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iPhone's "Mystery App" Is H.264 YouTube 323

Rebelgecko writes "It turns out the iPhone's mystery app is a custom YouTube viewer. The iPhone will play YouTube's videos using the H.264 codec(as will the AppleTV after an upgrade) for higher quality. From the look of it, it will take advantage of the iPhone's screen design and touch capabilities much more than watching videos in the iPhone's version of Safari would. The videos can be streamed via a Wi-Fi connection or the EDGE network."
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iPhone's "Mystery App" Is H.264 YouTube

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  • Woah... (Score:2, Funny)

    by cromar ( 1103585 )
    That is *sweet*!
  • by stratjakt ( 596332 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:26PM (#19596281) Journal
    Shouldn't the inbuilt browser be able to view YouTube anyways?

    It is really interesting, from a marketing point of view, how Apple takes things that would be ho-hum for any other brand or company, and suddenly turns it into front page news with the whole "mystery feature" game. They do this over and over and over, and nobody ever seems to catch on.

    I mean, realistically, it's just another smartphone in an already overcrowded market. But it's front page news every day.
    • And what other company, pray tell, provides access to an H.264 version of YouTube content?
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by stratjakt ( 596332 )
        But who cares? Really. Will it make any difference?

        You don't get a copy of the content. You cant download and store the videos. If you suddenly CAN do this, like some sort of Apple/Google alliance to allow downloads only from Macs, that'd be news - big news.

        But in the end, who cares if it streamed through flash, H.264, or the image is assembled in realtime by pixies on a lite brite? You're still streaming the same grainy video of some goth chick listing foods she likes.

      • by IANAAC ( 692242 )

        And what other company, pray tell, provides access to an H.264 version of YouTube content?
        YouTube itself is now beginning to provide its content in H.264 format. Check the beta mobile version of YouTube.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Red Flayer ( 890720 )

      Shouldn't the inbuilt browser be able to view YouTube anyways?

      FTFS (you don't have to even read TFA):

      ...it will take advantage of the iPhone's screen design and touch capabilities much more than watching videos in the iPhone's version of Safari would.

      It is really interesting, from a marketing point of view, how Apple takes things that would be ho-hum for any other brand or company, and suddenly turns it into front page news with the whole "mystery feature" game.

      That's not interesting from a marketing poi

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by grimdawg ( 954902 )
      The iphone isn't 'just another smartphone' though: it's the first smartphone to go after the market they're courting. This app is actually perfect for that purpose (chasing the ipod generation): market it as a portable Youtube viewer and you've given the kids a reason to want your product.

      With the iphone, Apple is trying to make a smartphone that doesn't LOOK like it's a smartphone - hey kids, it's a phone that looks ipod-ish and can view Youtube! It's the hippest phone ever! It's an interesting direction,
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by stratjakt ( 596332 )
        Man! This is what I'm talking about.

        How does Apple do this? They like convert people into Apple salesmen - like zombies or something.

        Look at your post, "chasing the ipod generation", "its the hippest phone ever", etc, etc..

        Everybody tries to do this. Apple isn't alone. You dont think PalmOne, Motorola, Erikson, Nokia want to be considered "hip"?

        First smartphone to target the market? What the hell was n-gage? You telling me that was pitched to stuffy businessmen to help organize their schedules?

        I reall
        • by 2nd Post! ( 213333 ) <gundbear.pacbell@net> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:50PM (#19596591) Homepage
          1) Apple manages to do this by making the iPod as perfect as they can. People actually like using it.
          2) No one else has managed to be "hip". So yes, everyone tries, but so far Apple is the only one that has managed, with the iPod. Nintendo is a close second with their DS and Wii.
          3) The n-gage was a disaster. Comparing the n-gage to an iPhone is like comparing a sour grape to an orange.
          4) Apple has this effect because they do things right, with the iPods, iTunes, and iTunes store.

          Your Treo is not targetted at consumers. Are there ads for the Treo on billboards, subways, or prime time TV shows? Does it make it trivial to synch your data, your email, your bookmarks, your movies, and music? By trivial I mean, no user action, just plug into your computer! Does the UI make it easy to access all those features? Not being able to access a feature is about the same as not having a feature in the first place.

          Then the killer... is this something your parents can do? Your neice? Your next door neighbor?

          That's Apple's secret. The iPod is accessible to everyone, not just geeks.
        • by Wah ( 30840 )
          But just imagine, it wasnt made by Apple - say it was a Motorola, or Erikson, or billy magoo. It's the exact same design, exact same features, exact same software. Would we be talking about it right now?

