Interesting Stuff 2009-0408 - Erik Huggers Ariel Interview
Editor's note: In this week's issue of Ariel, the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ's staff newspaper, Alex Goodey interviewed Erik Huggers, Director, Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Future Media & Technology. Thanks to Ariel and Alex for allowing us to republish this edited version:
Alex Goodey: What's your reaction to the awards the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ iPlayer has garnered in the past few weeks - four in total. You must be delighted?
Erik Huggers: More than delighted. They just keep coming in. it's a great recognition of the hard work of the team in FM&T, and of the fantastic programmes that the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ's content division creates.
At the end of the day the reason the project was so successful in my opinion was a combination of great technology with great programmes, marketed in a way that consumers understand. It's the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ working together and making a sea change in the industry.
AG: What comes next for the consumers, after a very successful first year you must feel like there is little else left to conquer...
EH: This is the tip of the iceberg. We have about half a million unique users using iPlayer every single day, but there's quite a few more people on the internet who haven't yet used iPlayer, so what comes next is we want to make sure we reach as many people as possible, number one. That's a drive for broader adoption of the iPlayer.
Secondly, we're working on iPlayer version 3. We're looking at a whole new look and feel for the service, and we're also going to introduce some new nifty little features, some of which have been in the iPlayer lab for a while, some of which are new altogether.
AG: We've been hearing a lot about open source recently. Why is it so important, and why is the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ promoting it?
EH: In a funny sort of way, you get audiences not just to be audiences, but more and more people have capability in writing and developing software, and if you can embrace the power of the many to develop an application, that's a very interesting way of working. We can throw thousands of people at developing an application, but if you can do it in a way where people can build on top of what you put out, it'll get better adoption, it'll get more stable products, it'll be more feature-rich.
We've got a long history of doing that, for example we recently visited Kingswood Warren with Mark Thompson for the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ R&D folks, and they have build a product called Ingex (automated tapeless production software). That's completely open-source software. We contributed it to the industry, it's getting adoption and people are building new features. So we benefit, they benefit. A very positive thing.
AG: Would you say open-source is an in-house move as well as an external one?
Can software spend be justified when free software in the open-source arena can do the job just as well and sometimes better than paid-for software?
EH: I think without a shadow of a doubt there is still a very important role to be played by paid-for software and even for software we end up developing ourselves.
If you look at what we're trying to do across the entire value chain some of the stuff has never been done before so you can't even go and buy it, even if you wanted to buy it, even if you wanted to get it for free, it doesn't exist yet so some of the - call it the line of business functionalities that are particular to our industry - you just cannot find elsewhere.
Now, over time that will come but I think we have an important role as a catalyst in that space and so what we try to do is try to find the right balance from a value for money point of view with an audience benefit point of view with what do we need for functionality to empower the business to get its stuff done. So sometimes that means we buy existing pieces of software and we do a systems integration job on it, other times we say gosh it doesn't exist yet and we have to build it ourselves and I don't think it's a straightforward answer - it really depends on what situation you're in.
Dispelling iPlayer myths
AG: Is iPlayer likely to be put into the public domain, open source, so the audience can start developing its own add ons?
EH: There's a common misconception as to what iPlayer really is.
iPlayer is not a bit of software that you can stick on a disk and give to someone - 'Here's your iPlayer'. What you see as a consumer is the least complicated thing of the entire service. The most complicated thing of the entire service is the back end, call it the engine room, the plumbing, making all of the proprietary systems that we have in place talk to each other, work with each other and get those workflows to actually work.
We've had many broadcasters from around the world call us to ask 'can we licence the iPlayer?' and we say 'we're flattered that you're asking us but the truth is we couldn't do it even if we wanted to'.
I think what we can do, however, is in the digital Britain response we have posed the idea of sharing iPlayer, in other words, could we help set up their own iPlayer? So literally - itv.com/iplayer, so you go there you'd get the iPlayer but with ITV content.
