Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Realtime 3D video

Update: Realtime 3D for you too!

Read http://hackaday.com/2009/12/30/update-realtime-3d-for-you-too/


3D Capture at 60fps from Kyle McDonald on Vimeo.

[Kyle McDonald] has kept himself busy working on 3D scanning in realtime. He’s posted a writeup that takes us through the concepts, tools, and assembly of a DIY 3d scanning camera. You should remember a preview of this method posted earlier this month, but now it’s time to build your own. You’ll need a camera, a projector, and some open source software to process the image data. Using these simple tools, [Kyle] turned out much better video than before. Take a look after the break to see his results from scanning at 60 fps using a PS3 Eye. The trick to this setup is getting the correct synchronization between the projector and the camera, something that could be improved with a bit of extra hacking.

Viacom Sued Google Over clips they themselves uploaded!

From techdirt.com 

Copyright maximalists who hate the DMCA's safe harbors often claim that service providers can easily tell what content is infringing and which is not. This is, in fact, a key part of the argument made by Viacom in its lawsuit against Google over YouTube. It claims that YouTube must know that the clips are infringing and should be taken down. There's just one problem: even Viacom doesn't seem to know which clips are infringing and which are not. It turns out that, among the many YouTube clips included in the lawsuit, approximately 100 were uploaded on purpose by Viacom. Yes, you read that right:

Viacom sued Google over clips it claimed were infringing, that Viacom purposely uploaded to YouTube.

That alone should show how ridiculous Viacom's claims are in this lawsuit. There is simply no way for Google to know if clips are uploaded legitimately or not. Oddly, however, the court has now allowed Viacom to withdraw those clips, but lawyers like Eric Goldman are questioning how this isn't a Rule 11 violation for frivolous or improper litigation. But, more importantly, it demonstrates that even Viacom has no idea which clips are infringing and which are authorized. Given that, how can it possibly say that it's reasonable for Google to know?

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Why Indie Directors Give Movies Away Free Online

Read the article here: Why Indie Directors Give Movies Away Free Online

Vuorensola released Star Wreck in 2005 online for free. Seven hundred thousand copies were downloaded in the first week alone; to date, the total has now reached 9 million.


"Releasing it for free is just good marketing," he says. "Whether it's through piracy or distribution your film is out there on the Internet, so we decided to harness this." And he has managed to make quite a bit of money out of it. Online sales of merchandise — including T-shirts and collector's editions of the DVD — have generated $430,000 on a film that only cost $21,500 to make, Vuorensola says. He and his team have also now secured a proper distribution deal with Revolver Entertainment in the U.S. and Britain.

HP computers are racist?

The face tracking feature of the HP web cam does not seen to recognize or track black faces.



This is awkward. It appears that HP's new webcams, which have facial-tracking software, can't recognize black faces, as evidenced in the above video. HP has responded:
We are working with our partners to learn more. The technology we use is built on standard algorithms that measure the difference in intensity of contrast between the eyes and the upper cheek and nose. We believe that the camera might have difficulty "seeing" contrast in conditions where there is insufficient foreground lighting.

Others seem to have had more success. 
http://www.thegrio.com/2009/12/hp-face-tracking-webcams-arent-racist.php

Friday, December 25, 2009

Using TV to exapand the reach of High Speed Internet

From the San Jose Mercury:
Looking to expand the reach of high-speed Internet, federal regulators look to the television.

WASHINGTON — Looking to pare the shrinking but substantial number of Americans without high-speed Internet, federal officials are considering taking advantage of a technology that practically everyone has at home: the TV.

