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Posts Tagged ‘video’

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Introducing #watchitlater: Share the Best Videos Over 5 Minutes, Save them in Pocket

August 23rd, 2012  •  By Mark

One of the interesting things about Pocket over the past two years has been the growth of video: Users are saving more of it, and YouTube is now Pocket’s most-saved domain.

As we move to new screens and new devices, we are seeing new opportunities for content. A 3-minute video is perfect for quick moments at work or on your PC. But Pocket is starting to become more accessible on TV screens—here’s how to set up Pocket with Apple TV, for instance—so we’ve started seeing a different type of video: longer clips, over 5 minutes, that we can play at home on the couch.

Just like what #longreads solved for in-depth reading, there should be a better way to discover great longform videos, so today we’re introducing #watchitlater.

Use this hashtag on Twitter, Tumblr or App.net to share your favorite online clips over 5 minutes. It can be anything: Documentaries, short and feature-length films, concerts, or university lectures and TED Talks. Anything over 5 minutes.

If we all dig hard enough, we’re bound to find some gems for everyone to save to Pocket. And be sure to follow us at @PocketHits, where we’ll share the most-saved longform videos to #watchitlater.

Happy watching!

-Mark Armstrong
Editorial Director, Pocket

 

Posted in News , video, watchitlater

How to View Pocket on Your Apple TV with AirPlay

July 31st, 2012  •  By Mark

By now you probably know that Pocket is great for saving video for later. Now, thanks to Apple’s AirPlay mirroring feature—and Apple TV—you can view Pocket and watch your saved videos on your TV.

All you need is an Apple TV and your iPhone, iPad, or a Mac with the new OS X Mountain Lion, and you can set up Pocket on your television. Here’s how:

For iPhone/iPad

1. See if your iPhone/iPad supports AirPlay.

According to Apple’s requirements, you’ll need iOS 4.3 or later.

2. Make sure your iPhone/iPad and Apple TV are on the same WiFi connection.

3. Open your Pocket app.

If you don’t already have it, download it here free. Filter your saved items to show just the videos.

4. Select a video to watch, then look for the AirPlay button in the embedded video player. Select your Apple TV from the menu.

For Mac

With Apple’s new OS X Mountain Lion, released last week, you can also use AirPlay and Apple TV to access the Pocket web app from your Mac:

1. Check to see if your Mac supports AirPlay.

AirPlay is supported on the following Mac models: iMac (Mid 2011 or newer), Mac mini (Mid 2011 or newer), MacBook Air (Mid 2011 or newer), MacBook Pro (Early 2011 or newer)

2. Select your Apple TV from the AirPlay icon in your menu bar

3. Access Pocket from your browser, and choose the video filter:

4. Click a video to start watching it—and be sure to click the full-screen button and HD when available.

Now: What to Save?

Looking for more video to save for later? Here is a small handful of channels with both short and long-form video options:

• PocketHits: Check out our own curated Twitter channel featuring the most-saved content inside Pocket. For videos you can also follow our daily picks on Vimeo and YouTube.

• Short of the Week: Handpicked short films (mostly over 5 minutes) from independent directors and producers.

• TED Talks: What’s an online video post without some intellectual and creative inspiration? TED Talks are usually about 17 minutes apiece and perfect for the TV screen.

• Devour: Devour is the best of what’s viral right now, from movie trailers to parodies and homemade productions.

• Vice Magazine: News documentaries from some of the most dangerous places in the world.

• New York Times: A growing library of video segments from the paper of record, covering news, culture, food, business and more.

We’re working hard to continue making it easy to access what you save in Pocket, and we’re excited to make your TV experience even more seamless. Happy viewing!

-Team Pocket

Posted in News , apple tv, iOS, iPad, iphone, Mac, Mountain Lion, Pocket, tv, video

Pocket’s Most-Saved Videos: Clay Christensen, bottle openers, and a real-time horror film

June 4th, 2012  •  By Mark

Every week: A handpicked collection of the most popular videos saved in Pocket. Enjoy!

–

1. “Tell” (32:47)

(Warning: Graphic) From Short of the Week, a real-time horror film by Ryan Connolly about a man who tries to get away with murder:

2. “Create a Life with Purpose” (8:20)

Author and Harvard Business School professor Clay Christensen on his new book How Will You Measure Your Life?

3. “Bottle Cap Blues” (1:58)

Don’t try most of these at home: The art of opening a beer bottle with a pizza, an iPod and your own belly button:

4. “Create” (2:09)

An animated short by Dan MacKenzie about a boy and his imagination:

5. “Perfume Desktop Disco” (1:11)

Daihei Shibata’s choreographed animated music video:

See more of our most-saved articles, videos and recipes by following @PocketHits on Twitter. You can also find us on Flipboard in the Cool Curators section.

Posted in News , data, most saved, Pocket, video

Pocket’s Most-Saved Videos: Fresh Air host Terry Gross after dark, and a search for the hipster

May 14th, 2012  •  By Mark

Every week: A handpicked collection of the most popular videos saved in Pocket. Enjoy!

