Posts Tagged ‘thePlatform’

Cloud-Based Video Editing Solutions and Increased Corporate Spending on Hosted Services

June 25th, 2012

An Interview with Hareesh Vazhaparampil of Mixmoov

 

By Paul Ritter, Special Contributor to VidCompare

 

With the Brightcove PLAY event happening this week in Boston, it’s a great time to take a look at the world of video in the cloud and to speak with one of the up and comers in the marketplace. With so many different types of applications and technologies moving to the cloud to take advantage of efficiencies, cost savings and scalability that can be gained, it’s been clear for a while that many aspects of video publishing, hosting and delivery are key areas that are benefiting from cloud technology. Corporate spending on hosted services for video solutions has been on the rise for several years, and is expected to increase steadily through 2015, based on research published by Interactive Media Strategies. Hosted services for business video related technologies and solutions will account for almost $700 million in annual spending in the corporate sector by 2015, according to the market forecast by IMS developed earlier this year.

In the past 12 months or so, technologies that enable video editing in the cloud have begun to gain ground as a component of the hosted services or software-as-a-service (SaaS) marketplace. Some of these solutions are geared primarily toward consumer applications, such as WeVideo (see link) and YouTube’s video editor. Other solutions such as Animoto, and Stupeflix are increasingly targeting the business sector as well as the consumer market. Mixmoov, a provider of online video editing technology that’s based in France, takes a B2B approach for reaching new customers. Mixmoov is a Brightcove partner that is one of many key players in the online video ecosystem that is making the pilgrimage to Boston for the must-attend event in the world of video in the cloud.

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2010 Predictions for Online Video

December 17th, 2009

OVP2010We’re seeing 2010 predictions emerge in the Online Video space by industry leaders and it provides for interesting reading. That being said, there’s nothing shocking being stated, or rather, there are no big surprises or prognostications of something new to come. Everyone tends to agree on what to expect in the New Year including the much hyped TV Everywhere, set-top boxes, multiple screens, and of course, mobile.

Indeed these are exciting features and products to look forward to and what’s mentioned by these smart individuals is definitely worth reading. So, I have laid out for you a few comments and links regarding aforementioned subject matter below:

  • Ron Yekultiel of Kaltura on the DIY online video solutions: “Alternatively, more publishers will opt to self-host the video management platform behind their firewall to allow for greater security, control, and flexibility. In both scenarios, the commoditized video delivery services (e.g. storage, backup, streaming, transcoding) shall be augmented by innovative high-margin digital services such as video search, metadata extraction & analysis, and syndication.”
  • Ben Weinberger of DigitalSmiths on TV Everywhere: “TV Everywhere, which Time Warner announced over the summer, is a beautiful idea: for a fee, cable operators will give subscribers multi-platform access to whatever is on cable, at any time, from any place, on any device.  This notion has caught fire, with Comcast and other major players announcing their own versions of this exciting platform.  I expect that, along with the new initiatives movie studios unleash, 2010 will be the year of TV Everywhere — especially as versions of this idea start becoming available to consumers.”
  • Ian Blaine of thePlatform on viral distribution: “Another trend that hit big in 2009 is viral distribution on a massive scale. We of course had YouTube as an early leader, and its growth in 2009 continued to stun. One billion streams a day is something that was hard to imagine even a few years ago. But beyond YouTube, the continued growth of Facebook and the emergence of Twitter as platforms for distribution of media became real, and really interesting.”
  • And Ryan Lawler of NewTeeVee on set-top boxes: “With broadband connectivity being extended to more consumer electronics devices like TVs and Blu-ray players, it will become difficult to justify buying yet another standalone box. And that’s not even mentioning Boxee’s bigger problem, which is convincing programmers and cable companies that it isn’t the enemy.

Personally I think there is something bigger (in the sense of holistically, not enormity) brewing for 2010 which I’ve discussed at length with several OVP CEOs, and that’s the notion of specialization in our space as a result of impending commoditization. OV has come a long way in a very short amount of time and the fact of the matter is, we’re nearing ubiquity at a breakneck pace. It won’t be long until every online business has video in some way, shape, or form used to market their business, sell their product, extend their brand, and/or increase exposure.

The space will grow significantly in 2010 at the cost of a few providers, spurred by differentiation and specialization. I sound like a broken record, I know. But knowing what you do best and capitalizing on strengths is what’s going to take the leaders in OV to the next level and prevent the occurrence of commoditization. Let’s face it, it’s difficult to be everything to everyone. There’s just too much to manage and it’s just too easy to overwhelm users today especially with newer technology and services. With a keen eye on a specific niche and market segment, OVPs will be able to help the $3B small medium enterprise sector realize their goals and achieve them with assurance and confidence in the coming years.

Peace.

CDNs & Online Video Platforms

August 4th, 2009

OVCDNPPThere’s been a lot of talk lately about online video platform providers looking to Akamai for CDN services. Brightcove’s been using them for a while now, Ooyala went against their own grain and decided to partner with them pseudo-exclusively, VMIX, Kit Digital, Multicast, and now Delve Networks (I guess they weren’t happy with EdgeCast – partnered in 2008). What’s the big deal here? Why is this such exciting news? So Akamai realized that the CDN space is becoming commoditized and decided to lower their once astronomical rates to play within the Small Medium Enterprise space. OK, now what?

It seems all these partnerships are only stalling the inevitable, convergence. BitGravity got into the Platform game several months back announcing OV APIs while Platform Providers like Ooyala and thePlatform have been touting their CDN services. With over 80 online video platforms and more than 40 CDNs, how long do you think it will take for either M&A conversations to get real or for incestuous relations to fire up?