YouTube to take on High Quality Videos

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YouTube has been well known to have crappy quality videos but it still survives will lurking under the shadows are sites such as Revver and Blip.tv produce amazing quality videos without the viewers. Now that's all about to change. Steve Chen, the co-founder of YouTube, announced November 14 2007 that a high-quality YouTube would be in the near future of their business plan. As little of you know, YouTube's goal has been to stream video to everybody with an internet connection but with high quality videos that wouldn't be possible. That's why they are testing a player that will recognize a users internet connection and decide whether or not to stream low or high quality videos.

Steve Chen has said the currrent quality of YouTube has been "good enough" until now, but that's just bogus as the proof is right there at their website. The projected wait time for the new rollout is about 3 months but really it won't make much diffeence as the majority of videos submitted to YouTube are poor to begin with. The brilliant thing YouTube did though was they've been storing the original quality of the videos to begin with. This means, you will never see a video compressed again, that is, until a better format comes out. In any case, this improvement will shut out all the rest of the other sites as YouTube will have it all.

 

The Future of Technology Vol. 3

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Imagine downloading a music video or movie onto your phone and displaying it on a wall. That's not far from reality. Expected to debut in 2008 on game consoles and PCs, it will revolutionize the way we view videos. Right now, the big thing is watching TV and movie online but by the looks of it, that will all be transferred over to the mobile phone.

The first mobile phone will be projector equiped by 2009 with due help from Motorola to develop PICO projectors that were first invented by Microvision. The projectors use light scanning technology to display a colourful image all from a beam of light. If you open your cell phone and project the image from 12 feet away, the picture on the wall will be up to 120 inches which is incredible. Soon the picture will be HD and you'll have a mobile TV in your pocket. A PicoP engine will control the whole thing, the size of a mint, to control the intensity of te thousands of colours generated by the scanner. All on one phone charge, you'll be able to play "I Know Pronounce You Chuck and Larry." The estimated cost of intergrating all this onto your phone will be $150 and accessory projectors will be a higher price of $200.