Ready for its closeup: iMovie for iPhone 4 is here — from MacLife.com by J.R. Bookwalter

iMovie for iPhone

After being introduced during his keynote address at WWDC 2010 earlier this month, Apple CEO Steve Jobs quipped that iMovie for iPhone will be available alongside the iPhone 4 “if we approve it.” And approve it they did — iMovie is ready to rock your new iPhone 4.

Apple’s App Store elves were busy overnight in preparation of Thursday’s iPhone 4 launch, including the release of iMovie for iPhone. The new app promises to complement the new handset’s 720p HD movies, allowing you powerful editing tools in the palm of your hand.

From Apple:

Make beautiful HD movies anywhere with iMovie, the fun, feature-rich video editing app for iPhone 4. Create a video postcard of your day at the beach and publish it to the web — without ever leaving your spot in the sand. Or make a movie of your child’s birthday party and send it to your parents — while the party is in full swing. With iMovie…

From DSC:
The ability to record and edit video on the fly presents some interesting applications for mobile learning, don’t you think?

Collaboration tools replace business travel – Denise Deveau, Financial Post
‘Anyone can dial in from any location’

Software-based Web-conferencing tools won't leave you stranded when volcanic ash grounds your flight

Software-based Web-conferencing tools won’t leave you stranded when volcanic ash grounds your flight
Photograph by: Cisco Canada Handout, Cisco Canada Handout

Adobe Flash Player 10.1 arrives — from webmonkey by Michael Calore

After spending many months on development and beta testing, Adobe has released the latest version of its Flash Player.

You can download Flash Player 10.1 for Mac, Windows and Linux at Adobe’s website. You’ll need to shut down all of your browsers while it installs. There’s a version of Flash Player 10.1 coming for Android, but it won’t be ready until later this summer. A beta version is available in the Android Marketplace if you want to test it out.

This release is significant for a number of reasons…

InfoComm 2010: Rich media driving the ‘Evolution of the Network,’ Cisco exec declares — from The Journal

“Just looking at what’s going on on networks around the world, it’s incredible. Traffic is literally exploding on networks,” de Beer told InfoComm attendees. “[Networks of the past were built] around data and [were] optimized for Web traffic. In just two or three years from now, when 90 percent of traffic is video, those networks will have to look fundamentally different.”

De Beer is predictably bullish on video and, especially, telepresence. Earlier this quarter Cisco completed a $3.3 billion buyout of videoconferencing and telepresence solutions provider Tandberg to help it stake a claim in what Cisco has estimated to be a $34 billion market for collaborative technologies.

He pointed to a future for collaboration that make it easier for users to create and manipulate rich media and for IT departments to deliver these technologies while also cutting back on the need for end-user support.

He added: “When it comes to rich human interactions, being able to easily create, find, share, consume, and manage content is very important. And we believe the network, what we now term as ‘medianet,’ which you should think of as the evolution of the network that is ready for rich media,… will play a very important part.”

New Dimension Media provides education, a second chance to over 1,200 “at risk” Illinois students — from eSchoolNews.com

New Dimention Media -- great for at risk students!

Founded in 1978, New Dimension Media, a division of Questar, Inc., is the premier producer and distributor of original core curriculum media content created for K-12 classrooms. NDM programs have won over 100 of the industry’s most prestigious honors, including the CINE Golden Eagle and the Golden Apple. NDM content is used in over 100,000 schools around the country. More…

(Credit: Apple)
Original posting from CNET.com:
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Online video continues to grow -- from Pew

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Learn Creative Suite 5 on Adobe TV

Deliver innovative ideas in print, web, interactive and mobile. Learn the new features and how to get started with all CS5 products on the How To channel on Adobe TV.   Watch now

Android beats iPhone to the punch with video calling

Adobe adds HTML5 creation tools to Dreamweaver — from webmonkey.com by Michael Calore

Dreamweaver CS5

SAN FRANCISCO — Adobe will begin shipping a package of HTML5 web design tools for Dreamweaver, the company says.

The HTML5 Pack for Dreamweaver will available for download on Adobe Labs some time on Wednesday. It will be a free download for anyone who owns Dreamweaver Creative Suite 5, and Adobe will roll it into an automatic update for Dreamweaver once the add-on pack has been thoroughly tested.

The add-on pack gives Dreamweaver CS5 the ability to provide code hints for HTML5 elements and CSS3 styles when building pages in the text-based Code View window. Adobe is also adding a few starter layouts for people building HTML5 pages from scratch. More layouts will be added later.

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Google introduces new Web video standard, splits industry — from cnn.com by Seth Weintraub
Google today announced the release of VP8, a new video codec that it envisions will pave the way for the future of video on the Web.

From DSC:
Great — that’s just what the world of digital video needs — another codec! Here’s yet another “standard” to make the chaotic mess even messier. Geez.

You know…I’m a big fan of Apple (as you can probably tell).  However, I’m not sure this pissing match between Jobs and Schmidt is helping or hurting the customer bases out there (perhaps both at times). It just seems like their egos are huge and they’re constantly trying to battle it out…trying to out perform the other. Product for product.  Service for service. And now, codec for codec.

SchmidtandJobs2

I wonder what conversation(s) took place in the Apple boardroom that got Eric so worked up to go head-to-head w/ Jobs. Or did Eric see the $$/opportunities..er writing on the wall? Or did Steve get ticked off at Eric for some other reason? Who knows. I just hope this can settle down a bit. I don’t know…maybe this competition will only benefit consumers. But in the case of the codec here, it hurts developers and designers; and, like the title states, it splits the industry.

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Where on the Web is HTML5?– from Webmonkey.com by Scott Gilbertson

…HTML5 is much more than a hopeful successor to Flash’s web-video crown. In fact, watching a video without a plug-in only scratches the surface of what HTML5 offers.

HTML5 is the next generation of HTML, the language of the web. More than just a markup syntax like its predecessors, HTML5 provides a new set of features designed to make modern web applications work more like desktop applications.

The key features in the HTML5 stack: native video and audio playback, animated graphics, geolocation, hardware acceleration for in-browser events, the ability to keep using a browser-based app even if your internet connection drops, the ability to store application data on your local machine, dragging and dropping of files from the desktop to the browser, and the addition of semantic markup on pages, making them easier for both machines and humans to understand.

Also see:

Google rolls out new developer tools — from CNN.com

Google kicked off its annual developers’ conference on Wednesday by introducing tools to help people build web-based applications, while making a strong push for HTML5, the next generation of the code on which the web is built.

In a wide-ranging keynote, Google engineers and guest speakers emphasized the potential of the web as an open-source platform for developers to build apps and reduce the dependence on plug-ins — small external programs, such as the Flash media player, that can make browsers more useful.

“The future of the web is HTML5,” Sundar Pichai, a Google vice president of project management, told the audience at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco, California.

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