print article | This entry was posted by Abdulaziz Albloushi on July 18, 2009 at 1:09 pm, and is filed under Development, News & Reviews. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |







