The H.264 Convergence: Will Video Standards Finally Take Hold?

At the Streaming Media East show on Tuesday May 20th, we have a session entitled "The H.264 Convergence" that will detail how over the past year, more and more streaming media players are utilizing H.264 and providing support for the technology.

Adobe’s recent support for H.264 in their Flash player has sparked industry discussions amongst major broadcasters and online video producers about the role H.264 will play. This session will explain why H.264 is getting so much exposure, what recent announcements have put it into the spotlight, and whether it can really be the one codec that the entire industry can converge on. Attendees will also see real-world examples of sites and services that are utilizing H.264 today.

Confirmed speakers include:

  • Moderator: Eric Manchester, Manager Digital Media Distribution, Time Warner Cable
  • Kevin Towes, Product Manager, Flash Media Server, Adobe
  • Matt Smith, Video Architect, Yahoo!
  • Tim Napoleon, Chief Strategist, Media and Entertainment, Akamai
  • Greg Smith, CTO, Move Networks

Have a topic or question for any of the speakers you want to see
addressed? Submit it in the comments section and we’ll add it to the
Q&A portion of the session.

Registration is still open
and you can see all the various pricing packages, including a one-day
ticket on our website. Six years since we took over the
StreamingMedia.com business and we’ve still managed to keep the
conference very affordable for everyone to attend. A full two-day
conference ticket is only $895.

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Learn How To Use Adobe Media Server To Deliver Live And On-Demand Video

One of the four different 3-hour workshops taking place at Streaming Media East on Monday May 19th, is entitled "Learn How To Use Adobe Media Server To Deliver Live And On-Demand Video".
This workshop, produced by Adobe, will show how Adobe’s Flash Media Server offers a unique combination of powerful streaming and a flexible environment for creating and delivering engaging multidirectional social media experiences to the broadest possible audience.

Attendees will learn about HD-quality video, integrated live video streams, delivery to mobile devices, and deeper interactivity through an extensible plug-in architecture. This session will also cover new features that include enhanced content protection with encrypted streaming, increased performance, and new logging/measurement tools to maximize the return on content investment.

We’ve kept the workshops very affordable with a morning AND afternoon workshop ticket costing only $225. You can see details on all of the workshops on the website and register online.

Lifecasting: The New Broadcasting Platform

At the Streaming Media East show on Wednesday May 21st, community social media guru Chris Brogan will be leading a session entitled "Lifecasting: The New Broadcasting Platform". In the early days of television, live was the second choice, because of potential pitfalls, cost of production, and a host of other problems. And yet, in the world of Internet video, lifecasting—using Internet video to share moments of our lives or to broadcast personal events and happenings—is the new hot thing.

With platforms like Kyte.tv, Zannel, Mogulus, Stickcam, and many others now available, lots of new options and opportunities exist. Come see some of the hot and upcoming mobile lifecasting options in
action and learn if lifecasting will become just a fad or the next big
thing.

Confirmed speakers include:

  • Moderator: Chris Brogan, VP, Strategy and Technology, CrossTechMedia, co-founder, PodCamp
  • Scott Monty, Consigliere, crayon
  • Sarah Austin, Founder, Pop17.com
  • Brad Hunstable, Founder, Business Development, Ustream.tv

Have a topic or question for any of the speakers you want to see
addressed? Submit it in the comments section and we’ll add it to the
Q&A portion of the session.

Registration is still open
and you can see all the various pricing packages, including a one-day
ticket on our website. Six years since we took over the
StreamingMedia.com business and we’ve still managed to keep the
conference very affordable for everyone to attend. A full two-day
conference ticket is only $895.

Ad Networks Vs. Branded Video Sites

At the Streaming Media East show on Wednesday May 21st, Joe Mandese, Editor In Chief at MediaPost will be leading a session entitled "Ad Networks Vs. Branded Video Sites". In the increasingly disaggregated world of online video, who will win share of video advertising budgets?

Branded sites like YouTube, Heavy, Daily Motion (etc.), or the burgeoning market of advertising network players. Buyers and sellers face off on the impact of branding vs. audience reach and the implications for media planning, advertising budgets, and CPMs.

Confirmed speakers include:

  • Moderator: Joe Mandese, Editor In Chief, MediaPost
  • Fred McIntyre, SVP, AOL Video
  • Aleck Schleider, VP, Marketing, Advertising.com
  • John Lumpkin, SVP, Sales Strategy and Partnerships, Heavy.com
  • Garrett Albanese, Media Supervisor, Carat

Have a topic or question for any of the speakers you want to see
addressed? Submit it in the comments section and we’ll add it to the
Q&A portion of the session.

Registration is still open
and you can see all the various pricing packages, including a one-day
ticket on our website. Six years since we took over the
StreamingMedia.com business and we’ve still managed to keep the
conference very affordable for everyone to attend. A full two-day
conference ticket is only $895.