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1. “Fresh Air 2″ (6:40)

What happens after Fresh Air host Terry Gross leaves work? A short film from guest Mike Birbiglia (Sleepwalk with Me), who decided to find out:

2. “The Hipster Hunt” (4:42)

A French journalism student arrives in New York to discover an English term she hadn’t heard before: “Hipster.”

3. “Swelter” (2:32)

An animated short film by Calarts student Jacob Streilein about a man, a boy, and a desperate thirst:

4. “We Are Young” (3:26)

Texas-based a cappella group Pentatonix sits on a couch and performs their beat-boxed rendition of the Fun hit:

5. “Rory Sutherland: Perspective Is Everything” (18:25)

Sutherland, vice chairman of Ogilvy Group in the U.K., on why “the circumstances of our lives may matter less than how we see them”:

See more of our most-saved articles, videos and recipes by following @PocketHits on Twitter. You can also find us on Flipboard in the Cool Curators section.

Posted in News , data, most saved, Pocket, video

Pocket’s Most-Saved Videos: The president, the veep and the beauty of Yosemite

April 30th, 2012  •  By Mark

Every week: A handpicked collection of the most popular videos saved in Pocket. Enjoy!

–

1. President Obama at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner (17:45)

The president hones his stand-up act with digs at birthers and the cast of “Glee”:

2. “Retro Bobby” (6:10)

Short film about a man and his retro toy and gaming shop:

3. “Veep” (29:18)

HBO has posted the first episode of its new comedy starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus as the vice president. (Embedding disabled.)

4. “Pointe Shoes” (5:45)

A short film from the New York City Ballet on the making of a ballerina’s shoe:

5. “Yosemite Range of Light” (4:44)

Nature time-lapse from Shawn Reeder inside Yosemite National Park:

See more of our most-saved articles, videos and recipes by following @PocketHits on Twitter. You can also find us on Flipboard in the Cool Curators section.

Posted in News , data, most saved, Pocket, popular, video

Pocket’s Most-Saved Videos: The history of Islam, the future of transportation, and stuffed animals

April 23rd, 2012  •  By Mark

Every week: A handpicked collection of the most popular videos saved in Pocket. Enjoy!

–

1. Crash Course: “Islam, the Quran, and the Five Pillars” (12:53)

John Green teaches us the history of Islam in just under 13 minutes:

2. “Following Joe” (2:09)

Two minutes of skateboarding with Joe Pease:

3. “Future.Inc” (5:00)

A sci-fi short film about the social network of the future:

4. “Dude, Where’s My Car?” (15:35)

Mark Frohnmayer at TEDx on how he has taken a gaming approach to fixing the transportation problems in our cities:

5. “Jericho” (13:08)

A grieving widower gets visited by some old (stuffed) friends:

See more of our most-saved articles, videos and recipes by following @ReadItLaterTop on Twitter. You can also find us on Flipboard in the Cool Curators section.

Posted in News , data, most saved, Pocket, video

Read It Later’s Most-Saved Videos of the Week

April 14th, 2012  •  By Mark

New every Friday: A handpicked collection of the most popular videos saved in Read It Later. Enjoy!

–

1. “Caine’s Arcade” (10:58)

The story of a boy, his homemade arcade, and the flash mob that arrived to come play with it:

2. “John Cleese on Creativity” (36:10)

The Monty Python comic legend explains who and where creativity comes from: “It is not a talent. It is a way of operating.”

3. “New CGI of How Titanic Sank” (2:42)

A recreation of the Titanic disaster on its 100th anniversary, guided by Titanic director James Cameron:

4. “Portrait of a Boxer” (2:09)

A short film by Philip Bloom about a boxer and what drives him:

5. “Rear Window Timelapse” (2:58)

A filmmaker constructs a panorama of scenes from the Alfred Hitchcock classic:

See more of our most-saved articles, videos and recipes by following @ReadItLaterTop on Twitter. You can also find us on Flipboard in the Cool Curators section.

Posted in News , data, most saved, Read It Later, video

Read It Later’s Most-Saved Videos of the Week

April 6th, 2012  •  By Mark

New every Friday: A handpicked collection of the most popular videos saved in Read It Later. Enjoy!

–

1. “A 50-Point Plan to Wreck Your Career or Save It” (51:56)

Influential designer Aaron James Draplin curses like a trucker while he offers some heartfelt career advice in this presentation at Portland’s Creative Mornings.

2. “Luminaris” (6:15)

A playful, magical stop-motion animated film by Juan Pablo Zaramella about a couple who create light together.

3. “Silver & Light” (9:19)

Photographer Ian Ruhter’s travels around America, using wet-plate photography and “the world’s largest camera.”

4. “Successful Alcoholics” (25:13)

A 2010 short film about a hard-drinking couple, and the decision one of them finally makes.

5. “10 Lessons I Learned from Steve Jobs” (21:03)

Guy Kawasaki, Apple’s former chief evangelist turned author and entrepreneur, speaks to TEDx Harker School in Nov. 2011 (shortly after Jobs’s death) about what he learned from his former boss.

See more of our most-saved articles, videos and recipes by following @ReadItLaterTop on Twitter. You can also find us on Flipboard in the Cool Curators section.

Posted in News , data, most saved, Read It Later, video

Read It Later’s Secret: Our Users Love Video, Too

April 3rd, 2012  •  By Mark

By Mark Armstrong and Matt Koidin

Video saves in Read It Later are up 138%, and YouTube is our most-saved domain; The median length of a video saved in Read It Later is nearly 30 minutes

–

As our name implies, Read It Later launched in 2007 as an app for quickly and easily saving articles on the web to “read them later.”

But here’s another fact about our more than 4 million users: They also love video.

As video consumption has exploded on the web, and as content has become more multimedia-rich, we realized early on that our users weren’t just saving articles to read—they were saving their favorite video clips from YouTube, Vimeo, and beyond. Even the articles weren’t just text anymore—they’re a mix of writing, images and embedded video.

To meet this demand, Read It Later quietly began supporting in-app video streaming in 2010. In the past year alone, video saves using Read It Later have grown by 138 percent, and YouTube is now the No. 1 most-saved domain in all of Read It Later.

We’re also seeing new evidence that our app is helping people consume longer video than what’s been traditionally embraced on the web: In an analysis of Read It Later’s top 1,000 saved videos, the median length was nearly 30 minutes.

We’ve supported our community as their uses for the app have expanded. Here’s a quick look at how video consumption has changed over the past year and a half:

Read It Later Video Saves

The Most Popular Video Sites inside Read It Later

We mentioned YouTube is No. 1, but here are the other video sites and what percentage of total saves they have. It’s important to note that Read It Later currently only offers optimized viewing for YouTube and Vimeo, so this likely has an effect on how the other sites stack up. In the meantime, we’re working hard to expand our support for all the video sites you like to use.

Read It Later Video Saves

Video Loyalty

Which sites have the highest percentage of returning users? Here, you’ll see video “return rates” are strong with all the sites. College Humor and Break.com have the best showing, followed by Comedy Central, Hulu and Vevo:

Read It Later Video Saves

Breadth of Topics & Categories

If you take a look at the most-saved videos on @ReadItLaterTop, you’ll see a pretty broad mix of what’s popular with users. The list includes both quick viral hits, like this totally awesome 1-minute video of Lionel Richie’s “Hello” spliced together from classic movies…

And this 14-minute documentary about an American advertising producer who works in Shanghai:

‘Keep It Short’? Not Always

It’s been widely accepted that video on the web should “keep it short,” but that might be changing in a time-shifted world. When we looked at the 1,000 most popular videos from July through December, 32 percent of the Top 1,000 videos were over 5 minutes long, and the median length was 29 min., 33 seconds.

So, in an era of TED Talks, Khan Academy and university courses, we’re seeing evidence that users will embrace longform video if given the tools to do so in a way that fits with their daily lives. Of course, with 68 percent of videos saved under 5 minutes, short-form still rules: As our Most-Saved Videos list shows (see below), users love to save everything from music videos to animation, movie trailers, news clips and more. Shorter clips also represent the vast majority of video content produced for the web.

No matter what you prefer, Read It Later is committed to making it easier for you to consume all your favorite content, whether it’s through a beautiful reading experience or the ability to watch video seamlessly. And we’ll continue working to help users enjoy it anywhere, on any device.

—

Most popular videos saved on Read It Later*:

1. “Somebody That I Used to Know” (4:25): The band Walk off the Earth’s inventive music video covering Gotye
2. “Address Is Approximate” (2:43): Animated short film about a robot dreaming of the West Coast
3. “Star Wars Uncut: Director’s Cut” (2 hours): Casey Pugh’s crowdsourced remake of the original “Star Wars: A New Hope”
4. “23 and 1/2 hours: What is the single best thing we can do for our health?” (9:19): A whiteboard-animated presentation by @docmikeevans
5. “The Joy of Books” (1:51): Stop-motion animated film of what happens inside a bookstore at night.

—

Longest videos saved during the same time period:

1. “10 Hours of Darth Vader Breathing” (via Tosh.0, naturally)
2. “Chris Hedges: The American Empire is Over” (Interview, C-SPAN, 2 hrs., 54 min.)
3. “Star Wars Uncut: Director’s Cut” (2 hours, 4 min.)
4. “Richard Feynman: No Ordinary Genius” (BBC Horizon documentary on the theoretical physicist, 1993, 1 hr., 35 min.)
5. “UNLIKE U: Tranwriting in Berlin” (Documentary, 1 hr., 30 min.)

*Read It Later data includes content saved July-December 2011

Posted in Trends , data, Read It Later, video

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