ah ah ahaaahhha
Finally! About time Microsoft got kicked in the gonads. Why can't they just develop a browser which meets standards?
Talk about bad timing. Today, Microsoft released a second developer preview of its next Internet Explorer, just as word arrived that the browser's market share has dipped below 60 per cent and a storm of criticism hit Redmond for handling HTML 5 video with a closed codec it partly owns. When Microsoft announced the first IE 9 …
And let the user install whatever communist patent-stealing open-source codec they want (that's if they're inside the US, if they're outside the US then just let the user install whatever codec they want).
Or just come out and say that Microsoft want to use IE as a tool to help cash in on a codec they've got the patents for.
My understanding is you can do just that. Penultimate paragraph here: http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2010/05/03/follow-up-on-html5-video-in-ie9.aspx
This whole thing seems a bit of a storm in a teacup (ah, must be the internet). As I understand it the patent situation around advanced video codecs is, at best, muddy. So platform providers have a choice of supporting something where the licensing situation is well known (ie H.624) or something that you may get sued for later (and is arguably inferior anyway).
This article on the subject is quite good: http://www.engadget.com/2010/05/04/know-your-rights-h-264-patent-licensing-and-you/
He's saying you can use DirectShow codecs with Media Player/Centre but not IE. He's also saying you can play other video formats using plug-ins in IE as you always have been able to do, but the current plug-in architecture isn't standard and isn't wired up to the HTML5 video tag. If you want to use the standard video tag it's any codec you want as long as it's H.264.
So, he says there's a lot of uncertainty, but he's not prepared to clarify how much less uncertainty there would need to be before it could be said that the uncertainty had been resolved.
This boy as commitment issues.
"We know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns, the ones we don't know we don't know"
Remind me' does he work in Software, or Astrology?
People complain about not meeting the standards, but they want HTML5 now, before the standard is fixed...
I don't think they really care what gets used for video, they are following along at this point.
I saw a comment from a softie that said they pay more into the video patent fund than they get back out.
We don't own it, so we won't support it....Typcial.
As a web developer I'm getting sick and tired of dealing with Microsoft's BS on these kinds of issues. Just when I think they're finally going to do something right with IE they pull a stunt like this.
My message to Microsoft: JUST FOLLOW THE EFFING STANDARDS! Everyone else supports Theora and OGG. Guess what Microsoft? That's consensus.
"Everyone else supports Theora and OGG."
Everyone else except Apple supports Theora and OGG.
There, that's better.
Actually, the only people taking the right approach here are Google, who quite happily support both codecs so the world can get on with its pissing contest in the background while they concentrate on doing something useful.
Damn. I've just had to support Google. I feel dirty now.
Question is, if they already have a video HTML5 tag implemented, and it currently can handle H.264, is it really all that hard to pipe the datastream to a different codec? I would think a browser would jump to support as many things as they could (isn't that why plug-ins were created in the first place?). I think H.264, VC8, and Ogg would be a good mix of the three main codecs to support, and it would cost what? 2 weeks of coding and testing by a real coder? (I say "real", because I'm not sure how many undergrads they have monkeying away on IE9...)
it's not like I personally care that much about Ogg Theora. But how hard is it for multi billion dollar corporation to just implement a codec support? Really?
And then let the _customers_ decide. If Ogg Theora doesn't cut the mustard, it'll drop out of the running.
It's like SVG. Of course, it won't be a widely used standard until M$ supports it in IE. But it is disingenuous for M$ to claim it shouldn't be supported because of insufficient mindshare. Precisely because the biggest roadblock to adoption is... M$ sitting on the fence.
Grow up, Ballmer & Co. There can't be that much money in it and this is bad press.
They should spend the time they waste making hundreds of unsolicited CSS and HTML tests for the W3C working on their browser instead. They're like a bunch of Sunday drivers.
There are plenty of other people who'll come up with Acid tests and test suites in their spare time.
And stop trying to wow people with new features when you're the very last people to be implementing them. Microsoft really don't need to teach people how to use CSS3 to round corners or HTML5 to embed videos anymore than they need to teach us how to use the back button. Don't think the reason few websites use these things is because they don't know how - It's because they think there's no point when IE doesn't support them. Just get on with it and support them, and leave people to their own devices. Trust me, those features make people's lives easier - they'll start using them as soon as it's practicably possible (which means when IE supports them, and old versions have died off).
A search of Google Shopping [US] returns 3,500 hits for "H.264 Camcorder." $120-$5,000. Product on the shelves.
Search for H.264 consumer and industrial video products, all types, and you will get about 35,000 hits.
The list of H.264 licensors is dominated by global giants in manufacturing. Fujitsu. Hitachi. Mitsubishi. Panasonic. Philips. Samsung. Sony. Toshiba... There are hundreds of familiar brand names among the 811 H.264 licensees.
It would take years - more likely a decade - to turn this around even if Google were to release a competitive VP8 codec + reference hardware designs + professional grade editing, production and distribution tools the first thing tomorrow morning.
HTML5 does not specify what codec should be used and it won't specify the codec even when the specification is finished.
So, vendors such as Microsoft and Apple have to make a choice. They've chosen H.264. Both of them.
That's a good thing. It means the video "war" is over. Everyone just uses HTML5 and H.264 and we're done.
Now...what's the problem again? It seems to me that the world just agreed on a video standard - H.264.
Oh...wait...the problem is that it "should have been Ogg Theora" - a video standard that almost no-one uses and may turn into a rat's nest of patent issues. Nobody knows.
Genius.
Within our business we've all but removed the necessity for IE on the desktop. There's one ageing Cloud app that needs it today but that's being re-written in Q3. We're basically a Chrome-only business now, openoffice when needed and have moved to Android handsets - basically some flavour of linux everywhere. Saving us a lot of money - We're only 450 people but I'd always question the relevance of Microsoft's actions in any IT outlook - they're simply not all that relevant anymore
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There are two type of flash - adobes fault for not bothering to rename one of them!!
ShockWave Flash (.swf) This was by macromedia, bought out by adobe..
(to confuse things even further there is also the 'shockwave player' that is *totally* different, AFAIK a kind of java?? mainly used for complex online games)
SWF is the stuff that all those flash ads use... If its not animated gif, or some kind of script or older stuff..
Then there is 'flash Video' (.flv) that is used by many including youtube, with Javascript to make it look nice...
yes, its faster MAYBE....
BUT
many have deserted it, for the far better session manager you get in FF...
ditto for the speed dial, that is a very simple 'add-on' in opera, but in FF, you get 'groups', dial naming, right click to add to speed dial, lots of others....
And then there is a 'bitmap animation stopper' that does not just stop it(as Opera does) but enables it to cycle 'just once'...
The latest Opera has even LESS functionality, the address bar is just one big google search, type in 'bbc' or even 'google' it just searches google for it!!! (yes, it googles google, for google!!! ROFL ROFL )
enter that in FF, it intelligently just goes to the proper website......