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Using the Vodpod Organizer to Publish a Set of Videos

Our Organizer is a really powerful tool if you want to quickly curate a set of videos to publish to a widget, VodSpot, or a video site powered by our API.

From your Vodpod home page, click the “organize your videos” link. This will bring up the organizer:

organizer

You can then use the organizer to quickly assemble a set of videos from your collection. Just shift + click to select the videos you want (or use search to refine your list first). Once you have selected the videos you want, you can then give them a specific tag (or tags), or move them into a separate collection.

Then, just setup a widget based on those tags (or, create a VodSpot module that points to those tags).

Filed under: Basics, FAQs, For Your Blog, Publishing Tools, Tips, Tricks, Hacks

Upgrade went a little rough…

We’ve updated the site today to Rails 2.3, which is a great change, but has definitely caused some problems and headaches. We’re working hard to fix things.

One big problem is that our forums are totally hosed. So please use this blog (and comments on this post) if you need to communicate with us for now.

–scott

Filed under: News

Techstars.tv on Boxee, with Vodpod

We love it when people build cool stuff using Vodpod.

When we launched VodSpot last year, among the first folks to try it out was TechStars. They built a really nice video site using VodSpot, which was impressive given our early tools were a bit crude!

TechStars is a Boulder-based seed investment fund, that provides a lot more than early stage funding to entrepreneurs. They invite a select group of start-ups to Boulder each summer, provide them with early funding and great mentors. Check out their VodSpot at TechStars.tv or their website to learn more.

Now TechStars has gone further, and built a Boxee application. David Cohen, the man behind TechStars, describes it on their blog — here are a few key bits:

I thought I’d take a second and tell you how we built TechStars.tv, because I think the solutions we’re using rock.

The TechStars.tv web site is powered by VodSpot, which is one of the services available from Vodpod, a popular video bookmarking service. VodSpot gives you a flexible, branded, fully-skinned way to display any given collection of videos from around the web. It supports all the popular sites like YouTube, Vimeo, etc. Your VodSpot doesn’t host your videos, it just organizes videos that already exist elsewhere on the web. It’s simple, intuitive, and it works flawlessly. When you are looking at TechStars.tv, you’re looking at an example of VodSpot, plain and simple. We’ve just skinned it to look like the TechStars web site using CSS. Our collection of videos simply includes our original content such as our new weekly documentary series “The Founders” as well as other relevant content from our great mentors from around the web.

Once we had this working, it seemed like the natural thing to do was to enable the content within Boxee. I dropped a note to the guys at VodPod, and they quickly turned around and gave me a video RSS feed that was compatible with Boxee. I then tweeted to see if anybody in our community might want to hack together a Boxee app out of that feed. Michael Sitarzewski stepped up and spent one late night figuring it out. It’s pretty simple (basic instructions here) and Michael had the finished up completed in two or three days. Of course, he rocks, so it might take normal people longer. Michael runs a startup called Callisto.fm which is a new way to discover and listen to podcasts. If you dig the Boxee app he helped create, please give him some feedback on Callisto.fm – I’m sure he’d appreciate it.

So there you have it – TechStars.tv is now live on Boxee. Thanks to VodPod and Michael of Callisto.fm for their help in making it happen.

That’s cool! We’ve got Boxee running on a Mac Mini and 42″ flat panel here at Vodpod HQ — we’re looking forward to playing with the new TechStars app this afternoon.

As we blogged a few weeks ago, anyone can get their Vodpod collection working on Boxee. It’s cool to see people starting to build apps now — this is definitely something we’re paying close attention to, and we expect to have more on this later in the summer.

Filed under: Stuff We Love, Tips, Tricks, Hacks

Major “surgery” in vodpod engineering

Summer seems like a great time to revamp our hosting stack and upgrade our application to Rails 2.3!

We’re finally ditching Apache in favor of Nginx + HAProxy. It’s a little scary to leave the warm embrace of good ‘ol Apache – but we’re ready to move on. Seems sort of appropriate, as we move from something US-built to find products from Russia and France, it rather reflects the growth of vodpod overall.

This change should mean better site performance and more capacity for growth.

Filed under: News

Your Vodpod (or Vodspot) on the TV

Vodpod helps people bookmark and collect their favorite videos from any site,. And we have tools that make it easy and simple to publish your video collection to any site, so people can watch those videos anywhere you like.

A logical next step for us to is to make easy for people to watch your collection not just on any site, but on any device — including your TV.

We’re starting to experiment with just that today, with the release of special RSS feeds for your Vodpod collections, and Vodspot sites, for Boxee, a very new (and very alpha!) bit of software that lets you watch videos on your PC or from the Net on your TV. People can now watch your video collection on a TV connected to Boxee by going to your collection (or your Vodspot, if you have one), copying the URL for the “Boxee RSS” feed, and pasting in at boxee.tv here.

Caveats abound: for someone to watch your videos through Boxee, they’ll have to have have Boxee installed on a device that supports it and is connected to your TV (you can also use Boxee just on your PC, but that kind of misses the point); and not all Flash players play nicely with Boxee, so your viewing experience will be a bit inconsistent.

But it’s interesting, and it certainly provides a peak into the future. We should note Boxee isn’t the only game in town. There is another similar, and very interesting bit of software called Plex, and we read with interest today that Flash10 is coming to a variety of phones this Fall. Interesting times.