So there is no such thing as putting it out there. What we could end up doing is a world where we make some of our own, we expose some of the APIs and allow others to build services on top of our services and those are things that we're absolutely thinking about."
Erik Huggers was interviewed by Alex Goodey
Comment number 1.
At 8th Apr 2009, jr4412 wrote:Erik Huggers writes: "..we expose some of the APIs and allow others to build services on top of our services.."
way to go, especially if there aren't any restrictive licenses.
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Comment number 2.
At 9th Apr 2009, cping500 wrote:Could we have a blog from the 'bug fighting' iPlayer group to tell us what they are doing about curing some of the annoying intermittent bugs especially in the audio (radio version.)
On the question of how to do it.... I think there is probably enough on the collective "Future Media" blogs to give any competent person the field the recipe.... but why not get some of our money back by offering a training course to interested parties and a consultancy service before the employees who built it set up their own company to do this.
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Comment number 3.
At 10th Apr 2009, Andrew wrote:Director of Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Vision, Jana Bennett, promised in a speech on 9 March ( /pressoffice/speeches/stories/bennett_winning.shtml ) that Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ HD programmes would be available on iPlayer "in the next month". What happened?
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Comment number 4.
At 10th Apr 2009, Nick Reynolds wrote:Andrew646 - if you're just patient for a little longer, there will be some exciting news soon.
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Comment number 5.
At 16th Apr 2009, KernowChris wrote:... and so what happened at 1pm today when the iPlayer HD news item got pulled from the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔpage?
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Comment number 6.
At 16th Apr 2009, Andrew wrote:Here's the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ News story about the launch of iPlayer HD that ChrisCornwall was referring to:
How come there isn't a blog post about it here on the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Internet blog though? There's usually a post here when there are significant changes to iPlayer.
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Comment number 7.
At 16th Apr 2009, Andrew wrote:Thank you for finally including release notes for the update to iPlayer Desktop: /iplayer/dm/release_notes.txt
The update to iPlayer Desktop went fine, but I can't see that anything has changed on the iPlayer website; is any HD content actually available yet? I assumed that the Doctor Who special would be available in HD ( /iplayer/episode/b00jz2t4/Doctor_Who_Planet_of_the_Dead/ ) but I can't see a special HD download button, only the regular one.
Also, there's a thread on the iPlayer message board about iPlayer HD: /dna/mbiplayer/F8035762?thread=6477071
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Comment number 8.
At 18th Apr 2009, Nick Reynolds wrote:ChrisCornwall - as I've been on leave for two days I'm not sure what happened either.
There is a blog post coming however. Expect something next week.
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Comment number 9.
At 18th Apr 2009, KernowChris wrote:@NickReynolds - Thanks.
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Comment number 10.
At 18th Apr 2009, killerspam wrote:The HD iplayer streams are definitely there, just not 'live' on the iPlayer site.
The video resolution is 720p (1280x720), video is 3072Kbps h.264 and audio is 128Kbps (could have done with being a little higher for HD, beeb!)
The iPlayer website isn't yet providing the links to download the files, but there any many shows already encoded in HD, including Jonathon Ross, Dr Who, 'A Question of Genius', Antiques Roadshow, Doctors, Gardner's World, Jools Holland, Robin Hood, and The No. 1 Ladies' Detective.
I do wonder whether this will be download-only or streaming. The Flash-based player performs badly on Linux machines, and the scaling is distorted somewhat via the Air app on windows.
Looking forward to seeing progress!
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Comment number 11.
At 19th Apr 2009, KernowChris wrote:@Nick Reynolds ...
Is there any prospect of reintroducing the sorting features as in the last beta version (pre Christmas 2007) of the iPlayer download manager. I really miss them and the professional feel of that release.
All versions of the download manager released post beta have been appallingly basic and some would say amateurish. I sincerely hope that something is done in a future release.
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