The Federal Communications Commission wants to revamp the market for set-top boxes — the channel-switching devices that cable and satellite subscribers typically lease for $5 or $10 a month — and equip the machines with Internet-surfing capability.
The thinking is simple: 99 percent of households have a television, and 76 percent have a personal computer. So why not piggyback on the TV to extend the reach of high-speed broadband, which lawmakers and regulators see as a necessity for anyone to function in the 21st century economy?
If the commission is successful, it could usher in an era in which people use a single gadget to watch cable shows, download movies from the Web and surf the Internet — all on their TVs.
"If you had a set-top box that can access traditional cable but also get to the Internet, more people could start to see the value of having broadband," said Matt Wood, associate director of Media Access Project, a public interest law firm.
But beyond pushing high-speed Internet into more homes, advocates say the FCC's effort could spark a transformation of the basic set-top cable box into a high-tech, multiuse machine, much like the cell phone has been revolutionized by the BlackBerry and the iPhone. "We've seen a steady march of TVs and separate boxes that provide Web-based video," such as the TiVo and Roku devices, said Brian Markwalter, vice president of technology and standards for the Consumer Electronics Association. "When you can integrate that with the other pieces you're paying for" — cable or satellite programming — "it will spark all sorts of creativity."
The FCC has also signaled that it wants consumers to be able to use the same set-top box for any type of TV service — cable, satellite or fiber-optic — allowing them to switch from one carrier to another without obtaining a major new piece of equipment from the provider. That could spur more people to buy set-top boxes instead of leasing them.
"It's time "... to consider if there are better ways to open the set-top box market to greater competition and innovation," William Lake, the FCC's media bureau chief, said at a public meeting recently. To drive that point home, FCC officials pointed out that there currently are 14 set-top boxes that consumers can buy at stores vs. nearly 900 types of mobile phones.
The FCC is a long way from imposing any new rules for set-top boxes; this month it sought public comment on ways to spur "video device innovation," the initial step in what would be an extensive set of proceedings. But it is part of a broader undertaking of the commission under its new chairman, Julius Genachowski, to lower barriers for people to access video and other offerings over the Internet.
The effort could pick up steam with the commission's expected February release of its national broadband plan, which will propose strategies to make high-speed Internet available to the roughly one-third of American homes that lack it.
This would not be the first time the federal government has gotten involved in the set-top box realm. Prodded by Congress and the FCC in the mid-90s, the cable industry developed technology that allows customers to switch from one cable provider to another using the same set-top box. But that effort is widely perceived as a failure, in part because of shortcomings in the technology and in part because of the emergence over the past decade of noncable video service providers such as satellite and fiber-optic.
The stakes for cable and other video service providers of any potential FCC initiative are high. Making it easier for consumers to get Web-based video presumably would mean one less reason for them to pay for expensive channel packages.
In a filing to the FCC this month, the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, which represents cable firms, said it supports the commission's look at why a vibrant retail market for set-top boxes hasn't developed. At the same time, the cable group questioned whether a market exists for set-top boxes that could cost hundreds of dollars and risk becoming obsolete as technology advances. The group cautioned that a mandate to require Web-enabled set-top boxes could substantially increase costs for consumers.
"To add full Internet capability to even the newest generation of set-top boxes would require more processing power, a browser, PC plug-ins (Silverlight, Adobe, etc.), media content protection clients, parental controls, virus and malware protection, and a remote keyboard and mouse, among other features," the association stated in its filing. "Most of the cost would be borne by the millions of (cable, satellite and fiber-optic) subscribers who already have a computer and who may have no interest in having Internet functionality added to their television sets."
Indeed, past attempts to integrate TV and the Internet — including WebTV and Apple TV — never gained much traction. Whether an all-in-one device that surfs the Web, accesses online video and broadcasts TV programming would have more appeal is an open question.
Critics suspect cable companies are raising doubts just to protect their turf.
"The incumbents are always going to raise excuses why it can't work," said Matthew Zinn, senior vice president and general counsel of Alviso-based TiVo. "The cable operators want to maintain a walled garden and keep consumers captive." 

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Insurgents Intercepting Predator Video? No Problem

From Wired.com: Insurgents Intercepting Predator Video? No Problem
by Legendary Security expert, Bruce Schneier

 Contrast this with the additional risks if you encrypt: A soldier in the field doesn't have access to the real-time video because of a key management failure; a UAV can't be quickly deployed to a new area because the keys aren't in place; we can't share the video information with our allies because we can't give them the keys; most soldiers can't use this technology because they don't have the right clearances. Given this risk analysis, not encrypting the video is almost certainly the right decision.

Reverse engineering off-brand media players

From Hack-a-day:
Reverse engineering off-brand media players

[Marcan] picked up this device on the cheap and is working to reverse engineer the controller. This media player is an off-brand Chinese model that can be had for the low-low price of $33.97 with free shipping. That’s worth it just to scavenge the parts for other projects, but the challenge here is to hack the controller because a datasheet was never produced for it. Warm up your logic analyzer, check out the wiki, and you can be pounding away at this ARM926EJ-S based system in no time.
The call to arms comes from [Marcan's] blog. You may remember him as the guy who is working to solidify iPhone sync in Linux or… what else did he do?  Oh yeah, he had this little project called the Wii Homebrew Channel a while ago. Get involved and you can learn from some folks who really know what they’re doing.

