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Wednesday 22 January 2014

IF YOUR INTERNET CONNECTION IS NOT QUICK ENOUGH FOR YOUTUBE - GOOGLE CAN HELP YOU DETECT [CHECK IT OUT]

I know of many Blackberry who complain rather more or less have the belief that you can't you can't watch Youtube videos with BIS. It's not that it won't show the Youtube video but they claim to say "it skips". So what they do is that they watch online videos on Youtube via WiFi network.
Many are tempted to blame
stuttering YouTube streams on our internet providers, but who's really at fault?

What's the possible solution to the problem?

Google may shed some light on the subject now that it has launched a Video
Quality Report
http://www.google.com/get/videoqualityreport/#how_video_gets_to_you
. The tool tells
surfers how well their providers typically handle YouTube in a given region, breaking reliability down by the feed quality and time of day. Services that properly load at least 90 percent
of 720p videos get a "YouTube
HD Verified" badge, while those that tend to choke wind up in standard definition and lower definition categories.

Only Canadians have access to the report at the moment, although it should reach other countries in time.

What's the aim?

Wherever it goes, it should
help viewers decide whether or not it's time to switch networks -- and it just might spur some companies into making much-needed upgrades.

Google can now say if your internet connection is quick enough for YouTube

I know of many Blackberry who complain rather more or less have the belief that you can't you can't watch Youtube videos with BIS. It's not that it won't show the Youtube video but they claim to say "it skips". So what they do is that they watch online videos on Youtube via WiFi network.
Many are tempted to blame
stuttering YouTube streams on our internet providers, but who's really at fault?

What's the possible solution to the problem?

Google may shed some light on the subject now that it has launched a Video Quality Report. The tool tells
surfers how well their providers typically handle YouTube in a given region, breaking reliability down by the feed quality and time of day. Services that properly load at least 90 percent
of 720p videos get a "YouTube
HD Verified" badge, while those that tend to choke wind up in standard definition and lower definition categories.

Only Canadians have access to the report at the moment, although it should reach other countries in time.

What's the aim?

Wherever it goes, it should
help viewers decide whether or not it's time to switch networks -- and it just might spur some companies into making much-needed upgrades.

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Source: engadget

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