          Obviously not [techeblog.com]

          /not the same exact software, design, and features...but closer than anything else.

          • Awww, c'mon... I'm not exactly excited about the iPhone, but even I can see the difference from that video... they don't even demonstrate a web browser, let alone something as cool as the in-built Google Maps, voicemail integration, or the "gestures" support. To me, it looks like LG just took away the keyboard on a normal phone and replaced it with a touch screen. Aside from the fairly smooth video, they didn't show any features that my free phone from T-Mobile doesn't have!
        • by Amouth ( 879122 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:09PM (#19596871)

          ...

          How does Apple do this? They like convert people into Apple salesmen - like zombies or something.

          Look at your post, "chasing the ipod generation", "its the hippest phone ever", etc, etc.. ...

          The only new thing is, like you said, "its the hippest phone ever", and nobody will shut up about it. ...
          quite simple.. the power is in the turtle neck - the flat, black, turtle neck...

          damnit someone should steal that shirt and sell it on ebay ....

          • *snap* *snap* *snap* *snap* *snap* *snap* *snap* *snap*.

            Dont forget, sunglasses indoors and a black beret.
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by BorgDrone ( 64343 )

          Everybody tries to do this. Apple isn't alone. You dont think PalmOne, Motorola, Erikson, Nokia want to be considered "hip"?

          If they want to be considered 'hip' maybe they should release some products for the 'hip' crowd.

          Have you ever tried using an N-Gage ? Have you ever used one of the high-end Nokia 'smart' phones, like e.g. the new N95 ? They suck. The user interface is a mess, the phones are slow and unresponsive, the casing feels really cheap and plastic. And these are expensive phones.

          Every high end

        • by NDPTAL85 ( 260093 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:30PM (#19597179)
          You don't understand how Apple has this effect because you, like everyone else who's a registered member of Slashdot, are a geek.

          Geeks have a higher tolerance for poor user interface design, I mean heck look at how popular Linux, BSD and Unix are amongst the geek set. The "CLI" or Command Line Interface is actually PREFERRED by this set. You take two computers, say either a Windows based PC or Macintosh and compare it to a GUI'less Linux setup and a geek would know that both computers can do anything. A regular person however would consider the Linux computer to be useless because they wouldn't know how to nor would they be interested in taking the time to learn how to use it. If it isn't point and click, it loses. Geeks don't mind investing the time though, they LOVE to tinker.

          This is why you consider the iPhone to be nothing special. I own a Treo 700p that can already do all the things the iPod can do just about and there are certainly Windows Mobile and Symbian phones that also do most of what the iPhone does at a much lower price. But thats NOT THE POINT. Its not about matching features for features. Its about making sure that people will actually be able and WILLING to use the features that your product DOES have.

          I am absolutely positively certain that regular folks will get more use out of their iPhones then they will out of their Treos, HTCs, Motorola Qs, Blackberries, Nokias...etc simply because the iPhone has the better interface. Regular folks have higher standards when it comes to interfaces. Either its going to be well designed or it won't be used. Geeks on the other hand will put up with crappy user interfaces because they are blinded by the features underneath. The truest test is when a user buys a device on their own and no longer needs their "geek" friend/neighbor/co-worker to set it up for them. Thats the iPhone.
          • by Knara ( 9377 )

            Geeks on the other hand will put up with crappy user interfaces because they are blinded by the features underneath.

            Interesting use of the word "blinded". Devices are tools and the features are the point. What you're arguing, essentially, is that people without critical thinking skills and who lack the ability to learn how to use a tool will love being spoon-fed by Apple when the iPhone comes out.

            On second though, I think I agree with you.

            • by timster ( 32400 )
              Oh, come on, try to see past the end of your nose. Leaving aside the GP's dumb choice of the command-line interface as an example of a crappy interface, one thing that Slashdotters need to get through their heads is that you can't fix a truly crappy interface simply by learning how to use it.

              Apple makes better interfaces because they make interfaces that are more functional once you've learned to use them. Anyone can make an interface that simply takes less time to learn to use; you just add a button for
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                by Knara ( 9377 )

                The poster I replied to pretty clearly was implying that the reason that "geeks" don't think the iPhone is special is because the functionality exists, it just isn't simple enough for the general population to use. I don't see how my reply did anything but agree with that assessment.

