
I used this extended video tag from Theora.org to display Ogg/Theora video’s on my work blog. Works great.
<video src=”http://www.archive.org/download/Rooms_Rules_Roles/Rooms_Roles_Rules.ogv” width=”352″ height=”288″>
<applet code=”com.fluendo.player.Cortado.class” archive=”http://theora.org
/cortado.jar” width=”352″ height=”288″>
<param name=”url” value=”http://www.archive.org/download/Rooms_Rules_Roles/Rooms_Roles_Rules.ogv”/>
</applet>
</video>
[…]
Comments Off on Video tag with Cortado fallback Posted on: Saturday, October 3, 2009
by: Peter in category: Manuals, Problems and solutions

Open Images is an open media platform that offers online access to a selection of audiovisual archive material to stimulate creative reuse.
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Comments Off on Open Images Posted on: Wednesday, September 30, 2009
by: OSVideo in category: Media archives, News

FLOSS Manuals is a collection of manuals that explain how to install and use a range of free and open source software. The manuals are friendly and simple, and they are intended to encourage people to explore the wide range of free, open source alternatives to expensive and restrictively licensed software.
FlossManuals.net now hosts great information on how to use Theora video. In true cookbook style, the TheoraCookbook several aspects of working with Theora are explained. With the recent Book Sprint that was held in Berlin, and the help of many loosely connected contributors, the Theora Coockbook has (well .. in my humble opinion that is) become an indispensible document for anybody working with open source video.
[…]
Comments Off on TheoraCookbook Posted on: Wednesday, September 9, 2009
by: Peter in category: Manuals, News

http://osvideo.constantvzw.org/wp-content/uploads/jonathan_zittrain.ogg
An ogg/vorbis bootleg recording of Jonathan Zittrain’s talk Here Comes Everybody. In this entertaining yet serious speech Zittrain addresses social political aspects of video on the web, the need to consider local mesh network strategies, the power of ISP’s. Where is ‘here’ in the cloud of the web? What is the positive and negative potential of mass scale availability of workforce on the web?
Jonathan Zittrain is co-director and co-founder of Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society and a professor at Harvard Law School. Among his areas of expertise are cyberlaw, security, and copyright law. His book The Future of the Internet—And How To Stop It is about generative technology like the internet and how it promotes innovation and disruption. As controlled devices like iPods and Tivos grow in popularity, we face worrisome consequences for the net’s future potential for user participation.
Comments Off on Zittrain: Here Comes Everybody Posted on: Sunday, June 21, 2009
by: Peter in category: Copyrights and licenses, Further reading, News, Patents

http://osvideo.constantvzw.org/wp-content/uploads/peter_sunde.ogg
This is an audio recording of the long distance interview with Peter Sunde of the Pirate Bay by Xeni Jardin that concluded the Open Video Conference. Introduction by Alan Toner.
Comments Off on Pirate Bay interview by: Peter in category: News

http://osvideo.constantvzw.org/wp-content/uploads/moltke_gaylor_king.ogg
Here’s an audio recording of the discussion by the (co)directors of three of the best known documentaries about filesharing: Henrik Moltke (Good Copy Bad Copy), Bratt Gaylor (RIP A Remix manifesto) and Jamie King (Steal this film) that took place during the Open Video Conference
Does making a film about sharing mean you should yourself share the film you’re making?
Comments Off on Copy Remix Steal Posted on: Saturday, June 20, 2009
by: Peter in category: Copyrights and licenses, Further reading, News

Attended this nice talk by Matt Mason at the Open Video Conference.
Listen or download this recording in ogg/vorbis
Mason wrote the Pirate’s Dillema and his talk was basically an outline of that book. He speaks about the remix as marketing tool, an wonders how business models can be developed after the model of piracy. What will happen to Nike when we will be able to download 3D printers that can print sneakers? And what is the future of the 3D printer market once 3D printers will be able to print out 3D printers?
[…]
Comments Off on Matt Mason: cash + piracy by: Peter in category: Copyrights and licenses, Further reading, News
Seen at the Open Video Conference: Yochai Benkler’s keynote introducing the conference. A warm felt plea for collaboration, exchange and a democratisation of media. And one of the few presentations that were launched from a Linux system.
Here’s a bootleg audio reording from a heavily echoing NYU law school auditorium.
http://osvideo.constantvzw.org/wp-content/uploads/yocai_benkler.ogg
If you prefer to watch a video registration, check out the archives of open video alliance.
Yochai Benkler is the Berkman Professor of Entrepreneurial Legal Studies at Harvard, and faculty co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. He writes about the Internet and the emergence of networked economy and society, as well as the organization of infrastructure, such as wireless communications. His work traverses a wide range of disciplines and sectors, and is taught in a variety of professional schools and academic departments. In real world applications, his work has been widely discussed in both the business sector and civil society. His most recent book, The Wealth of Networks: How social production transforms markets and freedom (2006), is considered a seminal peice on peer production and the power of networked socities. His work can be freely accessed at www.benkler.org.
Comments Off on Yochai Benkler: democratic media by: Peter in category: Further reading, News

Witnessed during the Open Video Conference in NY, 19 june 09,
The Politics and Poetics of DeCSS: Featured Talk – (5:25 PM – 5:45 PM)
Here’s an audiorecording in ogg/vorbis of the firy and energising talk given by Gabriella Coleman on the moral and ethical importance of the DeCSS tool. She makes beautiful links between freedom of speech, poetics of code and te importance of linguistic expression.
http://osvideo.constantvzw.org/wp-content/uploads/gabriella_coleman.ogg
Nothing exceptional I know, you can get the video from the website of OpenVideoConference, with much better soundquality, but nothing beats a good old non authorised recording in a non-flash format.
More important: the official registration didn’t capture the sound of a bag of crisps that opened with a loud ‘plof’ on the third row.
Description: In this talk, NYU Steinhardt professor Gabriella Coleman visits the protests surrounding the DeCSS arrest and lawsuits that unfolded between 1999 and 2003 in order to examine when and how a new vibrant free speech sensibility was cemented and refined among Free and Open Source developers. Contained within this story are important lessons about the role of conventional protests and unconventional protests (in this case, in the form of poetry and art) for establishing this free speech ethic.
speaker: Gabriella Coleman — Assistant Professor, NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development
Comments Off on Gabriella Coleman: The Politics and Poetics of DeCSS by: Peter in category: Further reading, News
Raffaella Traniello is a Venice based videolover and teacher. She is an active member of the Cinelerra and Lumièra communities and worked on several handbooks that testify of her enthusiasm for working with free software. Following Q+A attempts to unfold some of her energetic activities.

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Comments Off on Interview Raffaella Traniello Posted on: Tuesday, June 16, 2009
by: Peter in category: Collaborative filming, Films and Projects, Further reading
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