FLASH FIRST?

how no background image looks on an iPhone's Safari browser Last time we looked at making your HTML5 video degrade to a flash player.  This post will look at how to default to the flash player and fall back to links to the HTML5 video for the smaller segment that do not have flash enabled on their browser or are viewing on their iPhone or iPad.  All I did was convert my source video to flash (FLV), H.264 (MP4), and Ogg (OGV).  I set up my flash player to run as usual, but instead of giving those without flash a link to get flash, I give them two links.  One will let the Safari and Chrome crowd, including those with hand-held devices, watch the MP4 file in the HTML5 player (or to download it).  The other link lets the Firefox, Opera, and Chrome crowd watch the OGV file in situ (or to download it).
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Is Your Blog iPad Ready?

Distributing a video product can be very simple. I just shoot a video with my iPhone. Touch the share button. Touch the ‘Send to YouTube’ button and I’m done.

But if one wishes to produce a regular video program or include video elements in one’s web page or blog then distribute it to the general public things start to get a little more tricky. My wife has a Droid Eris which runs on Android. You may have an old version of Internet Explorer. (Please tell me you don’t.) Some of you have Macs which choke on about 75% of the web’s videos because they are in Flash. On top of everything else, like the iPhone, the new iPad won’t be able to handle Flash at all. We could choose to curse the darkness (you fill in who you would blame), but it is dark so we need to light a candle if our web media is going to continue to be relevant into the future.

In addition to the variety of operating systems or hardware one might have, there are many different browsers one might use. Oh, and there is a change in the HTML standard with regard to video coming down the pike as well. In anticipation, HTML5 has already been implemented in some form or another in most contemporary browsers.

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XBMC Addon Manager Imminent

At the XBMC site they have posted:

“Next up is the merge from the addons branch, the underpinning of the new addons manager (go figure) as well as the basis for the PVR frontend branch. Once finished, though still a ways out, this will add the capability of extending XBMC from the couch. No need to ssh/ftp into your box to add skins, scrapers, plugins, PVR Backends, etc.”

If they can do for the PVR frontend what they have done for my downloaded TV shows and movies I will be so psyched.  Way to go team.

via Impending Merge: Addons | XBMC.

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Music in the Stream

Read this humming “Islands in the Stream” sung by Kenny and Dolly, cause that’s how I’m writing it.  Over at Lifehacker, they’re putting on another one of their “Hive Five” posts where their readers pick the best five of something and this time it is all about streaming music.  The main theme of streaming music is based on the “sounds like” principal.  The three top services all feature the ability to play music that sounds like a song or artist the user provides to seed that channel.

Pandora is where I started  my streaming music experience and I still use it frequently both on the computer and on the iPhone.  The computer interface is very straightforward and provides a lot of information about the artist, album, and song and easy links to purchase the music that is playing.  In fact, while setting up to get a screen shot I heard an album I liked and bought it.  The iPhone app is also somewhat spartan with a small ribbon of an advertisement displaying below the album cover.

Matt told me about last.fm a couple of years ago(?) and I added that to streaming services but set it up to play different types of music than Pandora.  A feature that I like is that I can “scrobble” what I’m playing in my own collection and that makes those songs available to me through last.fm.  It also adds a social element which doesn’t add a lot of value for someone like myself but is important to a lot of folks.  For example, it offers the option to listen to what other people who like the same artists I do are listening to.  When playing music there are no ads on the iPhone app but a simple ribbon in the corner notifying you that the artist is in concert.

Slacker radio seems comparable to Pandora and has the best looking now playing screen on the iPhone app.  There are no ads.

Grooveshark and lala are worth a look if you want precise control over your streaming playlist or you want portability of a precise playlist.  That is important to some folks.

I’ve lived a lot of places in the U.S. and have favorite radio stations from all of them.  That is why I’m also adding RadioTime and its WunderRadio iPhone app to this list.  I can listen to radio from Raleigh to Pittsburgh to So Cal to Hawaii.  Just close my eyes and I’ve traveled to some place that I love.  (Not advised while streaming music and driving, however.)  There’s my two cents.  Can’t wait to see what the Lifehacker community comes up with.

screenshots after the break
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Droid Eris, Quit Smirking at Me

Maybe my wife hates me.  Maybe she hated hearing me boast about how my iPhone has this app or that one.  Maybe she got tired of hearing me say, “Oh, let me tell you the answer to your question” as I Googled the topics at parties.  (Oh, yeah, I’m definitely the geekiest guy there.)   So she took her perfectly good LG enV3 and washed it in the washing machine.  Then she went out and bought the phone I would have bought if I didn’t have this AT&T contract around my neck.  She bought the Droid Eris.

Now,  she is the one spouting off about how the house we just passed is selling for X-dollars (HotPads) or she just got an email from one of our kids while I’m driving us to church.  And, unlike my iPhone, she can watch internet TV streaming from TV.com or from NBC.com.  Even Apple’s computers choke on flash video according to Steve Jobs, who says it is one of the main reasons that his company’s computers crash.  But, that is only about 75% of internet video so it’s no big deal.

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