                I own Macs, I own PC-clones. Back in the day I owned Commodores. I do not find Apple interfaces to be particularly intuitive vs these other platform interfaces. It is true, that Apple can sometimes make common tasks easy to

                • by timster ( 32400 )
                  the iPhone is catering to the "we chew your food for you" computing crowd

                  This is the point I disagree with, and that you haven't supported well. Since we've established that interfaces are important, I'm sure nobody will come in here and claim that it must be true because other, competing phones already have the iPhone's features. The point being that it's possible, in theory, for Apple to have made a phone with a better (not merely simpler) interface, and that such a phone could be more useful even for s
            • by Goaway ( 82658 )
              In other words: You want things to be hard to use, because it makes you feel special when you can figure them out.
            • by NDPTAL85 ( 260093 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @04:04PM (#19599351)
              If any tool requires you to use "critical thinking skills" in comparison to a competing tool that does not, than the former tool "fails" at being the best it can be. Critical thinking skills should be reserved for making actual decisions, not simply getting a product to work.

              "Decent" interfaces that you point out on competing smartphones just aren't good enough anymore when something better comes along. That something better is the iPhone. All that "decent" stuff that came before is although still quite usable, now dated and obsolete. Its yesterdays news.

              Your position is almost comical. People spend hundreds of dollars on these devices and you are actually opposed to a product so easy to use that its "chewing your food for you." You personally, after spending this much money on a device actually WANT to have to do mental work to get the most out of it. Thats like spending full price for a car that you have to put together yourself when everyone else's is pre-constructed and drivable off the lot. Ha ha worked a car analogy in! Damn these users for wanting to get the most bang for their buck! Why they're wimps! REAL users know better than to expect exlimplary service and products when they hand over their cash!

              Perhaps you should start a company that would sell devices based on your design preferences.

              1. A hammer that has a loose neck that will only stiffen strong enough to be used after you enter into a keypad on the handle the first 56 digits of Pi.
              2. A light switch that requires you to recite the Gettysburgh Address in order to function.
              3. A weight scale that requires you to tap dance like Fred Astaire for 15 minutes before it will tell you your weight.
              4. And lastly a dishwasher with a panel on the front that will require you to specify the exact amounts of water used, at what pressure and what temperatures and what amounts of detergent to be released at 50 different intervals during the wash cycle before you can use it.

              After all, we want to make sure that absolutely NO ONE is forced to use a product that makes completeing tasks TOO EASY. If you are forced to use a product that spoon feeds you everything it stifles the development of CRITICAL THINKING skills.

              You could call your company, Idiot Enterprises Incorporated.
          • The CLI is a perfect user interface. It makes it easy to string large numbers of actions after each other and is fairly uniform across programs. Everything about is transparent. I can view context-sensitive help about any feature with just 4 more keystrokes:"m" "a" "n" and " ". Let's count the number of files in my home directory:
            $ls ~ | wc -l
            or (on Mac OS X) clicking on "Finder" in the Dock, clicking on my home directory, and then struggling to count the large number of files. What if I want to count dot
        • by Altus ( 1034 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @02:04PM (#19597675) Homepage
          Everybody tries to do this. Apple isn't alone. You dont think PalmOne, Motorola, Erikson, Nokia want to be considered "hip"?

          The difference is, apple actually succedes at it.

          Now before you flame the fuck out of me, think about what I'm actually saying... I am NOT saying that apple is better than these other companies, I am not saying that their technology is any different or better or anything. I am simply saying that while Motorola, Nokia, Microsoft, Creative Labs and all those other clowns want to be considered "Hip", Apple actually IS considered "hip" and that makes a big difference.

          They didn't get into that position just by marketing, they didn't get there by having superior technology. They got there by figuring out what features and interfaces the majority of people would really dig and then selling that. Nobody else seems to do it as well as they do.

          That is what makes apple different, if you don't understand that you will not understand what makes them successful.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          The device does nothing new, features nothing new, offers nothing new. I can do all of this on my Treo right now.

          Oh yeah? Then if that's true, how come the Treo guys aren't putting out ads like this? [youtube.com]

          I tell you what, if I had a phone that could do what the iPhone does, I'd get a copycat ad out tout de fucking suite, along with whatever was my extra selling point tacked on at the end (most probably something along the lines of "...all this, and cheaper than the iPhone!")

