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Linux.conf.au 2011: The Latest and Coolest with HTML5 Video

I gave a talk at LCA 2011 in Brisbane about some of the things that I have learnt and code I have developed during writing my book, see http://www.amazon.com/Definitive-Guide-HTML5-Video/dp/1430230908/ . The talk announcement: The new HTML 5 specification continues to change – a particularly large number of changes are still happening for audio and video. Not just that we were provided with a new open codec format called WebM which didn’t really change any functionality, but may eventually lead to a common baseline codec. But just in July 2010 features for accessibility and a new caption format called WebSRT have been introduced. Also, a new video API is being discussed that will expose analytics about the video performance, e.g. the number of dropped frames, the download rate, and the playback rate. Lastly, a audio data API is proposed that allows the programmer to access raw audio data and do cool thing such as frequency analysis. I will provide a brief introduction to the new HTML5 video and audio elements, their JavaScript API and already standardized and available functionality in modern Web Browsers, such as pixel manipulation through the Canvas or the application of SVG filters to videos. Then I will show some cool demos of what will be possible once the newer features are standardized and rolled out. This talk will contain lots of “bling”, i.e. lots of visual and aural demonstrations, but there will also be technical content at the level required by more or less hard-core Web developers. Do not expect a kernel talk from this though. For slides see: http://blog.gingertech.net/2011/01/27/html5-video-presentations-at-lca-2011/ Creative Commons licensed http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ by Linux Australia

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Uploaded by: Silvia Pfeiffer
Hosted: youtube

Doug Schepers: W3C and Twitter (humour warning!)

Doug Schepers of the W3C gave an overview talk about W3C and Web standards at the Web Directions South 2009 conference in Sydney, Australia, see http://south09.webdirections.org/program/w3ctrack#the-w3c-and-web-standards-big-picture . This is a short extract from his talk, where he announces that Twitter has bought the W3C. Awesomeness warning! Doug sent me a transcript: (Can you hear me all right?) So, I just wanted to introduce you to W3C, and to do so, I have some exciting information: W3C has been acquired by Twitter. We’re really excited about this… there are… there are a couple of complications. All of our specifications are now going to have to be 140 characters or less. But we think this will actually speed up our time to market. I’d like to introduce 2 new specifications: here is HTML5 and CSS3. So, we’ve cut out everything except the essential bits: border-radius will now let you have rounded corners… so, um, congratulations. And we expect that these will be implemented very quickly. Here’s the text of that slide: (W3C logo in Twitter font) W3C has been acquired by Twitter. Now, all specifications will be 140 characters or less: * @w3c HTML5:h1-6,p,li,div,video,audi o #rec * @w3c CSS3:font,color,padding,border -radius #rec

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Uploaded by: Silvia Pfeiffer
Hosted: youtube

Video accessibility for the HTML5 video tag

This is a submission to the W4A 2009 Web accessibility conference (http://www.w4a.info/ ). In the video, we explain the current status of video accessibility on the Web and means forward for HTML5. We propose a solution for associating textual captions with video and explain it on the example of Ogg Kate, SRT and DFXP. We then explain further challenges such as Sign Language, Audio Annotations, and more general types of time-aligned text, e.g. Karaoke, music lyrics, ticker-text, transcripts, or annotations with hyperlinks.

Category: 2
Uploaded by: Silvia Pfeiffer
Hosted: youtube

Video accessibility for the HTML5 video tag

Higher quality copy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpbtpeofN3c This is a submission to the W4A 2009 Web accessibility conference (http://www.w4a.info/ ). In the video, we explain the current status of video accessibility on the Web and means forward for HTML5. We propose a solution for associating textual captions with video and explain it on the example of Ogg Kate, SRT and DFXP. We then explain further challenges such as Sign Language, Audio Annotations, and more general types of time-aligned text, e.g. Karaoke, music lyrics, ticker-text, transcripts, or annotations with hyperlinks.

Category: 2
Uploaded by: Silvia Pfeiffer
Hosted: youtube

Beyond HTML5 Video

Short 2:30min long video presented as a lightning talk at TPAC 2008 to make a case for making more out of the HTML5 video element. It demonstrates Metavid and its wiki-style editing functionality of transcripts. It further shows the use of the transcript to navigate and search in long-form video. Exposing the structure and content of video to the User Agent and the Server enables video accessibility, content adaptation, and deep search. The video also indicates links to the W3C Media Fragments working group, the W3C Timed Text working group, and the W3C Media Annotations working group.

Category: 2
Uploaded by: Silvia Pfeiffer
Hosted: youtube