If you can see the video below, you've got an HTML 5 supported browser that also supports a streaming video format called H.264 (or MP4). If not, the space below will appear blank, contain a non-working artifact, or will give you information. In any event, the script for the video is immediately below the video clip.
SCRIPT:
Hello, I'm Glen Gummess, instructional designer in the Center for Instructional Delivery.
I'm here today to tell you about how video is becoming easier to view, and to create, for the world wide web.
The key word is "becoming" for while great progress has been made in enabling people to shoot and upload videos to the web, there is still a lot of work to do to make it truly as easy as taking a picture on a webcam and uploading it to Facebook.
The current state of the art for viewing video on the web is Flash video. Whenever you go to Youtube, or view a news clip on Yahoo, you're viewing a Flash video, based on Adobe Flash.
However, mobile devices do not support Flash video. So, a way had to be developed to deploy videos for I-phones and android devices.
One new emerging standard is HTML 5. Unlike flash video, HTML 5 video plays without an add-in. Browsers that support HTML 5 just play the clip faster and without taking as much computer resources.
Web page authors that write HTML 5 can now just insert a video with a simple HTML "tag". There's no need to embed complicated code in the web page.
Example:
HTML 5 is now supported by a variety of browsers, as this table shows.
But, not all browsers that support HTML 5 support the same types of video, due to various competing video formats.
And as long as that competition continues, the full implementation of HTML 5 will be delayed. That competition is likely to continue for a few years to come.
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