-->

Adobe Joins with Kaltura for HTML5 Widget

Article Featured Image

Is Adobe switching to HTML5 video? No, but a recent release from Adobe aims to make work easier for video publishers who have to juggle the demands of Flash and HTML5 video.

Adobe has released the HTML5 Video Player widget, which provides easy browser detection. The widget serves video through the <video> tag, or the Flash Player when the <video> tag isn't supported. It works the same whether video is being watched on a computer, cell phone, or TV device.

Site builders can get the widget from the Adobe Widget Browser. The Widget Browser is made to work easily through Dreamweaver, but Dreamweaver isn't a requirement. Those without it can download Adobe Air first, and then the Widget Browser.

The Video Player is built on a subset of Kaltura's HTML5's Media Library. According to the Kaltura blog, the HTML player's user interface is built using jQueryUI and the fallback Flash player is built on Adobe's Open Source Media Framework.

Using the widget, the player user interface will look the same no matter the browser. The interface will be easy to skin and the widget will support plug-ins for adding closed captioning or accessibility features.

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

Kaltura Receives $20M in Funding

Funds from Intel Capital will go to supporting the MeeGo mobile operating system and Intel's AppUp app store.

Siemens to Resell Kaltura Services to Media Companies

Global provider praises open source Kaltura's flexible platform, will sell stand-alone and integrated products.

Amazon Web Services Gets Adobe Flash Media Server 4

Delivering interactive, scalable experiences is now more accessible for small businesses and events.

Kaltura Releases V3 of Community Edition

Also, Kaltura announces a cloud-based version for the Amazon Web Services platform.

Adobe: "The Web is Ready for HTML5"

Adobe's Kevin Towes says the company embraces the notion of a web where HTML5 and Flash both have their places.

Adobe MAX 2010: Kick-off Keynote

Kevin Lynch shows off Flash—and HTML5 with CSS3—fueling Adobe's changing landscape.

Kaltura Announces Cross-Campus Education Suite

MediaSpace lets colleges create their own YouTubes, letting everyone contribute online media.

HTML5's Open Source Solution?

Kaltura provides a toolkit for HTML5 embedded video, with a fallback to Flash or Ogg Theora when H.264 isn't available in a user's browser

Companies and Suppliers Mentioned