          Disclaimer: I hate cellpho
      • by Altus ( 1034 )

        This is fairly accurate. Current smartphones are targeted at business users almost exclusively. All the cool features are enterprise type stuff. Apple is creating a smart phone where the primary features are end user driven and YouTube is a big part of that.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by 2nd Post! ( 213333 )
      1) How many smartphones target consumers? The analogy here is iPod:iPhone::geeks:businesspeople

      So the iPod opened up the MP3 player to nongeeks in the same way the iPhone will supposedly open up smartphones to non-business people.

      2) How many YouTube players actually use H.264 instead of Flash? Right now I think it is one... for the AppleTV

      3) YouTube is the next TV; that is why it is a big deal, higher quality and more widespread use. How many consumer phones play YouTube right now? My phone doesn't. I've no
    • by ktappe ( 747125 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:02PM (#19596769)

      I mean, realistically, it's just another smartphone in an already overcrowded market. But it's front page news every day.
      I'm no fanboi (I've already critiqued Apple's non-use of AJAX while leaving developers to use AJAX), but to call this "just another smartphone" is to really have blinders on. Consider: This thing really is different.
  • pays off (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mgabrys_sf ( 951552 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:27PM (#19596293) Journal
    Looks like it pays off to have a google member sitting on your board. You get access to the phone's "real" API's.
  • More evidence... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ktappe ( 747125 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:27PM (#19596303)
    This is more evidence that if you want to write a killer iPhone app, Safari+AJAX may not have the power you need. Apple sure didn't find that combo to have the horespower when it went to implement Google Maps and now YouTube.
    • by shmert ( 258705 )
      It's quite conceivable that the youtube app is actually a widget, and doesn't rely on any native API at all. Compare it to the weather and stocks widgets, which also appears on the main screen. You can certainly write a widget with an embedded video player (it's basically HTML with some optional Safari-specific drawing code).
  • man (Score:5, Funny)

    by Almir ( 1096395 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:29PM (#19596337)
    if they could only make it to, like, surf myspace too. that'd make it totally worth the money. i'd buy two of them just so i can do both at the same time.
  • You know (Score:5, Funny)

    by fishthegeek ( 943099 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:30PM (#19596341) Journal
    I don't know how many times my wife has been driving and I, sitting in the passenger seat bored out of my mind, thought to myself...

    {dream sequence}
    Damn I wish I could see a short clip of kittens doing cute things or kids doing lightsaber battles
    {/dream sequence}

    My life is now complete.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      You forgot "any random soundclip sequence ever made set to random Naruto clips for no apparent reason."

      But you're right. These are the day-to-day necessities that the iPhone is attempting to fulfill within us all. God knows you shouldnt be forced to get all the way FROM your home computer TO your work computer without having continuous access to youtube on the drive. Ive been waiting for the navigation console built into my dashboard to finally be able to play youtube vids, but now, thanks to the iPhone,
    • Better yet, I wonder if it works with PornTube.com?
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by fishthegeek ( 943099 )
        There is an easy way to tell... on the drive to work immediately following the 29th look for the number of cars wrapped around trees.
  • Anyone know if desktop macs get the YouTube custom viewer? It would be a nice addition to Front Row.
  • by daveschroeder ( 516195 ) * on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:31PM (#19596365)
    Also, there's a USA Today article on iPhone today with the first new information from AT&T on the launch (even though it's not much):

    http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/telecom/2 007-06-20-at&t-iphone-push_N.htm [usatoday.com]

    AT&T girds for iPhone launch on June 29
    By Leslie Cauley, USA TODAY

    For consumers eager to get their hands on an Apple iPhone, here's the good news: It will be available in all 1,800 AT&T phone stores at 6 p.m. sharp on June 29.

    The bad news? "We fully expect one or more of our stores to run out of stock on the first or second day -- my guess is the first day," says Larry Carter, senior vice president of sales for AT&T, the iPhone's exclusive U.S. distributor.

    To help accommodate as much foot traffic as possible, AT&T phone stores will stay open an extra hour -- until 10 p.m. -- on the first day.

    To get "iReady" for the big day, Carter says AT&T added 2,000 extra sales people to stores. Half will be there just to help handle the expected early crush of buyers. The other half, he says, will stay long-term to help with extra customers the iPhone is expected to draw to AT&T's stores.

    Crowd control on launch day is a concern. In some markets -- Carter declined to name them -- AT&T is working with local law enforcement on crowd-control plans. It also has alerted landlords at shopping malls and other phone store locations to make sure nobody is caught off guard.

