Advertisement

Rabu, 23 Maret 2011

Business Video: Global Presentation Platforms Making the World a 'Smaller Place' - Business-Video

If you have trouble viewing this email, click here to view online.

  Featured Articles




  Sponsored By: Business Video Expo


The Business Video Expo highlights the latest strategies and technologies available to executives who are serious about leveraging emerging video communications capabilities to build competitive advantage. By bringing together the industry's most innovative video technology vendors with end-users who are pioneering the use of video in the corporate environment, The Business Video Expo mirrors a burgeoning market no longer just a corporate novelty with a growing appetite for learning the best practices in implementing video to make business communications more engaging and effective.



  Top Stories



  From The Expert Corner


March 18, 2011

Business Video: Global Presentation Platforms Making the World a 'Smaller Place'

The world is getting to be a smaller place.
For evidence, look no further than this month’s launch of the new hosted video presentation solution from Thomson (News - Alert) Reuters.

The company’s new platform – called the Thomson Reuters Multimedia Centre – packages a lot of the software technology that Thomson Reuters (News - Alert) has used in providing Webcast services to global clients and makes it available via a platform that corporate customers now can license for themselves and use on their own.

One of the fresh ingredients of that platform is feature tucked away on the administrative side of Thomson’s software offering that reflects the global nature of Thomson’s current Webcast services business: an option that allows Webcast distributors to manage Webcasts offered in multiple languages.

The language feature is really elegant in its simplicity. Essentially, each self-contained Webcast container has a series of options for entering on-screen information in a specific language. Viewers choose the language they want via their player window. Once a language option is selected, the corresponding information in the proper language is retrieved from the specified location in the Thomson Reuters archive.

To the user, it looks like the Webcast is multi-lingual. To the Webcast administrator, it’s simply a process of leveraging some basic software programming to manage content more effectively – even it that content is in different languages.

The Thomson language feature is pretty straight-forward. From a development perspective, the software programming that makes the language option possible appears to be relatively basic. You can expect that any content management vendors that do not feature language support today will add features in short order comparable to the Thomson language offering.

The most encouraging aspect of the Thomson language offering is that it did not require a massive upgrade in video codecs or network capacity to create a better viewer experience. Rather, Thomson simply applied some old fashioned creativity in developing hosted software that helps to automate the process of managing content in a multi-lingual environment.

And while not all corporate Webcasters need such language support, the feature is relatively timely for Thomson. The biggest increases in online video spending in 2011, according to an Interactive Media Strategies (News - Alert) survey of more than 1,000 corporate executives conducted earlier this year, are coming from companies with more than 25,000 employees. These are exactly the type of companies that are likely to have multi-national operations that could benefit from a multi-lingual approach to Webcast content management.

What remains to be seen is whether a global perspective on the development of these presentation platforms will have an impact on Thomson’s ability to win business from corporate customers with operations across the globe.

Steve Vonder Haar is Research Director and Founder of Interactive Media Strategies and is responsible for the firm's coverage of the enterprise Web Communications sector. To read more of his articles, please visit please visit his columnist page.

Edited by Patrick Barnard


  From The Blogs


Business is Change

By: Peter

   Featured Videos



   Featured Resources



  TMCnet's Blogs



  Featured Channels



  Business Video



  Advertise With Us


  General advertising Info: Click here   

  Contact Us




  Become a TMCnet columnist!


Become a TMCnet columnist! Want to contribute your expertise to a growing audience of IP Communications professionals? Become a writer, blogger or columnist for the TMCnet Web site and this newsletter. Contact TMCnet Group Editorial Director, Erik Linask, at elinask@tmcnet.com for details.


This email was distributed by: Technology Marketing Corporation, 800 Connecticut Avenue, Norwalk, CT 06854 As a valued reader or attendee of TMC's publications and events, you will occasionally receive carefully-screened offers and free product information via email. If you no longer wish to receive this type of email, please Click Here to adjust your preferences.

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar