English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-09-02 15:09:26 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Internet YouTube

7 answers

Popular video search engines

[edit] Agnostic Search

Search that is not affected by the hosting of video, where results are agnostic no matter where the video is located:

* AltaVista Video Search had one of the first video search engines with easy accessible use. Is found on a direct link called "Video" off the main page above the text block.
* blinkx was launched in 2004 and uses speech recognition and visual analysis to process spidered video rather than rely on metadata alone. blinkx claims to have the largest archive of video on the web and puts its collection at around 12,000,000 hours of content.
* Dabble is a human powered video search engine indexing 17 million videos across hundreds of popular videos sites. Dabble launched in July, 2006.
* Everyzing (formerly Podzinger until May, 2007) has spent $50 million building speech to text video search. Everyzing takes the user within the actual content by using speech recognition. This enables online video consumers to jump directly to the point in the video for which they are searching. Everyzing founder/CEO recently acknowledged publicly that they get speech to text right 70% of the time.

[edit] Non-agnostic Search

Search results are modified, or suspect, due to the large hosted video being given preferential treatment in search results:

* AOL Video AOL Video offers a leading video search engine that can be used to find video located on popular video destinations across the web. In December of 2005, AOL acquired Truveo Video Search.
* Google Video is a popular video search hosting site, and permits visitors to upload content to be hosted. It searches its own hosted content, and that of Youtube, which it bought it October, 2006. Found in the list of possible search options after clicking "more" on the main page.
* Yahoo! Video Search Yahoo!'s search engine examines video files on the internet using its Media RSS standard. Is found on a direct link called "Video" off the main page above the text block.
* YouTube was created in February 2005, as a 'consumer media company' for people to search for, watch and share original videos worldwide through the Internet. It was bought by Google in October 2006. Youtube and Google video search only themselves, though they have a very large index of video.

2007-09-02 18:29:34 · answer #1 · answered by sagarukin 4 · 0 0

ifilm.com
dailymotion.com
vidilife.com
putfile.com
none as gud as youtube tho..

2007-09-02 22:35:55 · answer #2 · answered by alittleilusion 2 · 0 0

google video and veoh.

2007-09-02 22:16:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes.. google video , hi5 videos, metacafe, and lots more...

2007-09-03 04:16:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&q=video+sharing+websites&btnG=Google+Search


http://video.google.com/

2007-09-02 22:15:14 · answer #5 · answered by deth 4 · 0 0

yes:

http://www.metacafe.com/

2007-09-02 22:13:43 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

http://www.break.com/

2007-09-02 22:15:16 · answer #7 · answered by D 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers