Si resuelve el problema de los formatos propietarios, y el tamaño del archivo , pero el problema de la juntitis, y de la ideas mal comunicadas
74 PowerPoint slides and not one fact or insight.
— Meeting Boy (@MeetingBoy) August 26, 2013
Este blog ya está por alcanzar la mayoría de edad, es una cosa de locos, pocos llegan a hacerse tan viejos. Algún día veremos actividad en http://jiff01.com/
74 PowerPoint slides and not one fact or insight.
— Meeting Boy (@MeetingBoy) August 26, 2013
Dan Appelquist, Open Web Advocate from Telefónica Digital and Mozilla's Principal Developer Evangelist, Christian Heilmann, discuss how Firefox OS extends the capabilities of the Web using WebAPIs, pioneered by Mozilla and others. They discuss how these WebAPIs enable developers to build innovative apps by allowing them to access the underlying phone hardware using just Web technologies.
The HTML5 standard specifies the video tag, but does not specify the codec. Youtube is using the H.264 codec, which is a patented technology, meaning that users could be liable for license fees. Google and Apple pay a very large annual fee to be able to use H.264 decoding in their browsers.
Mozilla believes in a free and open web, and that reliance on patent-encumbered formats limits development and creativity to people who can afford the licensing. For example, if you were to put H.264 video on your website without licensing the codec, the H.264 patent holders could at some point in the future, sue you for damages.
The MPEG LA licensing group has announced that their H.264 video codec standard would be going royalty free in perpetuity for free-to-end-user use
Music: "I Saw The Way You Looked At Me" by Windom Earle