VLC Team Announces Video Editor In the Works

I am looking forward to this.  Hope the use the SDL Library, then cross ports should be easy. 

From Slashdot: VLC Team Announces Video Editor In the Works on Wednesday December 23, @04:11PM

"Despite news that VLC might not have anyone to work on the Mac release, Lifehacker brings word of a video editor that the VLC team is working on dubbed VideoLAN Media Creator. It hasn't been released yet (git clone git://github.com/VLMC/vlmc.git) but a pre-release is due out soon."

How to post videos online to a dozen places in just a few steps

From my buddy Mayur:
      How I post videos online to a dozen places in just a few steps

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

BLOBbox

TVBLOB LAUNCHES INTEGRATED SOFTWARE-SERVICE TV PLATFORM
IN THE HEART OF THE CONSUMER ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY

Opens Regional Asian-Pacific Office in Japan

Milan,  22 December 2008 – TVBLOB™ (www.tvblob.com), a software and services development company with a TV-centric platform that brings the power of the Web to TV, without a PC, announced the opening of an Asian-Pacific division and the appointment of Tre Zimmerman as VP Sales & Marketing. Targeting the Consumer Electronics industry, Mr. Zimmerman will bring TVBLOB's extensive software platform and integrated backend services to the heart of CE, making possible a new generation of hybrid TV - Internet devices and enabling new television business models that follow the proven successes of the Web.

Through a new kind of Internet set-top box called BLOBbox™, TVBLOB gives consumers new TV possibilities including blended DVB-T and WebTV access; HD video podcast subscriptions with automated BitTorrent® downloads; access to Web services such as YouTube®, Picasa®, and Miro®; consolidated PVR, time-shifting, and video archiving functionalities; and even TV-to-TV  content sharing and video communications, all using standard televisions and broadband connections.

For the CE industry, the TVBLOB software platform that underlies BLOBbox is already integrated on major chipsets and enables the fastest time-to-market for next generation TV devices. It offers several advantages including a fully W3C-compliant, Java-based Web browser able to support all current TV standards including MHP/DVB, Blue Ray, and Thru2way (previously OCAP); a range of Javascript extensions allowing developers to leverage the television platform

features; Client-side services including File transfer, Podcast, and BitTorrent® engines; Backend Services including box management, events recording, NAT traversal, and single user sign-on; as well as BLOBkit™ development resources and a Development Community (called “the BLOBforge™ “)to accelerate the creation of new TV services without a middleman, so that anyone can realize the next killer application on TV and become the next Jeff Bezos or Mark Zuckerberg.

“The appointment of Tre represents a critical step in our growth, as the heart of the CE lies in Asia-Pacific," said Fabrizio Caffarelli, founder and CEO of TVBLOB. "We have envisioned a new television world for sometime now and consumers expect this to come from CE. His notable experience in this market, managerial capacity, and drive are well adapted to our objective to work with CE manufacturers to bring forward a new range of Consumer Electronic devices for a new world of TV."

Mr. Zimmerman’s principal function will be to launch TVBLOB Asian-Pacific commercial operations and develop business with CE manufacturers, content producers and service providers. He has been in the digital technology industry for over 10 years specializing in mobile media & emerging technologies. Over his career, Mr. Zimmerman has served in a variety of senior management and corporate development positions at Nero, Extreme Media Pte., SID Information Technologies, and Gateway KK.

The TVBLOB Asian-Pacific office is located in Yamato-shi, Kanagawa, Japan. For more information, please visit www.tvblob.com.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Rasterbator

Rasterbator creates huge, rasterized images from any picture. Upload an image, print the resulting multi-page pdf file and assemble the pages into extremely cool looking poster up to 20 meters in size.

http://homokaasu.org/rasterbator/

Thursday, December 17, 2009

BBC Lowers HDTV Bitrate; Users Notice

BBC High Definition service draws complaints
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8415636.stm

From Slashdot
http://news.slashdot.org/story/09/12/17/187248/BBC-Lowers-HDTV-Bitrate-Users-Notice
"According to an article on the BBC website, BBC HD lowered the bitrate of their broadcasts by almost 50% and are surprised that users noticed. From the article: 'The replacement encoders work at a bitrate of 9.7Mbps (megabits per second), while their predecessors worked at 16Mbps, the standard for other broadcasters.' The BBC claims 'We did extensive testing on the new encoders which showed that they could produce pictures at the same or even better quality than the old encoders ...' I got a good laugh off of this, but is it really possible to get better quality from a lower bitrate?"

