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Peter Van Dijck’s Guide to Ease
So the podcasting guys are, clearly,
being kids. Fighting over the history of podcasting. Jees. I documented a lot of stuff on the videoblogging wiki during 2004, which was the
crucial year during which videoblogging started. Here’s a copy, in case that resource goes down. For the future. As a
disclaimer: this report probably misses a few important events, there might be a mistake or two in there as well.
1956
- AT&T builds the first Picturephone test system. Source
- Douglas Engelbart demonstrates videoconferencing over
a network. "Engelbart
demonstrated NLS at the Fall Joint Computer Conference in 1968
in a presentation to several thousand conference participants. He demonstrated
the mouse, the first working form of hypertext, and a form
of video teleconferencing."
- AT&T offers Picturephone for $160 per month.
- Packet Video Protocol (PVP), by Randy Cole, USC/ISI
- AT&T’s $1,500 videophone for home market.
- Adrian Miles
publishes a paper called Cinematic Paradigms for Hypertext
- Samsung releases the first MPEG-4 streaming 3G
(CDMA2000-1x)
video cell phone
- Adrian Miles
posts his first (known) videoblog entry on November
27, 2000.
- Dave Winer
talks to Adam Curry
and writes about Payloads For RSS, an article
in which he presents the ENCLOSURE element for RSS which
will lead to the Rss Enclosures
technology.
- Human Dog begins regularly posting video. Not quite
videoblogs,
but it’s a start. (Summer of Van Torre
Series http://www.human-dog.com)
September
- World’s first trans-atlantic tele gallbladder surgery.
- NTT Do Co Mo sells $570
3G (WCDMA) mobile videophone. - TV reporters use $7,950 portable satellite videophone
to broadcast
live from Afghanistan.
October
- Macro Media conducts videoblogging
experiment using Flash. Jeremy Allaire
writes Thoughts on Video Blog Experiment:
"Over the past several days a number of us Macromedians
conducted an experiment by using a simple Flash Com
video communications applications to blog about the Macromedia Dev Con
developer’s conference." - Chuck Olsen
posts his first videoblog, a tribute
to Paul Wellstone.
- Jeff Jarvis does a bunch of experiments
with videoblogging.
- BrowseTV begins
airing as a live videoblog from a webcam
and a laptop
that simulcasts both online and on cable access television Audience
members leave ‘comments’ by IM’ing the host and having their
messages appear live on the show.
- BBC News: Will porn kick-start
the video phone revolution? - Nacho Duran
set ups the first South American
videoblog, posting the first time on 2003/06/15 http://www.feitoamouse.com.br/videoblog/junio/030615.htm
- Slashdot article Are Video Blogs Ready For Prime
Time? (refering to an MSNBC article that’s not really
about videoblogging)
- Textamerica Introduces Camera Phone Video Moblogging
(videomoblogging?
movideoblogging? movoblogging?) (12/09/2003,)
- Justin Johnson
blog starts experimenting
with videoblogging.
- Steve Garfield
starts videoblogging with the post 2004 The Year Of The Videoblog - Chris Weagel of Human Dog opens the Human
Dog Laboratory.
Weekly video posts begin January 13, 2004. (http://www.human-dog.com/exper/journal1.html)
- Time Magazine article makes videoblogging a hot topic
(mentioning
Steve Garfield):
See Me, Blog Me - This wiki is created.
- Peter Van Dijck
posts his first videoblogging entry.
- Adam Curry
announces the start of the
development of a tool to make videoblogging easier, calling it Personal Tv Networks.
- Peter Van Dijck
and Jay Dedman
start the videoblogging
mailing list, which will turn into an active community. - A small group of people decide to experiment with
posting
one videoblogging post a day during Video Blogging Week. - June 20 – Mica Scalin
posts first video to Hello?http://publicaddress.typepad.com
a videoblog studio.
- Vidblogs dot com officially
launches, with over 30 active video bloggers. - Charlene, a professional editor by day, starts her videoblog
after talking to Mica. - Lisa posted the first known personal videoblog entry
using video from a cellphone — the VX7000 which uses
the 3g2 format.
- The first known sign-video-blog entry (using sign
language
in video on a blog) - The first known videoblog that allows video-comments.
- Aug 23 – The collaborative video project, Excuisite Corpse
begins.
- First beta of Creative Commons Publisher
is released, allowing videobloggers
to easily upload large videos that the Internet Archive
will host for free if they have a Creative Commons?
license. - Joshua Kinberg create’s Vipodder, a videoblog
aggregator based on the iPodder concept using Applescript, Perl, and Cellulo
2.0 – a quicktime playlist application for Mac OS X.
- Article in portuguese about videoblogging: Internautas incrementam blogues
com vídeos
digitais - Steve Garfield
sets up a test blog for the concept of videopodcasting http://stevegarfield.blogs.com/videopodcast/ - Steve Garfield
uploads the first videoblogging entry to the internet archive here. - The videoblogging mailing list
has grown to 120 members and over 2000 messages, and spawned
a sister mailing list called videoblogging_content
- Peter Van Dijck
starts me-tv, the first
vogbrowser (browser based videoblog aggregator), inspired by a prototype vogbrowser by Kenyatta. - Jay Dedman
and Josh Kinberg start ANT’s not television,
the first desktop based videoblog aggregator. - Businessweek writes about videoblogging.
- ABC News names bloggers some of it’s People Of The
Year. The 3.5 minute piece features
The Youngest Videoblogger In The
World, Dylan Verdi. Michael Verdi made this post explaining how it all
happened.
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