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Yoink'd creates video playlists in seconds
Posted by
Peter Butler
on Oct 9 2007
(Credit: Yoink'd)
Like most of us who spend considerable time in the Web 2.0 universe,
I love to embed content on blogs and social-networking home pages. YouTube
is loaded with countless hours of entertaining videos, but it wouldn't
be nearly as popular without the ability to embed those wacky movies
all over the Web. Now, a new online service called Yoink'd
hopes to capitalize on the embedded-video craze by providing a free
method of compiling, presenting, and sharing Web videos with your
friends.
Yoink'd is essentially an online media player that uses AJAX and
DHTML to search for, collect, and share online video files. It is an
entirely self-contained, Web-based application. All of your preferences
and playlists are saved within the Yoink'd Mediabox itself. There's no
profile page or settings page you have to visit each time you want to
add videos or change your preferences. To me, that's the beauty of
Yoink'd. The entire application lives in the embeddable widget. Once
you pop it on your blog, you'll never need to visit the Yoink'd site
again.
The Yoink'd Mediabox widget looks cool, but it needs to improve its searching and playback functionalities.(Credit: CNET Networks)
The Yoink'd interface seems to have borrowed heavily, at least in concept, from the Apple iPhone.
A simple main menu provides text links for your playlists, your
friends' playlists, your in-box (playlists sent to you), and your
Yoink'd settings. Clicking into any of those four menu options brings
up another set of navigation options; a helpful "back" button will
always take you one level up.
There are three ways to embed your Yoink'd playlist on your blog, Web site, or social-networking home page. The main app is the Yoink'd Mediabox,
a 320x480-pixel software component that is duplicated on the main Web
site. You can browse your own playlists and friends' playlists, create
your own playlists, or adjust your Yoink'd settings.
For a smaller, read-only version of player, try the Yoink'd Mini, which is 320x135 pixels. The Yoink'd Widget takes the opposite approach, providing all the features of the main player in a smaller, 190x310-pixel interface.
Yoink'd Mediabox is still very much in beta release, but it's a
promising start so far. The biggest limitations are in searching for
and playing online videos. The Yoink'd Mediabox only returns six video
results for any search term, which are not nearly enough, and there's
no metadata included with any searches. In order to gain larger
acceptance, Yoink'd will need to beef up its search. After all, YouTube
already lets users embed their own playlists.
I also ran into some serious problems with the registration/log-in
process. First, since Yoink'd is AJAX-based, Mozilla Firefox won't
automatically save your password information. Second, as soon as I
embedded Yoink'd Mediabox in this blog, it somehow logged me out
automatically, and I can't log back in. I'm sure that my password is
correct, but there's also no way to confirm it via an automatic e-mail
reminder.
One interesting feature in Yoink'd is the ability to turn any RSS feed into a video playlist. You can see the results of my most recent blog posts to The Daily Download
in the Yoink'd Mini widget that is embedded at the bottom of this post.
Yoink'd currently offers three skins for the larger Mediabox player,
but the other two widgets are quite plain.
The videos created from RSS text feeds are definitely random, but I thought the corresponding video for my Office of the future? newsletter post from last week was very amusing.
Another cool feature in Yoink'd that I don't understand very well is
the "auto-linking of dead video links." I'm not exactly sure how it
works, but when you see a YouTube video that has been deleted from
YouTube on another person's Yoink'd playlist, it still plays somehow.
I'll have to investigate what kind of voodoo Yoink'd is using to
accomplish the feat, but let me know in the comments if you understand
how it works.
While you can easily embed the full-sized Yoink'd Mediabox (pictured
above), I wanted to share the specific RSS playlist I created, which is
only possible by using the Mini widget
Subscribe to The Daily Download
Yoink'd creates video playlists in seconds
Posted by
Peter Butler
on Oct 9 2007
(Credit: Yoink'd)
Like most of us who spend considerable time in the Web 2.0 universe,
I love to embed content on blogs and social-networking home pages. YouTube
is loaded with countless hours of entertaining videos, but it wouldn't
be nearly as popular without the ability to embed those wacky movies
all over the Web. Now, a new online service called Yoink'd
hopes to capitalize on the embedded-video craze by providing a free
method of compiling, presenting, and sharing Web videos with your
friends.
Yoink'd is essentially an online media player that uses AJAX and
DHTML to search for, collect, and share online video files. It is an
entirely self-contained, Web-based application. All of your preferences
and playlists are saved within the Yoink'd Mediabox itself. There's no
profile page or settings page you have to visit each time you want to
add videos or change your preferences. To me, that's the beauty of
Yoink'd. The entire application lives in the embeddable widget. Once
you pop it on your blog, you'll never need to visit the Yoink'd site
again.
The Yoink'd Mediabox widget looks cool, but it needs to improve its searching and playback functionalities.(Credit: CNET Networks)
The Yoink'd interface seems to have borrowed heavily, at least in concept, from the Apple iPhone.
A simple main menu provides text links for your playlists, your
friends' playlists, your in-box (playlists sent to you), and your
Yoink'd settings. Clicking into any of those four menu options brings
up another set of navigation options; a helpful "back" button will
always take you one level up.
There are three ways to embed your Yoink'd playlist on your blog, Web site, or social-networking home page. The main app is the Yoink'd Mediabox,
a 320x480-pixel software component that is duplicated on the main Web
site. You can browse your own playlists and friends' playlists, create
your own playlists, or adjust your Yoink'd settings.
For a smaller, read-only version of player, try the Yoink'd Mini, which is 320x135 pixels. The Yoink'd Widget takes the opposite approach, providing all the features of the main player in a smaller, 190x310-pixel interface.
Yoink'd Mediabox is still very much in beta release, but it's a
promising start so far. The biggest limitations are in searching for
and playing online videos. The Yoink'd Mediabox only returns six video
results for any search term, which are not nearly enough, and there's
no metadata included with any searches. In order to gain larger
acceptance, Yoink'd will need to beef up its search. After all, YouTube
already lets users embed their own playlists.
I also ran into some serious problems with the registration/log-in
process. First, since Yoink'd is AJAX-based, Mozilla Firefox won't
automatically save your password information. Second, as soon as I
embedded Yoink'd Mediabox in this blog, it somehow logged me out
automatically, and I can't log back in. I'm sure that my password is
correct, but there's also no way to confirm it via an automatic e-mail
reminder.
One interesting feature in Yoink'd is the ability to turn any RSS feed into a video playlist. You can see the results of my most recent blog posts to The Daily Download
in the Yoink'd Mini widget that is embedded at the bottom of this post.
Yoink'd currently offers three skins for the larger Mediabox player,
but the other two widgets are quite plain.
The videos created from RSS text feeds are definitely random, but I thought the corresponding video for my Office of the future? newsletter post from last week was very amusing.
Another cool feature in Yoink'd that I don't understand very well is
the "auto-linking of dead video links." I'm not exactly sure how it
works, but when you see a YouTube video that has been deleted from
YouTube on another person's Yoink'd playlist, it still plays somehow.
I'll have to investigate what kind of voodoo Yoink'd is using to
accomplish the feat, but let me know in the comments if you understand
how it works.
While you can easily embed the full-sized Yoink'd Mediabox (pictured
above), I wanted to share the specific RSS playlist I created, which is
only possible by using the Mini widget
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