Exclusive Preview at the Open Video Conference

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Today we’ll give an exclusive preview of the Open Images platform at the exiting Open Video Conference in New York City. This preview is part of the Birds of a Feather session on Audiovisual Archives we are co-hosting. Read more about this session here.

Other interesting cases presented during the session are:

You can read our introduction here.

 

Open Images Functional Design

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

In March we started the development of Open Images. The first task at hand was drafting the Functional Design for our open media platform together with our MMBase developer André van Toly, d+g design. We finished this first phase in the development in April. Since Open Images is an open source media platform, we will also share our Functional Design document under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Netherlands license!

We expect to have a beta version of Open Images online at the end of this June. We will present the platform at the Open Video Conference (more on this in an upcoming post).

Please click here to download the document.

 

Open Source Video Software: An Inventory

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

This is a post to circulate our current research on the availability of open source software for video:

Open Source Video Software: An Inventory (OpenDocument Text file, 52 KB)

This inventory is the result of an ongoing effort at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision R&D Department at creating an insight in the current availability of open source software for video. The main reason for this research is the current development of Open Images, but it is also aimed at expanding our institutional knowledge and expertise, and to share this within research projects and (collaborative) software development. The goal is to get an overview of the available tools for the whole spectrum, from production to distribution and ultimately consumption. Next to this, we also consider processes involved with preservation, interaction and creative reuse of video.

The publication of this document is meant as a first step towards sharing this knowledge and transforming this research into a collaborative effort. We hope this document can become a starting point for a more comprehensive and elaborate inventory. To make this possible we have used an OpenDocument Text file for this document and licensed it under a Creative Commons license. So feel free to correct and/or add information to this inventory, or – for instance – convert the document into a wiki!

For the less ‘open’ readers, there is also a PDF version.

UPDATE: The Open Video Alliance has adopted the inventory on its wiki, making it possible for anyone to contribute!