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Digital Photos, Movies, & Music Gigabook For Dummies

Streaming Your Digital Video


Adapted From: Digital Photos, Movies, & Music Gigabook For Dummies

Doing stuff on the Internet usually means downloading files. For example, when you visit a Web page, files that contain all the text and pictures on that Web page are first downloaded to your computer and then your Web-browser program opens them. Likewise, if someone emails you a picture or a document with yucky work stuff, your email program must download the file before you can open it.

Downloading files takes time, especially if they are big video files. You sit there and you wait. And wait. Finally the movie file is finished downloading and starts to play, but by then you've left the room for a cup of coffee again. But software designers are crafty folk, and they've devised methods of getting around the problem of waiting a long time for downloads. They have come up with the following basic solutions:

  • Streaming media: Rather than downloading a file to your hard drive, streaming files can be played as the data streams through your modem. It works kind of like a radio, where "data" streams through in the form of radio waves, and that data is immediately played through the radio's speakers as it is received.
    With streaming audio or video, no file is saved on your hard drive. To truly stream your movies to other people, your movie files need to be on a special streaming server on the Web. There is a remote possibility that your Internet service provider offers a streaming media server, but most service providers do not.
  • Progressive download: Newer video-player programs can "fake" streaming pretty effectively. Rather than receiving a movie signal that's broadcast over the Internet like a radio wave, viewers simply click a link to open the movie as if they were downloading the file. In fact, they are downloading the file. But as soon as enough of the file has been received, the player program can start to play it. The program doesn't need to wait for the whole file to download before it starts to play. Current versions of QuickTime, RealPlayer, and Windows Media Player all support progressive download.
    The really cool thing about progressive download is that you don't need any special kind of server to host the files. Just upload the video file to any server that has enough room to fit it in.

Many people now refer to progressive download video files as "streaming video," and because the two formats basically function the same way, why not? The good news is that you don't need to do anything special to stream (or progressively download, or whatever you want to call it) your movies to your audience. Just output your movie in QuickTime, RealVideo, or Windows Media Video format, and let the player programs do the rest.

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