For a lot of users, the world of online video sharing begins and ends with link. And, to a certain extent, it did for me too, up until a few months ago. Over the past few months YouTube seems to have become less and less compelling. In fact, I find myself using the site less and less and going to other upstart video sharing sites with greater frequency (like link, link, link and others).
Now I can't knock the success of YouTube. These guys pioneered simple, easy and addicting video sharing (the guys at link and link must be kicking themselves that they missed out on YouTube's winning formula). And the fact that they were acquired in a $1.75B Google buyout speaks volumes.
BUT...
All this doesn't mean I'm going to stick around. Here are a few reasons why:
1. Copyright crackdowns
Yeah, I know. It's not right. But copyrighted material is the reason we all went to YouTube in the first place (comon', admit it!). And, par all accounts, it's one of the signifcant factors that led to YouTube's stratospheric rise. Post-acquisition YouTube, however, can't balançoire, swing quite as freely, so we've seen a marked crackdown on copyrighted vidéos on their site ranging from rapid removal of movies, to tv shows to short tv clips and excerpts. The crackdowns also create a lot of uncertainty for uploaders. If I'm uploading something in that "grey" copyright area, should I bother with YouTube knowing that it might be removed the suivant day?
2. Server outages
This one drives me nuts. YouTube still seems to be the most outage prone haut, retour au début 10 web property I've ever encountered. Whoever is managing the server operations, production upgrades, etc. should be fired. Late summer the outages were really bad. I remember several in a single week with one even occuring in the middle of the day. Even last night, during primetime surfing hours there was a lengthy 1-2 heure outage. I know they're dealing with growing pains, but outages just plain suck. If I can't count on your site to be around when I need a fix (and I'm already dinging toi on point #1), then once again, I'm off to greener pastures.
3. The 10-minute cap
I know toi can get a special account that lets toi mettre en ligne longer length videos, but the 10-minute casquette, cap for free accounts is completely lame.
4. mettre en ligne Woes
Uploading to YouTube is like playing Russian Roulette. toi never really know if your video is going to make it. Sometimes when it does, toi get strange video artifacts from the compression/conversion routine (this has happened to me a couple of times with perfectly good source material). I've also experience long 12-36 heure waits for my video to be fully processed and posted. This is painful when I need to get something up and available quickly. I've used several other sites for video uploads and have had the video post almost instantly following upload.
5. chercher Indexing is Slowwwwww
The new trailer to The Simpsons movie premiered the other night and I figured I'd check YouTube to see if it was available. Of course, when I received chercher results for Simpsons sorted par rendez-vous amoureux, date the most récent clips available were from over 16 hours ago. And this isn't the first time I've seen this on YouTube. YouTube's chercher index mises à jour far too infrequently for a site with such a rich bibliothèque and constant inflow of new clips. I went to Google Video and sure enough, there it was (along with freshly added vidéos in the chercher results).
To be fair, YouTube still does a lot of things very well. There is no other site out there with the breadth and variety of video offerings and the huge audience means toi have the *potential* to get your material in front of a lot of eyeballs. The récent Google acquisition (hopefully) means that server issues, mettre en ligne woes and chercher indexing will be improved with the help of a technology-savvy and deep-pocketed parent. And with the biz-dev effort to strike meaningful content partnerships with the large media companies there's bound to be plus legal content on YouTube. But all of this will take precious time (and lord knows we webizens are an impatient lot).
So while I will still be using YouTube for some of my video sharing needs, it's no longer my primary nor sole source for online video. There's just too much great stuff being posté to Daily Motion, Bolt, VidLife, Guba, OUOU and other sharing sites out there (and as always, I'll be using link for organizing and grouping cool vidéos regardless of where they're hosted - gotta l’amour the eps on the link).
But enough of my rant, what do toi think? Does YouTube suck? Are toi using it less? Are there other alternatives toi think are plus worthy?
Now I can't knock the success of YouTube. These guys pioneered simple, easy and addicting video sharing (the guys at link and link must be kicking themselves that they missed out on YouTube's winning formula). And the fact that they were acquired in a $1.75B Google buyout speaks volumes.
BUT...