Doom-Like Video Surveillance For Ports In Development

From Slashdot:

Doom-Like Video Surveillance For Ports In Development
"A research and development group down under is working to develop an advanced video surveillance system for ports around the world that uses video superimposed onto a 3D map. With 16-megapixel high-definition cameras on a distributed (cabled) network and a proprietary system written in a variety of languages (C++, Python, SQL, etc.), the group from NICTA is aiming to allow security teams at the Port of Brisbane — which is 110km long — to monitor shipping movements, cargo and people. By scrolling along a 3D map, the security teams can click on a location and then get a real-time video feed superimposed onto the map. Authorities from around the world with the right permissions can then access the same system. The main difference from regular surveillance systems is the ability to switch views without having to know camera numbers/locations and the one screen view."

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Lack of Manpower May Kill VLC For Mac

From SlashDot:

Lack of Manpower May Kill VLC For Mac

"The Video Lan dev team has recently come forward with a notice that the number of active developers for the project's MacOS X releases has dropped to zero, prompting a halt in the release schedule. There is now a disturbing possibility that support for Mac will be dropped as of 1.1.0. As the most versatile and user-friendly solution for bridging the video compatibility gap between OS X and windows, this will be a terrible loss for the mac community. There is still hope, however, if the right volunteers come forward."

Live Flash Streaming - CoLo & Hosting

http://www.simplecdn.com/pricing

Live! Buckets (Live Flash Streaming)
Plan Name Monthly Cost Max Concurrent Live Viewers
Small $59 per month 250 Concurrent Viewers Max
Medium $99 per month 500 Concurrent Viewers Max
Large $159 per month 1,000 Concurrent Viewers Max
Huge
Most Popular! $199 per month 2,000 Concurrent Viewers Max
Huge x2 $398 per month 4,000 Concurrent Viewers Max
Huge x3 $597 per month 6,000 Concurrent Viewers Max
Huge x4 $796 per month 8,000 Concurrent Viewers Max
Unlimited monthly bandwidth included. No live stream bitrate restrictions (stream HD if you like).
Stream from two or more Flash Media Encoder instances from a single plan.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Ask Slashdot: What Is the State of Linux Security DVR Software?

From Slashdot
StonyCreekBare writes "I am wondering what slashdotters have to offer on the idea of Linux based security systems, especially DVR software. I am aware of Zoneminder, but wonder what else is out there? Are there applications that will not only monitor video cameras, but motion sensors and contact closure alarms? What is state of the art in this area, and how do the various Linux platforms stack up in comparison to dedicated embedded solutions? Will these 'play nice' with other software, such as Asterisk, and Misterhouse? Can one server host three or four services applications of this nature, assuming CPU/memory/disk resources are sufficient?"

I also have a little written on this at dvr.videotechnology.com

Monday, December 14, 2009

Cellphones to be main channel for TV & video?

Just some interesting articles here.

Cellphones poised to be main channel for TV, video

Mobile operators, broadcasters and content providers are looking at mobile TV as a vehicle to drive revenue and mobilize their brands. However, simply delivering TV content over the mobile device is not enough to drive adoption.


Alcatel-Lucent provided end to end interactive mobile TV solution to Optimus for Euro 2008 mobile TV coverage and live music concerts in Portugal
Paris, September 10, 2008 — Alcatel-Lucent (Euronext Paris and NYSE:ALU) today announce that it provided Optimus, the mobile operator owned by the Portuguese Sonaecom group, with two turnkey end-to-end interactive mobile TV solutions, which enabled Optimus to offer extensive mobile TV coverage of Euro 2008 --the UEFA European Football Championship series-- and live coverage of local concerts.


Filmmakers, advertisers rush to create content for cell phone screens

Automated 3D Photography Machine

This just came in my E-mail (spam-ishly), it looked kinda cool. Wonder how much it costs?

Photosimile 5000



-----

Increase your image in 2010! Ortery's line of photography automation tools are the easiest, fastest and most efficient professional still, 360 and 3D imaging solutions available today. Give us a call or reply to this email if you require additional information or have further questions. We look forward to hearing from you.
Happy Holidays from the team at Ortery Technologies!