Filed under: News, Publishing Tools

Bookmark the Videos You Tweet

Did you know you can have Vodpod automatically bookmark videos you share in Twitter?

Yep, it’s a rhetorical question.

Just go to the blog importer, choose “Twitter” from the drop-down and enter your username. You can see it in action on this vodpodder’s account.

Lori Gregory now has an archive of the videos she’s been sharing on Twitter. Nice, simple, cool.

Filed under: Collecting Tools, Tips, Tricks, Hacks

Documenting the Election Protests in Iran

iran_protests

Footage of Iranians protesting their elections on the streets of Tehran the past three days has been extremely moving. Unlike the uprising in China in 1989 and the massacre in Tiananmen Square, these scenes of unrest are captured on mobile phones and small digital devices and sent to the world.

We’ve tried to document some of the more recent and best footage and reportage here. Many other Vodpod members are collecting videos about the protests from web sites and news sources around the world, including Video Giornale Interattivo, Dheeruyadav, and Dandelionsalad. You can see all the latest footage collected by our members here.

Please bookmark videos you find, and tag them “Iran” or “Iran Election Protests” so we can help one another to stay informed.

Filed under: News

Collect Videos from 1000s of Sites

Vodpod is simply best way to collect and to keep track of your favorite videos on the web.

We have three powerful tools for collecting videos: a browser button; search; and a “blog importer” that automatically collects videos you post to your blog, share on Twitter, or favorite on YouTube.

You can collect videos from any site that offers Flash video and an embed code so enable sharing. Nearly 10,000 different sites at this point.

Once you’ve collected some videos, we make it easy to publish your collection anywhere you like. You’ll find widgets for your blog; applications for Facebook and Twitter; an API that lets you build most anything you’d like; a variety of RSS feeds, including ones so you can watch your collection on Boxee; and finally a simple, fun way to build your own video site, called Vodspot.

Filed under: Basics, Collecting Tools, FAQs, Welcome

An Update on Vodspot

Only six months ago we announced VodSpot, a way to turn your Vodpod video collection into your own video site with the push of a button.

Like so many things we do, VodSpot was an experiment. We put it out there to see what people might create with it and how it might be used. Six months in we see a lot of promise; so much that we’re investing a bunch of energy and time over the next few months to dramatically expand the capabilities of VodSpot, and to turn it into a more substantial publishing platform. Stay tuned.

tpm_vodspotThe ways in which this new service is being used are quite diverse. One of our longtime partners, Talking Points Memo, launched a new video section of their site built on VodSpot in the spring. It is a compendium of recent videos they have produced, as well as relevant and interesting reportage, commentary and even comedy from other media outlets (MSNBC, CNN, The DailyShow among them).

We’re pleased that a number of prominent news and political blogs use Vodpod, and many have created VodSpots as well — among them Americablog and the Sayfie Review.

techstars_vodspotTechStars is a Boulder, Co.-based organization that provides both seed capital and mentorship for start-ups and entrepreneurs. They’ve created TechStars.tv, where one can watch videos about the TechStars program and the start ups in it, as well as speeches by and interviews with many of the mentors in the program.

helphive_vodspotActual startups use VodSpots, too! One is Help Hive, a new service just launched in Seattle. It helps Seattle-ites find plumbers, gardeners, roofers, landscapers and more. They have created a Vodspot where they share very funny collection of DIY-gone-wrong videos — proof if any were needed why it’s better to hire an expert than to try to do it yourself.

necole_bitchie_vodspotA VodSpot can serve as an excellent companion to a blog. A perfect example of this is the NecoleBitchie.com blog, where the author casts a wry eye on the world of R&B and hip-hop stars. Ms. Bitchie’s video collection — named Bitchie TV, naturally — seamlessly fits into the layout and navigation of her blog, maintaining the same header and overall look and feel of the blog. It also shows the range of template styles VodSpot can support.

reelseo_vodspotThe ReelSEO blog, which provides in-depth coverage of the online video world, also has done a nice job building out a video section to their site. Again, the overall look and feel of the blog has been maintained, with a consistent and header on both the VodSpot and the main blog.

The most recent, and very intriguing, use of VodSpot comes from the Gawker blog empire. Just today they launched a microsite ad for the HBO show “TrueBlood” — powered by VodSpot. The microsite is linked to from the Gawker.com front door through a Vodpod widget. Cool, we think. And interesting.

There are over 3000 VodSpots in the wild, so we’ve barely gotten started with this post. I’d have to stay up a lot later to cover the full range.

Filed under: News

Brand new user profile pages!

I just pushed out some snazzy new user pages at Vodpod.  Now, instead of having a subdomain for each collection (i.e. http://spencerpod.vodpod.com), you’ll have a single user page showing all your recent activity.  This page will showcase all the videos you add on vodpod, as well as comments you leave on other videos.  You can check out my page at http://vodpod.com/spencer.

For those of you with multiple video collections, each collection will live under your user profile page.  For example, my “electronic music videos” collection is at http://vodpod.com/spencer/electro.

In your sidebar, we’ve added a couple of nifty modules, most notably the Stats module.  This shows a fancy little chart of your monthly video views.  Below that, you can also see how many videos you’ve discovered, meaning you were the first to collect, and videos you’ve made popular, which are those that you discovered, and 5 or more people went on to collect.

I hope you like the changes!

Filed under: News

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