Overview Of Akamai’s Application Delivery Customers – Part 2

Last month, after spending the day at Akamai’s Cambridge headquarters, I detailed how Akamai’s application delivery product works, the types of content it delivers and the importance this product will play in Akamai’s revenue for quarters to come. At the meeting, Akamai also gave me an insight into who some of their customers are that use the service which I highlight below. Some of these companies have been featured on the Akamai website in case studies, others haven’t.

Of the numerous people I speak to about Akamai, their application
delivery product is the one that is least understood in terms of how it
works. Lets face it, understanding how content delivery works for video
and static content is not difficult, but application delivery is still
a new product and the market for the service is only just beginning.
While Gartner says that the market for application acceleration
products is expected to reach about $2.3 billion in end-user sales by
2009, Gartner does not break out that number to say where that revenue
comes from. Hardware based products from the likes of Cisco and F5 for
co-location based scenarios are very different than service based
solutions like Akamai’s. So while there is no way to truly know what
the market size is for outsourced application delivery services, it is
quickly growing. I’d be willing to bet that we see Akamai do close to
$100 million in revenue this year for their application delivery
product, up from $40 million last year.

When it comes to retail and e-commerce customers, I really don’t need
to go into many details on what the value is. Everyone knows that
anything that makes e-commerce based searching, shopping carts and
checkout faster is a no brainer and Akamai has numerous examples of
such customers on their website. A variety of customers in the online advertising space use Akamai acceleration services to accelerate both the end user navigation and delivery of stock images and video to journalist and media outlets. Adify has developed a unique build your own network platform that comprises a hosted application (accessed via a portal) through which customers choose their ads and settings, along with a transactional system that streams ads to customers’ sites.

By using application delivery, Adify is able to serve its ads in less than half a second in North
American and in less than one second to users in Europe—even though its
data center is based in the US. While Adify looked at an application acceleration based co-location solution, Akamai says Adify would have had to spend close to $600,000 annually to build data
centers around the world—and the costs would rise as the company
factored in equipment and personnel.

Various customers leverage Akamai’s acceleration services to accelerate support, B2B commerce applications to enterprise users and partners. While you read about many of these same companies using traditional Akamai services, like software downloads, etc… rarely are the other applications like supply chain management and extranet portals highlighted. Akamai says they have seen an increase in usage of their application acceleration technologies across industries that are new for the company.

Autodesk uses Akamai’s acceleration services for its on-demand Buzzsaw collaborative project management application. Caterpillar uses the application acceleration service to move the configuration of
industrial power generators and used equipment sales online, resulting
in improved satisfaction for its worldwide dealer network. Phase Forward uses the acceleration services to optimize the Web connection between Phase Forward’s hosted clinical trial electronic data capture solution and global trial sites.

While Akamai won’t say exactly how many customers they have for application delivery services, they did say that they currently have hundreds of customers in the B2B application acceleration business. And as more companies need to speed up the delivery of all kinds of software, applications, transactions, portals and supply chain management systems, the market for outsourced application delivery is only just getting started. When the market starts to get a little bigger, I bet we’ll see additional CDNs other than Akamai enter the market with service based solutions.

Get Hands-On Training With Microsoft Silverlight

One of the four different 3-hour workshops taking place at Streaming Media East on Monday May 9th, is entitled "Deploying On-Demand and Live Media Experiences with Microsoft Silverlight". This workshop, produced by Microsoft, will cover the entire process of creating, managing, and developing rich media experiences with Microsoft Silverlight.

Learn how to encode video and other rich media with Expression Encoder and see how to create media players in Expression Blend. The workshop will also demonstrate the media capabilities of Silverlight 2.0 and will explore, in-depth, how to deploy Windows Server 2008 for both streaming (Windows Media Services 2008) and progressive download (IIS 7 Media Pack) scenarios. Attendees will also have the chance to win copies of Expression Encoder.

We’ve kept the workshops very affordable with a morning AND afternoon workshop ticket costing only $225. You can see details on all of the workshops on the website and register online.

Learn How To Broadcast Over Mobile And Wi-Fi Networks

At the Streaming Media East show on Tuesday May 20th, Steve Garlfield will be leading a hands-on demonstration entitled "Live Broadcasting Over Mobile And Wi-Fi Networks".

While big media tests the waters of mobile broadcasting, many web video producers are already out there doing it live from the street, with a cell phone. Others are joining in and experimenting with two-way broadcasts via streaming video over cellphone networks and via Wi-Fi, wherever they are. Viewers can chat while the broadcast is going on and affect and sometimes even direct the content being produced. Come to this session to see Steve Garfield and other pioneers in the live broadcasting space show how its done.

Confirmed presenters include:

  • Steve Garfield, Mobile Video Journalist, SteveGarfield.com
  • Max Haot, Founder, CEO, Mogulus
  • Bhaskar Roy, Co-Founder, Qik.com

Registration is still open
and you can see all the various pricing packages, including a one-day
ticket on our website. Six years since we took over the
StreamingMedia.com business and we’ve still managed to keep the
conference very affordable for everyone to attend. A full two-day
conference ticket is only $895.