Videophlow tries to enliven YouTube

By Stephen Shankland on 28 April 2008

Tags: online | oortle | software | video | videophlow | web 2.0 | youtube | photo | chat

Photophlow was for sharing and chatting about Flickr photos. Now there's Videophlow, which presents a similarly elaborate interface for YouTube videos.

Oortle's service, called Videophlow, lets people post videos into a chat room and control the video playback. As with Photophlow, people can use Videophlow to take advantage of YouTube features such as searching, adding comments, or marking videos as favourites.

"You'll even be able to throw a tomato at the screen for everyone to see," Neil Berkman, founder of Oortle, said in an interview at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco, where he was scheduled to demonstrate the technology.

Oortle, the company behind Photophlow, is working on a video equivalent called Videophlow.

While Videophlow is still undergoing closed testing, Photophlow has been groaning under the weight of its membership, with slow response times and sometimes no access at all.

"Scaling and bug fixing are still our biggest priorities," Berkman said. "Supporting real-time interaction in the way we do means we can't use off-the-shelf software. It's a hard thing to get right, but I'm sure we will."

Streaming videos are tougher than photos for servers to handle, but happily for Oortle, that burden falls on YouTube operator Google. It's no more difficult to build its framework around video than around photo, Berkman said.

Another difference between the earlier site is that Videophlow will have "less emphasis on big public rooms. The main use we'd like to support is small groups of friends watching together," he said.

As with Photophlow, Videophlow is expected to be offered through a private beta test version.

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