    Not all stores are equal

    Carter would not say which stores will have the biggest iPhone stockpiles, but allowed that iPod users are a "natural market" for the smart phone. As such, he says, stores in areas with big numbers of iPod users -- such as New York City, Chicago and much of California -- will be well stocked.

    Does that mean that those stores will have more iPhones than stores in, say, Richmond, Va., or Florida? "Yes," he says. "It's just common sense."

    If your local store sells out, Carter says sales people will take mail orders, and devices will be shipped in 3 to 5 days, inventory permitting. "Ultimately, we will meet every customer's desire to have one," Carter says.

    To discourage sCalpers, AT&T plans to limit how many phones each customer can buy. Carter declined to cite the number, saying only that AT&T would try to prevent "hoarding and reselling."

    New service plans for iPhone

    There are other surprises in the works for June 29. In addition to launching the iPhone that day, Carter says AT&T also will announce new service plans for it.

    He declined to be specific, but says plans will be customized for the iPhone. Translation: The iPhone may offer cool features such as unlimited Web browsing, but you'll have to pay for them.

    Carter says the additional fees shouldn't be a surprise. "Regardless of which device you're using today, you pay us a certain amount for (voice) minutes, and you also pay us for data units," he says. "That is also true on the iPhone."

    No amount of planning will help, however, if Apple is unable to supply enough phones. "That's what we stay awake at night thinking about," Carter says.

    It's also out of AT&T's control. Manufacturing is being overseen by Apple, which also maintains control of design, customer care (for the device, not monthly service), advertising and more.

    Apple, famously secretive about its products, has been mum about its Apple Store sales plans. So far, it has not allowed AT&T sales staff access to iPhones so they can get comfortable using them before the big day. "Apple wanted to launch it that way," Carter shrugs.

    Only as good as network

    One thing AT&T does control, however, is the network on which the iPhone will depend. While network reliability might not have the sex appeal of an iPhone, it could spell the difference between the device becoming a runaway success -- or a flop.
    • To get "iReady" for the big day
      Hardy-har-har

      reflects AT&T's determination to stay ahead of the iCurve as more data users pile on
      It's getting iOld now -- and where're the quotes?.

      To discourage sCalpers
      Now that's fUnny.
  • $$ for at&t (Score:3, Interesting)

    by fsulawndart ( 860628 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:35PM (#19596417)
    imagine the data charges from watching youtube all day on your iphone
  • by Steffan ( 126616 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:36PM (#19596439)
    Actually, I think the killer app will be uploading to YouTube from the iPhone. It would be predicated upon the chipset having H.264 encoding capabilities as well, but I see this being a potentially huge win for Apple if they could pull it off. It's the logical extension of what they're attempting to do with the platform, and it would transform video blogging and bring it to the mainstream.
    • by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:43PM (#19596525)
      Absolutely. Use the video camera that the iPhone doesn't have, then use the video editing software that the iPhone doesn't have, then use the iPhone to upload the results that you couldn't create to Youtube. That's a killer app. Not.

      • by Have Blue ( 616 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:38PM (#19597279) Homepage
        The iPhone does have a camera. I don't know what resolution it can record video at but it should be more than capable of the 320x240 size of the Youtube player window.

        H.264 encoding is pretty hard but it doesn't have to be performed on the phone- it can send the raw capture (can't be that large) to Youtube's encoding cluster and have them do the heavy lifting, so the process is identical to using it on a computer.

        And sure, you can't run iMovie on the thing, but I bet it's more than capable of selecting a subset of the recording and maybe even basic titles. That covers 99% of the movies on Youtube already.
      • iPhone has a camera. Even if it doesn't sport video recording on June 29, it could certainly be added to the iPhone later, via a software update. (This concept may be unfamiliar to most cell phone users, who are told to pound sand when they try to get firmware updates to fix their broken phones.)
    • by tfoss ( 203340 )

      It would be predicated upon the chipset having H.264 encoding capabilities as well
      Huh? Since when did youtube start requiring H.264 encoding?

      -Ted
  • by El Icaro ( 816679 ) <icaro&spymac,com> on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:51PM (#19596609)
    Am I the only one that sees the iPhone as only an (awesome) entertainment device? I might be wrong but I didn't see any spreadsheet or word processing apps. I realize a widget could be written to run some local version of the google office apps but isn't it a bit wasteful?
    It would be so awesome of they released a developers kit (and wishful thinking, make it open to everyone). Too bad it's impossible (viruses, ugly inefficient apps and all that).
    Whatever the outcome, I'll pay 500 to whoever writes the first 95% compatible full speed widgetized NES emulator with a comfortable input system.

