Imagine: The Web without Flash?
Adobe’s Streaming Flash Media Server
With the exploding growth of Video on the Web, audiences are expecting high-quality experiences. Adobe’s vice president Jim Guerard recently talked about Adobe’s forthcoming Flash Media Server (FMS) 3 which will allow publishers to integrate video into their sites and applications with more control over playback, interactivity and branding. FMS 3 is scheduled for release in the first quarter of 2008.
One of the key noticeable feature of FMS 3 will be its ability to provide live or recorded streaming to Flash Lite 3 powered Mobile Phones. Flash Lite 3-enabled phones are expected to be on the market by the end of 2007.
FMS 3 will support the new file format which Flash Player 9 can load and play – .mp4,.m4v,.m4a,.mov and .3gp. Simply drop video files you might have encoded using one of the countless tools out there onto the server and it’ll stream. Even if the moov atom (index information in MPEG-4 files) is at the end of the file which a “progressive download” cannot do. A “progressive download” have to wait until the file is completely downloaded before it is played back. However, you can use tools like qt-faststart.c from Mike Melanson to fix your files so that the index is at the beginning of the file.
Adobe is in talk with Cisco to integrate Flash Media Server 3 into Cisco’s Content Delivery System. Well, looks like the battle between Microsoft Silverlight and Adobe Flash Player is going to be fought on our Television sets too, besides the already hot battle scenes on the desktops and mobile devices.
I have not extended the article with the technical details of the new Flash Player 9 as Tinic have done an extremely well-written lengthy article – What just happened to video on the web? His article is worth a thorough read.
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By Brajeshwar Oinam