1. mskrebs's Avatar
    Videos of video streaming using mymovy.com to BlackBerry BOLD.
    The technology will support live as well, and, of course, either wifi or 3g


    Other Movidity applications work as well.
    07-07-08 02:36 PM
  2. trev42088's Avatar
    ummmmm

    wha?
    07-07-08 03:21 PM
  3. mskrebs's Avatar
    you can see video streaming to the BlackBerry BOLD as we are developers of codec and streaming software at Movidity
    07-07-08 04:36 PM
  4. mnokia's Avatar
    you can see video streaming to the BlackBerry BOLD as we are developers of codec and streaming software at Movidity
    how does this differ from m.youtube.com, other than lack of content...??
    How may I benefit by goin to your site, over youtube?
    07-08-08 10:40 AM
  5. mskrebs's Avatar
    1) We're a technology company that licenses this software; even mymovy.com is licensable MMES (see Movidity website) mymovy supports live channel streaming
    3) the technology we have does not depend on rtsp (required by myoutube) to stream (even live) and can be accessed through any cellular network through standard ip/tcpip
    ...but it is not progressive downloading which does not support live streaming
    4) rtsp is a proprietary protocol and all servers, routers and your handheld must have the same version of rtsp to support an rtsp stream. That is why m.youtube often does not work on handhelds which presumeably have rtsp.
    It actually doesn't work on our BB BOLD, because we connect through Rogers in Canada.
    5) mymovy supports corporate portals which are discrete and secure. It can be used for UGC and the main portal can be used by individuals for this purpose, but the site is intended for commercial hosting. Video fetches on mymovy also demostrate 15 commercial advertizing.
    6) mymovy is not a WAP site and all searching is done on the content of the site (tag, name, etc.) through the mobile player.
    7) the mobile player also supports ip-based text messaging which is not dependent on SMS an looks like regular data - hence it is globally accessible;
    SMS support is also carrier dependent and specifically charged as SMS messaging
    8) mymovy can support a much larger number of streaming video clients because of our streaming model which is an async octet stream and not a bit stream requiring dedicated bandwidth or bandwidth reserved through rtsp
    9) our "stream" is also dynamically adaptive in the encoding rate to accommodate fluctuations in bandwidth to the gateway (BES, BIS, carrier) server; myoutube is video encoding at an inflexible rate
    10) myoutube cannot be streamed through a BES server connection; the BES server segments a video stream
    11) the player code has to enable wifi connectivity (which is free); m.youtube will not so you'll be paying for 3g access all the time
    12) mymovy can support "just audio" for upload/transcode and streaming; the Options interface on the handheld allows you to do this

    The site can support millions of items of mobilized video/audio.

    13) We are providing an alternative.
    07-08-08 11:27 AM
  6. georgelx's Avatar
    There are 100 million mobile videos on YouTube, you have about one hundred on your site. Going against YouTube / Google is suicide, especially since your technology has a very short life span. Remember those web accelerators from the nineties (this was dial up era). Well, the same is hapenning with mobile, 2.5G or 3G is equivalent to a dialup of the nineties. In the near future you will see 4G and better with new mobile devices more suitable for mobile videos and internet browsing (iPhone should be an obvious indicator).

    Fools...
    08-26-08 10:41 AM
  7. mskrebs's Avatar
    mymovy.com is one of several mobile video streaming applications developed by Logovision Wireless/Movidity. It can be licensed to corporations.
    02-16-09 04:51 PM
  8. mskrebs's Avatar
    In March 2008, YouTube's bandwidth costs were estimated at approximately US$1 million a day.

    In June 2008 a Forbes magazine article projected the 2008 revenue at US$200 million, noting progress in advertising sales.
    02-16-09 04:59 PM
  9. georgelx's Avatar
    mkrebs wrote that YouTube's bandwidth costs $1 million per day. As usual, you are writing nonsense, it is about $1 million per month... please check your figures and sources.
    05-18-09 09:43 PM
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