With both YouTube and Vimeo rolling out HTML5 versions of their website (see here and here), for testing right now, the writing may be on the wall for Flash video. And this may also explain why the Apple iPad doesn't include Flash.
HTML5 will have built in support for Flash type video content, and it comes with many advantages over Flash. First of all, it will be an industry standard, meaning more and more browsers will start supporting it and you won't need to install Flash before you can use sites like YouTube and Vimeo. It also theoretically makes for smoother and a better playback experience, with instant video skipping as opposed to waiting for buffers to catch up.
The problem though is that with the YouTube/Vimeo experiments, only the Chrome and Safari browsers are supported for now. There's also no fullscreen mode, no embedding support, and uploaded videos will have to be converted (by YouTube/Vimeo) in one of the formats supported by HTML5 (namely H.264). Many of these limitations will be removed in the future, of course.
The Apple iPad won't include Flash support but will support HTML5, and so YouTube and Vimeo's HTML5 support is very much welcomed.
But what will this mean for Flash, especially in terms of video apps? Flash has been incredibly useful, but it is still a third party proprietary format that we've been dependent on for too long perhaps. Imagine having to install an add-on just to be able to view JPEG images on webpages, and with Flash type content becoming more and more integrated into websites, that's what the situation will be like without some kind of industry standard in place. And that's what HTML5 tries to deliver. Whether it succeeds or not, we'll have to wait and see.
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HTML5 will have built in support for Flash type video content, and it comes with many advantages over Flash. First of all, it will be an industry standard, meaning more and more browsers will start supporting it and you won't need to install Flash before you can use sites like YouTube and Vimeo. It also theoretically makes for smoother and a better playback experience, with instant video skipping as opposed to waiting for buffers to catch up.
The problem though is that with the YouTube/Vimeo experiments, only the Chrome and Safari browsers are supported for now. There's also no fullscreen mode, no embedding support, and uploaded videos will have to be converted (by YouTube/Vimeo) in one of the formats supported by HTML5 (namely H.264). Many of these limitations will be removed in the future, of course.
The Apple iPad won't include Flash support but will support HTML5, and so YouTube and Vimeo's HTML5 support is very much welcomed.
But what will this mean for Flash, especially in terms of video apps? Flash has been incredibly useful, but it is still a third party proprietary format that we've been dependent on for too long perhaps. Imagine having to install an add-on just to be able to view JPEG images on webpages, and with Flash type content becoming more and more integrated into websites, that's what the situation will be like without some kind of industry standard in place. And that's what HTML5 tries to deliver. Whether it succeeds or not, we'll have to wait and see.
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