All this doesn't mean I'm going to stick around. Here are a few reasons why:
1. Copyright crackdowns
Yeah, I know. It's not right. But copyrighted material is the reason we all went to YouTube in the first place (comon', admit it!). And, par all accounts, it's one of the signifcant factors that led to YouTube's stratospheric rise. Post-acquisition YouTube, however, can't balançoire, swing quite as freely, so we've seen a marked crackdown on copyrighted vidéos on their site ranging from rapid removal of movies, to tv shows to short tv clips and excerpts. The crackdowns also create a lot of uncertainty for uploaders. If I'm uploading something in that "grey" copyright area, should I bother with YouTube knowing that it might be removed the suivant day?
2. Server outages
This one drives me nuts. YouTube still seems to be the most outage prone haut, retour au début 10 web property I've ever encountered. Whoever is managing the server operations, production upgrades, etc. should be fired. Late summer the outages were really bad. I remember several in a single week with one even occuring in the middle of the day. Even last night, during primetime surfing hours there was a lengthy 1-2 heure outage. I know they're dealing with growing pains, but outages just plain suck. If I can't count on your site to be around when I need a fix (and I'm already dinging toi on point #1), then once again, I'm off to greener pastures.
3. The 10-minute cap
I know toi can get a special account that lets toi mettre en ligne longer length videos, but the 10-minute casquette, cap for free accounts is completely lame.
4. mettre en ligne Woes
Uploading to YouTube is like playing Russian Roulette. toi never really know if your video is going to make it. Sometimes when it does, toi get strange video artifacts from the compression/conversion routine (this has happened to me a couple of times with perfectly good source material). I've also experience long 12-36 heure waits for my video to be fully processed and posted. This is painful when I need to get something up and available quickly. I've used several other sites for video uploads and have had the video post almost instantly following upload.
5. chercher Indexing is Slowwwwww
The new trailer to The Simpsons movie premiered the other night and I figured I'd check YouTube to see if it was available. Of course, when I received chercher results for Simpsons sorted par rendez-vous amoureux, date the most récent clips available were from over 16 hours ago. And this isn't the first time I've seen this on YouTube. YouTube's chercher index mises à jour far too infrequently for a site with such a rich bibliothèque and constant inflow of new clips. I went to Google Video and sure enough, there it was (along with freshly added vidéos in the chercher results).
To be fair, YouTube still does a lot of things very well. There is no other site out there with the breadth and variety of video offerings and the huge audience means toi have the *potential* to get your material in front of a lot of eyeballs. The récent Google acquisition (hopefully) means that server issues, mettre en ligne woes and chercher indexing will be improved with the help of a technology-savvy and deep-pocketed parent. And with the biz-dev effort to strike meaningful content partnerships with the large media companies there's bound to be plus legal content on YouTube. But all of this will take precious time (and lord knows we webizens are an impatient lot).
So while I will still be using YouTube for some of my video sharing needs, it's no longer my primary nor sole source for online video. There's just too much great stuff being posté to Daily Motion, Bolt, VidLife, Guba, OUOU and other sharing sites out there (and as always, I'll be using link for organizing and grouping cool vidéos regardless of where they're hosted - gotta l’amour the eps on the link).
But enough of my rant, what do toi think? Does YouTube suck? Are toi using it less? Are there other alternatives toi think are plus worthy?
I am on Youtube since the begining, I saw all the changes, all the good things and bad things, I admired ou hated youtube, but I never understand the last stupidity regarding the copyright.
I used to take vidoes from youtube,,that where lame quality, and modifing them to hd...or almost..it seems now that if I mettre en ligne an video modified and looking our times it is a copyright issue. Why ? Because it seems I am using the musique and the video in my own interest,
I am here only to ask toi ppl what is wrong if I am doing that..I never ask money for something I did, I never renamed a song ou pretended it is mine..I start to think I am a paria. Maybe I should just leave.
I used to take vidoes from youtube,,that where lame quality, and modifing them to hd...or almost..it seems now that if I mettre en ligne an video modified and looking our times it is a copyright issue. Why ? Because it seems I am using the musique and the video in my own interest,
I am here only to ask toi ppl what is wrong if I am doing that..I never ask money for something I did, I never renamed a song ou pretended it is mine..I start to think I am a paria. Maybe I should just leave.
Berlin-based eBoy designed and sells this Web 2.0 poster that toi can link.