Like Winamp, RealPlayer allows random access into a web-based MP3 file and enables you to jump (Real calls it seek) to exact minute:second offsets. You can also move forward and backward in one-second increments using CTRL plus the left/right arrow keys.
In version 10, we see the beginning of a segment-editing sensibility. When you add a clip to your Favorites, you have the option to set a start time (though not a corresponding end time or duration). On Windows, for the clip mentioned above, the result is this shortcut:
"C:\Program Files\Real\RealPlayer\realplay.exe" /startpos:00:23:45 \
http://rdscon.vo.llnwd.net/o1/_downloads/itc/mp3/2004/
David%20Bornstein%20-%20New%20Solutions.mp3
I'm puzzled, though, as to why the shortcut couldn't be this instead:
"C:\Program Files\Real\RealPlayer\realplay.exe" \
http://rdscon.vo.llnwd.net/o1/_downloads/itc/mp3/2004/
David%20Bornstein%20-%20New%20Solutions.mp3?\start=23:43&end=24:58
or, alternatively, a reference to a .RAM encapsulation of that URL by way of a ramgen service. It seems to me that if Real Networks hosted a well-known instance of that service, it could accumulate an interesting library of media fragments.
Something else puzzles me here. If you construct this URL and load it, you'll find that RealPlayer's 23:43 isn't quite the same as Winamp's, or ITConversations', or my own clipping service's, or Audacity's. In RealPlayer, the sentence that begins like so, "Historically when we think of how social change happens," appears not at 23:43, but at 23:50. I've yet to get to the bottom of this discrepancy, which amounts to a whopping seven seconds in this example, but it's clearly problematic. QuickTime, by the way, exhibits the same behavior as RealPlayer.
will the new Real Player have a podcatching feature? I'd like to be able to watch videocasts using RSS feeds.
Posted by:
;-) |
June 09, 2007 at 09:06 AM