Support for the HTML5
format could bring a new level of usability -- and editorial dispute -- to
Wikipedia.
It's taken four years but the crowd sourced encyclopedia finally launched a new HTML5-based video player this week that will greatly simplify the act of adding videos to the site’s millions and millions of so far text base pages.
It's taken four years but the crowd sourced encyclopedia finally launched a new HTML5-based video player this week that will greatly simplify the act of adding videos to the site’s millions and millions of so far text base pages.
Contributors will now be
able to upload and edit clips and add captions and subtitles, however, it is
yet to be seen how the online encyclopedia's infamous community of editors will
deal with this latest feature. For years, Wikipedia has been
criticized for its lack of video content save for a handful of clips encoded in
the Ogg Theora format. But the reason it has been so slow to roll out the
feature is because of the company's own commitment to only using open-source
technology and to hosting all of its content in-house, rather than using other companies' data centers.
No comments:
Post a Comment