    Oh yeah, and gives me an iPhone to test it intensively for five or six years or until the next iPhone comes out.
    • by mandos ( 8379 )
      See the recent Stevenote section on Quick Look. http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/features/quick look.html [apple.com] It views spreadsheet and word processing docs. It doesn't edit, but iPhone or its competition, I don't want to edit on something that small. Viewing however could be hugely useful!
  • NOT the mystery app (Score:3, Informative)

    by objekt ( 232270 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @12:54PM (#19596637) Homepage
    This is just an iPhone-friendly version of youtube. IPhone users will view it with Safari. It's been public knowledge since the 16th of June.
    visit it here [youtube.com]
    read old news articles about it here [google.com]
    • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:43PM (#19597353) Homepage Journal

      Yes, it is the "mystery app." The "mystery app" was caused by the application icons being slid down one slot in a brief section of an iPhone ad. Well, they've updated the iPhone website [apple.com] and the new iPhone graphic shows all twelve application icons. They are, in order:

      • Text, Calendar, Photos, Contacts
      • YouTube, Stocks, Maps, Weather
      • Clock, Calculator, Notes, Settings

      YouTube is the app that's been added. It's the "mystery app" that was missing from before.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Mwongozi ( 176765 )

      Did you even click the link [apple.com] in the article? YouTube is an app, and will not be viewed in Safari.

      The site you link to is for other phones.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:01PM (#19596741)
    why didn't the editors of this commercial catch this lack of continuity between shots?

    Maybe the editors did catch that lack of continuity, and they decided to leave it in. Maybe they put it there intentionally.

    Why would they do that? Simple, to generate a lot of discussion and marketing buzz, and maybe even to get additional exposure for the iPhone on Slashdot.

    • I've done editing work for a friend of mine that's a videographer. We've gotten back to the editing bay and realized that we lacked a certain shot or decided to flip a shot here and play more of the scene and did not flip the scene. Or we get back and this shot works better here, but something just isn't quite the same. If it's two seconds long, we are not going to stress about it because only a few are going to notice.

      I think the best example of this is from the from the Fellowship of the Rings where

      • I agree with you. The scenario you describe happens a lot more frequently than many people think.

        What I offered, however, was that it might have been done intentionally in this particular instance as a marketing ploy.

  • by Morky ( 577776 ) on Thursday June 21, 2007 @01:10PM (#19596889)
    I have my Blackberry Pearl set up as a bluetooth modem for my Macbook Pro and it is on AT&T's EDGE network in NYC. A two minute youtube video takes about four minutes to load, so you can start watching at about the halfway mark.
  • And I was almost sure it would be the hat [theonion.com].
  • Muggings? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by JamesRose ( 1062530 )
    After the Ipod came out there was a period (and to an extent this continue) where Ipods just got nicked left right and center because of Apple's stupid idea to give you white earphones, clearly marking you out as a target to get mugged. Now with the iphone, not only have you go the earphones, but you watch videos, so you are holding out a $500 phone at roughly arms length, in public. Am I not the only person who sees this as an incredible easy target for theives? And of course, when I'm at home I just use m
  • What is this nonsense? Why would Youtube deliberately use an inferior video codec for EVERYBODY not using an iPhone?

    This is what the apple website says:

    To achieve higher video quality and longer battery life on mobile devices, YouTube has begun encoding their videos in the advanced H.264 format, and iPhone will be the first mobile device to use the H.264-encoded videos. Over 10,000 videos will be available on June 29, and YouTube will be adding more each week until their full catalog of videos is available
    • What is this nonsense? Why would Youtube deliberately use an inferior video codec for EVERYBODY not using an iPhone?

      It is very simple. YouTube uses Flash, which only supports an inferior video codec. The iPhone YouTube application doesn't use Flash, and so doesn't have that constraint.
  • Oh God so far it's twelve iPhone stories since they announced the launch date on June 3rd.

    That's more than four mostly speculative rave fests a week.

    When will this madness stop???? And just how much Apple stock does Taco own?
    • by Knara ( 9377 )
      You seem to forget how many ad impressions this must generate. Though since its slashdot, I can't imagine a lot of people aren't running no-script or ad-block in FF.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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