Audience members can stream your event today for themselves FR EE. Apple yesterday approved the live Ustream Broadcaster for iPhone application. Now anyone with an iPhone 3G can stream live video straight from the iPhone to the Ustream website. That video can be embedded into other Web pages for free. When audience members are holding up their phones, they are no longer just snapping photos, but sending video of your conference or event to others on the web.
Todd Lucier employs in his blog post with the new trends at conferences.
It's been a tremendous progress that bandwidth and techniques now stream the live attendance at conferences (more passive than active) to allow remote places. so that the latest findings and experiences of a broad mass more easily accessible.
Of course, the usual internet desire for freedom cost is understandable. For meetings of governmental or nonprofit organizations, the a priori should have no economic interests, which is also nachvolziehbar.
But for the private sector (and PhoCusWright, a private think tank) that is difficult to realize or even counterproductive. First, there is not really a business model for a free solution, the other meaning is indeed the desire to offer superior knowledge and sell it.
That is my opinion also the point at which the model failed Streaming by iPhone. A ban on the transcript, as is usual in the cinema, meeting with lighting and a much stricter social control, easily realized.
The controversy over free of charge or fee, recording or not freedom, is far from decided, and if he proceeds is totally free for the benefit of not sure.
Photo cc "Live streaming from fra Qik.com nrkbeta at Flickr."
Posted via web from The Travel Technology Consultancy
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