I suppose a few of my colleagues might not be familiar with The Simpsons tv show and the character Mojo the Helper Monkey. I had hoped to embed a clip from the web, but it seems that either the Fox people are doing a decent job keeping their copyrighted content off the free web video sites or perhaps Mojo’s episode isn’t as funny as I thought it was…Maybe a little of both. But I suppose I should explain how Mojo came to mind in the first place.
I’m hanging out at the parent’s place this evening and after scouring the web for quite some time I’ve yet to actually find an embedded Quicktime video outside of an Apple or affiliated site. I even enlisted the help of my 3 adopted siblings, ages 10, 11, and 15 to act as Helper Monkeys, Oompa Loompas, Robins to my Batmans, Shortrounds to my Indiana Jones (that’s all the sidekick characters I can think of right now). Yet despite their familiarity and skill surfing the web, they could only find Flash videos…”Everything’s an Adobe video!” they repeatedly complained. I suppose there is some educational value in such whining. I am sure there must be some embedded QT videos out there, but this exercise clearly shows the prevalence of Flash.
Before I sent my sidekicks on their fruitless quest they suggested I simply visit Apple or Itunes to which I replied that while not technically cheating, doing so wouldn’t allow me to add much to a future class discussion. Well perhaps I should have listened to them. While I certainly don’t march in lockstep behind Bill Gates, I’ve especially tried to avoid being sucked into the I-everything Mac world. Maybe I’ve seen the Matrix, the Terminator, and 2001 A Space Odyssey too many times. But I trudge onto apple.com/quicktime but I didn’t readily see any embedded QT files. I did check out their HD gallery and was impressed by the quality of the videos at various relatively small file sizes, though they were pop-ups instead of embedded. However I did find an amusing, but really quite annoying glitch…I selected a video file of about 500 megs and it opened and started to stream, but rather slowly, though I expected that. So I paused it to prevent it from catching up to the stream too quickly. But in what seemed a very arrogant manner, when the video decided it had streamed enough to play fully it overrode my “pause” and began to play again, only to catch up the uncompleted stream and stall out again. I tried this several times and every time I hit the pause button, the video would start playing again only a few seconds later. I’m pretty sure I could hear HAL 9000 whispering in my ear ”I’ve sorry Aaron, I’m afraid I can’t do that”
For the record, I actually found on interscope.com, the record company, embedded videos that let you choose Flash, Windows, or Quicktime. The site makes you watch an ad before each video, but the site was well layed out and had a very nice selection of content.