949-859-5580 - Ortery Technologies USA - 8 Hammond Ste 112, Irvine CA - www.Ortery.com


 Click on above image to enlarge.

New CCTV Cameras from EONBOOM

Hello John,

How are you?

This is alinna contacting you.

The following is our new designs, you can enjoy them with your readers.



If any questions, please feel free to contact me.

Have a nice day.

alinna

Eonboom Electronics Limited

MSN: alinna@eonboom.com

Skype: alinna.ok

"Loud Commercial" Legislation Proposed In US Congress

From Slashdot: "Loud Commercial" Legislation Proposed In US Congress

"Have you ever caught yourself running for the volume control when a TV commercial comes on? Congresswoman Anna Eshoo (D-CA) has, and is submitting legislation that would require TV commercials in the US to stay at volume levels similar to the programming they are associated with. From the article: 'Right now, the government doesn't have much say in the volume of TV ads. It's been getting complaints ever since televisions began proliferating in the 1950s. But the FCC concluded in 1984 there was no fair way to write regulations controlling the "apparent loudness" of commercials.'"

Friday, December 11, 2009

Voice over and narration

This guys pretty good.
---------------------------------
Hello John,

My name is Duane Lawrence. I saw that you posted a video on your channel: SBG Lags Holographic Eye Adaptive Display HEAD.

I'm just doing a little networking. I want to let you know that I provided the voice over for the video. If you or anyone you know needs voice over for a project please let me know.

You can see other You Tube posts of my work here: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=duane+lawrence


.... and my website hompage: www.duanelawrenceonline.com

Thanks,

Duane

Friday, December 04, 2009

code-named: Keychest from Disney and Apple.

Disney Touts a Way to Ditch the DVD - Wall Street Journal
Purchase of a 'Keychest' Movie Would Allow On-Demand Viewing From Multiple Devices
The technology, code-named Keychest, could contribute to a shift in what it means for a consumer to own a movie or a TV show, by redefining ownership as access rights, not physical possession. 

This is in direct competition with DECE (Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem).

Supposedly, Keychest will use cloud-computing coupled with a physical product (e.g. a DVD), that will only require the person to pay for the rights so that it could be watched on any device.


"Dad has a Zune, Mom has an iPod, there's a Mac and a PC at home and a Roku box; right now, those devices don't talk to one another," the insider said. "We intend to blend those worlds."  from the Hollywood Reporter

Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem (or DECE)

Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem (or DECE)


based around a "rights locker" which will amount to a website where digital purchases will be stored -- we assume this is where VeriSign fits in.  (from article link below)

http://www.decellc.com/

DECE founding members include: Alcatel Lucent, Best Buy, Cisco, Comcast Corporation, Deluxe Digital, Fox Entertainment Group, HP, Intel, Lionsgate, Microsoft Corporation, NBC Universal, Panasonic, Paramount Pictures, Royal Philips Electronics, Samsung, Sony Corporation, Toshiba, VeriSign Inc., and Warner Bros. Entertainment.


Disney and Apple are absent from the list and appears to have allied to set up a completing service called Keychest.



Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem, the DRM of the future?
http://www.engadget.com/2008/09/13/digital-entertainment-content-ecosystem-the-drm-of-the-future/

Best Buy - CinemaNow to stream first-run DVDs

Good article:
Best Buy partnering with CinemaNow to stream first-run DVDs to 'all web-connected devices sold' 11/3/2009

The idea here is simple: pay once for a DVD then eventually be able to play it on any device be it a television, Blu-ray player, PC, smartphone or some other connected device.

Best Buy already announced a streaming Netflix deal and partnerships with TiVo and Napster that will be launching early next year as well.

Hulu Doesn't play well with others.

Currently most high end Blue Ray players can stream content from Netflix, Blockbuster, YouTube and Pandora. Some also offer CinemaNow.

One giant in streaming media web sites is missing Hulu.

On Settopbox devices Sling supports Hulu but Roku does not.

Google Video, Sling.com and Bing.com are the few that seems to have Hulu distribution agreements.  

Boxee, TV.com and Rippol all have been forced to remove Hulu content from their sites and applications.


Roku Channel Store Opens, Hulu Is a No-Show  Nov 22,2009
Pandora, Facebook Photos, Revision3, Mediafly, TWiT, blip.tv, Flickr, FrameChannel, Motionbox and MobileTribe, Netflix, MLB.tv and Amazon channels all now available on the Roku player

In Hulu's note to Rippol, the representative stated that "the only way for a company to legitimately embed our videos the way you do is to enter into a structured distribution relationship with us. However, we are currently entering into these very selectively."


