Posts Tagged ‘video online’

Umass Amherst Alumni Club Meetup

Posted in social media on July 22nd, 2008 by Matthew – Be the first to comment

Hey look – it’s me playing with video blogging via Seesmic . . . .
Umass Alumni Club MeetingWho’s going to the Umass Alumni Cub Meeting at Tia’s – Wed. 7/23 at 5:30pm?

Register at www.umassbostonclub.org
If you’re interested in the event I’m talking about, check out the Umass Amherst Alumni Club, Boston.

Deep Web: The Next Frontier

Posted in search engine marketing on December 29th, 2007 by Matthew – Be the first to comment

The web that you search is not complete. Far from complete, in fact. When you use any search engine (ex. Google, MSN, Yahoo) to search for results on the web, you’re relying on the the completeness of results found in the search engine’s index or cache. In other words, all search engines, even Google, can only provide results based on what it has found itself. The term Deep Web refers to all web sites, content pages, and files that are inaccesible to search engines, and therefore can not be included in any result pages displayed for any query. 

Some of the content that is contained in the Deep Web is found on pages that do not have any inbound links, dynamic content that can not be accessed, or content secured behind password-protected websites. More interesting is the Deep Web found inside video and image content. Since search engines can’t actually look at a picture or watch an online video, this content is widely ignored. Combine this fact with the rise of online video for both business and personal use, and you can begin to see the ramifications. As more and more written blogs give way to video blogs and podcasts, this once searchable content will become part of the Deep Web - inaccessible to search engines or users’ searches.

Companies exist that create tags for videos. In other words, they watch the video, and create text that describes the content of the video, which are called tags. But rather than create tags that describe the video as a whole, Deep Tagging is the process of creating tags for parts of the video. Search engines read these tags and then can match online videos to search engine queries.  However, this process is very human-intensive manual, and Deep Tagging companies have struggled to stay in business. 

Online video is clearly becoming the next wave for online communication. It’s become easier and easier to make, manage, produce, and maintain video for both business and residential users.  Companies that can tap into deep web content such as video will surely be ones to watch in 2008 and beyond.