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Vimeo finally goes mobile + adds 1080p and HTML5 (ßeta)

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Vimeo, a leading video hosting/gallery site offering both paid and free models, has finally added mobile capability for its paying clients. This capability finally allows Vimeo Plus members to make their videos compatible with mobile devices like the iPhone, iPod Touch, Palm Pre, and Google/Android devices like the Nexus One. Vimeo Plus members can also now have the option to have web-based 1080p videos (although the wisdom of that today is debatable). Finally, all videos on Vimeo -whether from Plus members or standard members- will now have the option to be viewed either with the new HTML5 (ßeta) player (browser dependent), or the pre-existing Flash player (device dependent). This article will cover these three new features in more detail, and discuss their ramifications, both for content creators and content viewers.

In this article

Vimeo’s new support for mobile devices

The fact that Vimeo now supports mobile devices for its paying clients, like the iPhone, iPod Touch, Palm Pre, and Google/Android devices like the Nexus One, eliminates one of the service’s few previous Achilles’ heels. The mobile support is not automatic. If desired, Vimeo Plus Members must enter in their control panel in the settings of any previously uploaded video, select the mobile option, and save. After doing that, all other videos belonging to that user at Vimeo will be re-encoded for mobile device viewing, as well as all subsequent videos uploaded by that user.

Privacy and Embedding settings

Vimeo offers Plus members a very complex set of privacy and embedding settings. I’ll cover privacy first, since it can indirectly affect embedding settings. Here are the privacy settings, which can be different for every video:

Who can see this video? (Select one from the list.)

Where can this video appear? (Select one from the list.)

If you select the last one, you get the opportunity to enter in URLs. You can indicate whether the permission is global for a particular domain, particular for a subdomain(s), or only specific page(s) on that domain.

Then, the control panel offers the following options, which are related to behavior on Vimeo.com (assuming it’s enabled above):

What can people do with this video? (Add a checkmark before each one you want to activate.)

Who can post comments on this video? (Select one from the list.)

Now come the embedding options, which are all adjustable for each video separately. Vimeo allows Plus members to determine whether other people can embed the video in HD or not. If you enable embedding in HD, then you get the option to restrict HD embedding to one or more particular domains. Then you can indicate whether the HD embedding permission is global for a particular domain, a particular subdomain(s), or only specific page(s) on that domain. Vimeo then offers Plus members detailed options regarding a particular video’s Intro, Outro, and Everything else. For the Intro, you’re allowed to:

For the outro, you’re allowed to (pick one of these):

For “Everything else”, you are allowed to add a checkmark to activate (or not put a checkmark to deactivate) any of the following:

My goodness! There are so many options, that Vimeo even allows you to save presets with your desired names, to facilitate using the same custom settings with other videos.

Click here for page 2 of this article to see

Click here for page 2 of this article.


Embedding details and current workaround for mobile auto-detection when embedding

Like many video gallery sites, Vimeo offers you copyable HTML code to paste in websites and blogs. If you are a Vimeo Plus member, you see a preview of how the embedded video will look, based upon all of the settings you set above. This facilitates editing those settings and previewing the results before you actually put the embedded video “live” somewhere.

As of the publication date of this article, the embedded code supplied by Vimeo does not yet support HTML5 (see more about that later in this article) or mobile devices. However, this mobile limitation when embedding is not a limitation of the Vimeo server itself, but of the HTML code automatically supplied by Vimeo. Fortunately, a Vimeo Plus user named Jovani González has already published the minor HTML tweaks necessary to the code supplied by Vimeo to make this work in the Vimeo forum. It is likely that by the time you read this, Vimeo will already have updated the automatic embed code generation to make the tweaks unnecessary.

HTML5

You have probably been reading about HTML5, which makes embedding video a browser-based standard, and no longer requires any plugin like Flash or QuickTime. Currently, the browsers that support HTML5 are Chrome, Safari, and even Internet Explorer with a Chrome plugin. Both YouTube and Vimeo are currently offering HTML5 in ßeta. Currently, you can’t request an HTML5 video to go full screen. According to Vimeo, this is currently a limitation in the browsers, and is expected to be resolved soon. It is likely that Apple’s iPad will support HTML5’s video feature to allow embedded video. But whether the iPad supports HTML5’s video feature at first or not, this point is not a make-or-break issue to have web video played on the iPad. It only affects whether video will be visible while embedded. If it is not embedded, an H.264 video file can simply be linked from text or from a graphic, which is the way it is done today on the iPhone.

Is 1080p web video a wise choice?

Both Vimeo and YouTube now offer the option of 1080p web video. Fortunately, this option only appears when you actually upload a 1080p video… and even if you do, a viewer can downshift to 720p if desired. I have long been a fan of full-raster HD 720p for the web, and I have given several seminars and webinars about the best ways to accomplish it. Here are some reasons why 1080p may not be such a good idea today:

I am certainly not bothered by the fact that Vimeo and YouTube are giving us the 1080p option. It makes sense to use it if all of the following are true:

Otherwise, I would stick with 720p for now for the web.

Vimeo’s advantages over your own server

If you become a Vimeo Plus member, you have less work, and less decisions to make. You encode your video to a single spec at a very high bit rate and upload it, and make your settings on the Vimeo control panel. If you embed the video on your own site(s) or blog(s) and (for now) use Jovani González’s workaround, you upload a single file and Vimeo makes it play everywhere, including mobile and desktop browsers. Vimeo does all of the time-consuming and brain-consuming work for you.

Vimeo’s few remaining Achilles’ heels, compared with your own server

Allan T©pper’s articles and seminars

Get a full index of Allan T©pper’s articles and upcoming seminars at AllanTepper.com. Listen to his podcast TecnoTur, together with Tanya Castañeda, Rub©n Abruña, and Liliana Marín, free via iTunes or at TecnoTur.us.

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