According to Hulu:  Don't embed, Link instead


Bing Brings Hulu, YouTube and MSN Video
Describing it as a "new unified online video destination," Microsoft says Bing Videos will combine results from ABC, YouTube, Hulu and MSN Videos. Of course, such a product calls for a new homepage, which Microsoft has dutifully rolled out for Bing Videos.

Sling.com Isn’t Really A Hulu Competitor, But Does Offer Compelling Reasons To Make It Your Go-To Web Portal
SlingMedia run Sling.com, a video portal similar to Hulu.com but with a few extra benefits.
NBC and Fox content is actually served from Hulu.  Sling and Hulu partnered up to bring that content to Sling users, so you’ll still see the Hulu logo and see the Hulu commercials.


Hulu is streaming using Adobe's Secure RTMP protocol.

Appian.com software can capture Hulu Video.

New Plugin from Google lets you Stream Hulu and Netflix videos with Frontrow 2/09



Understudy is a plug in for Mac OS X interface Front Row. Users can subscribe to multiple feeds and watch from Hulu, Netflix, YouTube, and the BBC iPlayer.



Email from Hulu to Rippol hours after they launched.
We saw that you launched today. We want to notify you that you are using our embeds in violation of our terms of service which state specifically that embeds are for personal, non-commercial use only. As such we will plan to block embedding from your site by 12/4.  Typically we disable embedding immediately but given that you just launched, we want to give you some time to transition. In the place of the embeds, we can offer you is a site map feed that links back to Hulu for video playback and includes several useful pieces of metadata in a feed. It includes video titles, descriptions, thumbnails, video type, duration info, season number, episode number, air date, expiration date, in addition to the video link on Hulu.com. It is updated every few hours: http://www.hulu.com/video_sitemap.index.xml

Rippol responded with they will never put ads in or around Hulu content.
Hulu responded:
Ad placement would be more relevant to the "non-commercial" part of the TOS vs. the "personal" part. While you may not plan to place ads near our content, Rippol is a commercial business in the sense that you plan to make money from the content service you create. Thus our content on your site is being used for commercial purposes, even if it is indirect (i.e. you attract users with Hulu content but only monetize other content).Note we are not singling out Rippol as we have transitioned other premium video aggregators to our site map feed.

From: Hulu Gets Ripped Out Of Rippol
When Hulu was announced in 2007, NBC Universal CEO Jeff Zucker said that Hulu would aim to have "ubiquitous distribution." The press release issued at the time said that Hulu "will actively seek agreements with a variety of additional distribution partners." The release also stated that each "distribution partner will feature the site?s content in an embedded player customized with a look and feel consistent with each site, making the offering organic to each destination."

Stats for video streaming.

Top U.S. Online Video Content providers by videos viewed
October 2009
Site
videos
% share
Google Sites
including Youtube
10,524,187,000
37.7
Hulu
855,559,000
3.1
Microsoft sites
450,957,000
1.6
Fox Interactive Media
446,396,000
1.6
Viacom Digital
407,205,000
1.5
Yahoo Sites
338,035,000
1.5
Turner Network
288,070,000
1.0
CBS Interactive
255,124,000
0.9
Facebook.com
245,422,000
0.9
ABC Television
203,512,000
0.7
Total
27,942,066,000
100.0
from comScore Video Metrix



Hulu U.S. video streams soar almost 50% in October, Google’s YouTube flat

Download flash streaming web video content.

http://www.applian.com/  record/download/rip
 

You can capture Hulu videos, record Skype calls, Record Sirius™ and XM™ Radio, download streaming video clips from Windows Media™, Real™ and Flash™ formats.



They have 2 product of interest:
Replay Capture Suite & Replay Media Catcher


With Replay Media Catcher


Download media from Flash Video, Windows Media and Wowza servers, including any site that uses the HTTP, HTTPS, MMS, RTSP, and RTMP protocols. Replay Media Catcher does not support Adobe Secure RTMP Measures.
For capturing online video, you can download videos from millions of popular places, including:
  • YouTube
  • MySpace
  • Daily Motion
  • iFilm
  • Metacafe
  • TV Show sites.
  • Movie sites.
For a complete list see http://applian.com/recording_solutions/show_RCAT.php