Using video in your Web pages
Video and animations are two of the most dramatic and
eye-catching elements that you can include in your
Web documents.
The two most common formats used on the Web are:
- Quicktime
- Quicktime is a format, originally developed for the Macintosh,
which allows users to view and edit video,
animation, sound, text, music, and other dynamic information.
From a technical point of view, Quicktime supports two kinds of
files: image files and time-based movie files.
- MPEG (Moving Picture Expert Group)
- MPEG is a standard for digital video
(sequences of images in time) and audio compression.
MPEG is expected to become the
industry standard for delivery of interactive television.
QuickTime also supports MPEG compressed video.
As usual with Web documents, the format used is specified via the file
name extension. For Quicktime, use .qt or .mov as the extension.
For MPEG, use .mpg or mpe as the file name extension.
Some Video Examples
The following Quicktime video was made with a black-and-white
digital video camera called QuickCam, made by Connectix.
Kelly's ad, in Quicktime format.
This short clip is only about 8 seconds long, but takes up 880K
of disk space. If it was color, the clip would take up even more
space. This should drive home the point that video storage
requires large amounts of disk space.
We translated the clip into MPEG format, and now it only takes
up about 180K. And, as you can see, we've lost both quality and sound!
In sum, if you plan to incorporate video into your Web documents,
you must ensure that you have adequate disk space. In addition,
you'll probably also want to have a fast server machine and
a fairly high bandwidth network connection. Otherwise, Web
clients trying to retrieve video documents risk having to wait
a long time while the video is transfered. Worse, if it takes
too long, their network connection might abort part
way through the process!
Mimi Recker, mimi.recker@vuw.ac.nz
Copyright © 1995 Mimi Recker