VIDEO LIST
Prefix (T) plays in embedded You Tube control panel. Right click to start.
Return to previous page using browser back button.
Prefix(B) uses the application media player in your browser. I suggest QuickTime.
It has a satisfactory control panel. The files are .mp4.
Click to download and save.
Tested with Chrome, FireFox, Internet Explorer, and Safari browsers.
(T) Printing Money
(B) The Future Is Waiting
(T) Silence
Note: I'm using a free hosting service with limited memory for video files.
The HTML5 video tag is not fully satisfactory. The HTML5 tag console
panels are poor quality, and the FireFox browser requires javascript
coding to fall through to FLASH because it does not support FireFox
accessing embedded video. To play using embedded web site video, even
with HTML5, in all browsers, requires 4 different file formats, javascript
coding, and uses excessive memory for videos of a few minutes length.
Thus my video file page uses video display features built into browsers
by accessing the browser helper applications, and large videos will
play from uploaded embedded You Tube files. This enables minimalist
coding for my applications. This is relatively simple and functional.
If programmers ever get their act together, a common video format that
can be accessed by all browsers with a one instruction HTML video tag
will enable (1) video file, and (1) HTML video tag instruction, for any
video play, using any browser, with an included console control panel
having at least the features of QuickTime.
Ideally what should have been done, since the .mp4 file format was already
a standard, and able to play well in the proven QuickTime player,
would have been to tweak the different browser software to automatically
play video during download, thus removing that delay, with
one click to start the download. That way the memory already built into
every PC, with all the browser features, and using a proven player,
would have been used efficiently. Clearly corporate need for patent
encumbering and developing "brand", at the expense of customer satisfaction,
by forcing work around among the different software packages, is delaying
efficient consumer video IT.