Technorama

An omnibus of tech posts by a Futurologist on software development primarily.

Sunday, 15 May 2005

 

Content provision: Accessibility goes hand in hand with Availability

Accessibility and Availability issues have cropped up again with the launch of the BBC Creative Archive. This entry on my site clarifies the issues to avoid the FUD taking over the actual content provision issues. There are two key areas to consider when talking about content provision:

Availability of Content: Over the last few years we have seen that the prominence of (CC) has been rising. Now the BBC have embraced the idea of this model in a modified fashion as part of their BBC Creative Archive project. The BBC's approach does not address all issues, but does progress in the right direction and make content available at least.

Also included in this point is the charge made for the available content. In the case of the UK there is a TV licence fee (£126.50 per year, effectively £10.50 per month) covers provision national television and radio channels. Other businesses provide content for an alternative charging method, such as Cable or Ch4 Broadband service. There are a wide variety of content sources, both no-charge and paid for sources. This is less of an issue when
considering provision of these services.

Accessibility of Content: If content is to be made available it needs to be in an accessible form. Content in an in-accessible proprietary format may as well not be available, because if it cannot be used without expensive patent license for a proprietary format (or software decoder) it is useless. Content can also be in-accessible because the format is impeded by software patents, often patent holders submarine launch their codec formats and then later (when the format is in common use) announce that now that everyone is locked into use of the format they will only
permit use of the format once a patent licence has been purchased (Remember the Unisys LZW [GIF] patent?, or the Fraunhofer / Thompson MP3 patents?).

Codec Open format? Free Software implementation? Score out of 10
Theora Yes. (5) Yes: http://theora.org/. (5) 10
Vorbis Yes. (5) Yes: http://vorbis.com/. (5) 10
MPEG-4 No. Costly MPEG-LA. (0) Yes, from http://xvid.org/. (4) 4
MPEG-2 No. A costly patent licence is required from
MPEG-LA. (0) Yes, from libmpeg2. (4 points) 4
MPEG-1 No. A costly patent licence is required from
MPEG-LA. (0 points) Yes, from libmpeg2. (4 points) 4
Microsoft Windows Media No. Costly MS licence*.(0 points) Partly, ffmpeg. (3) 3
Apple QuickTime No. Costly MS/* Apple licence. (0 points) Partly, ffmpeg. (3) 3

10 is highest score, 0 is poorest score. (Openness is valued higher than practical implementations, because the later is nearly useless without the former.)

* (Requires the user to agree to Microsoft licensing terms and pay them £149.98 [dabs.com price of MS WinXP] for a copy of their OS)

Some people choose to ignore or the important issue of accessibility, (for the reasons outlined above) this is the not the best point of view to have. It is essential that the accessibility of available content us planned hand in hand together.

To use the example of the BBC's Creative Archive (if you can ignore the proprietary
Macromedia content embedded into the front page) there are several partners providing content under this licence. If we take for the example, the BFI's [Looks very jolly, doesn't it?]. This video is available in three proprietary formats:

As you can see from the table above, these are all proprietary formats which require licence fees to use. As the BFI is promoting these formats instead of open formats, users will be obliged to pay licence fees to be able to view the available content. An unfortunate choice by the BFI/BBC Creative Archive. Is this going to be a recurring problem with the BFI/BBC provisions?

The three proprietary provisions are actually a step back from what Paula LeDieu (co-director of the BBC Creative Archive) stated was the Creative Archive plan in the Q & A session on
1 November 2004. Why was the open format you planned dropped Paula? Why the shift away from an open strategy?

Transcript of Paula LeDieu response in Q & A (Starts 05:33 in) Questioner: "Is there any word on which file formats you are going to use, or is there going to be.. Ok, first of all, File Formats."Paula LeDieu: Yep, ok, file formats. I think that the file formats that we will go out with will are probably 2-3 proprietary and 1 open. But, I always caveat the whole conversation about file formats. We are saying that there will never be a definitive file format for Creative Archive. File formats shift, they are highly fashionable things, and I was talking with the guy that runs archive.org, a guy called Bruce [not audible]. He deals with this all the time, and he says he has got the fashion cycle down to about two years. About every two years he has to rethink and reformat all of the material in the archive. As I said, we will probably go out with 3 proprietary and 1 open, I think depends what the fashion is like by the time we get there. But what I would say is that we will be constantly looking at the marketplace, and constantly looking at what is the most appropriate for the people that are using it. And we will be constantly re-evaluating what format we use.

(Audio was quite muffled, transcript is as good as is possible with the source)


An example of the BBC getting the Accessibility and Availability right is their fresh Backstage project. Take for example their OPML News feed summary. The quality of available + accessible content is a completely separate debate which I will not focus on today.

Labels: ,


Comments: Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]





<< Home

Archives

February 2003   March 2003   April 2003   August 2004   September 2004   December 2004   May 2005   June 2005   December 2006   January 2007   February 2007   March 2007   April 2007   July 2007   August 2007   September 2007   October 2007   November 2007   December 2007   January 2008   February 2008   March 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   August 2008   September 2008   October 2008   November 2008   December 2008   January 2009   February 2009   March 2009   April 2009   September 2009   November 2009   December 2009   January 2010   April 2010   September 2010   October 2010   November 2010   December 2010   January 2011   February 2011   March 2011   April 2011   May 2011   June 2011   July 2011   August 2011   September 2011   October 2011   November 2011   December 2011   January 2012   February 2012   March 2012   April 2012   May 2012   June 2012   July 2012   October 2012   December 2012   March 2013   May 2013   August 2013   September 2013   October 2013   November 2013   March 2014   May 2014   June 2014   July 2014   September 2014   October 2014   December 2014   January 2015   February 2015   March 2015   April 2015   May 2015   June 2015   July 2015   August 2015   September 2015   October 2015   November 2015   December 2015   March 2016   April 2016   May 2016   July 2016   August 2016   September 2016   October 2016   November 2016   December 2016   January 2017   February 2017   March 2017   April 2017   May 2017   June 2017   July 2017   August 2017   September 2017   November 2017   March 2018   April 2018   May 2018   June 2018   August 2018   October 2018   December 2018   January 2019   March 2019   May 2019   August 2019   September 2019   March 2020   April 2020   May 2020   September 2020   October 2020   February 2022   June 2022   July 2022   October 2022   December 2022   February 2023   April 2023   September 2023   October 2023   May 2024   June 2024   July 2024  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Subscribe to Posts [Atom]