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#10 Dutch Insurance company (banned from tv)
#8 Samsung Omnia (i900) "Unboxing"
#6 Tiger Woods walks on water
#5 Nike Football "Take it to the next
level" directed by Guy Ritchie
#3 Kobe, Aston Martin, Nike
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#2 Diesel’s Something for the
Weekend XXX 30th Anniversary Party
(NSFW)
What is Youtube? Well, just in case you are
living in a cave this is what wiki had to say..
YouTube, LLC is a video sharing website
where users can upload, view and share
video clips. YouTube was created in February
2005 by three former PayPal employees.[1] In
November 2006, YouTube was bought by
Google Inc. for 1.65 billion dollars, and is
now operated as a subsidiary of Google. The
company is based in San Bruno, California,
and uses Adobe Flash Video technology to
display a wide variety of user-generated
video content, including movie clips, TV
clips and music videos, as well as amateur
content such as video blogging and short
original videos. Most of the content on
YouTube has been uploaded by members of
the public, although media organizations
including CBS and the BBC offer some of
their material via the site.
Unregistered users can watch the videos,
while registered users are permitted to
upload an unlimited number of videos.
Videos that are considered to contain
potentially offensive content are available
only to registered users over the age of 18.
The uploading of videos containing
defamation, commercial advertisements,
copyright violations and material
encouraging criminal conduct is prohibited
by YouTube's terms of service.[2]
YouTube company headquarters in
San Bruno, California
YouTube was founded by Chad Hurley, Steve Chen
and Jawed Karim, who were all early employees of
PayPal.[3] Hurley studied design at Indiana
University of Pennsylvania, while Chen and Karim
studied computer science together at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[4]
According to a story that has often been repeated in
the media, Chad Hurley and Steve Chen developed
the idea for YouTube during the early months of
2005, after they had experienced difficulty sharing
videos that had been shot at a dinner party at
Chen's apartment in San Francisco. Jawed Karim
did not attend the party and denied that it had
occurred, and Chad Hurley commented that the idea
that YouTube was founded after a dinner party
"was probably very strengthened by marketing
ideas around creating a story that was very
digestible."[5]
YouTube began as an angel funded technology
startup, with help including a $11.5 million
investment by Sequoia Capital between November
2005 and April 2006.[6] YouTube's early
headquarters were situated above a pizzeria and
Japanese restaurant in San Mateo, California.[7]
The domain name www.youtube.com was
activated on February 15, 2005, and the website
was developed over the subsequent months.[8]
The choice of the domain name www.youtube.com
led to problems for a similarly named website,
www.utube.com. The owner of the site, Universal
Tube & Rollform Equipment, filed a lawsuit against
YouTube in November 2006 after being overloaded
on a regular basis by people looking for YouTube.
Universal Tube has since changed the name of its
website to www.utubeonline.com.[9].[10]
YouTube offered the public a beta test of the site in
May 2005, six months before the official launch in
November 2005. The site grew rapidly, and in July
2006 the company announced that more than
65,000 new videos were being uploaded every day,
and that the site was receiving 100 million video
views per day.[11] According to data published by
market research company comScore, YouTube is
the dominant provider of online video in the United
States, with a market share of around 44 percent
and more than five billion videos viewed in July
2008.[12] It is estimated that 13 hours of new videos
are uploaded to the site every minute, and that in
2007 YouTube consumed as much bandwidth as
the entire Internet in 2000.[13][14] In March 2008,
YouTube's bandwidth costs were estimated at
approximately $1 million a day.[15] Alexa ranks
YouTube as the third most visited website on the
Internet, behind Yahoo! and Google.[16]
In October 2006, Google Inc. announced that it had
acquired YouTube for US$1.65 billion in Google
stock, and the deal was finalized on November 13,
2006.[17] Google does not provide detailed figures
for YouTube's running costs, and YouTube's
revenues in 2007 were noted as "not material" in a
regulatory filing.[15] In June 2008 a Forbes
magazine article projected the 2008 revenue at $200
million, noting progress in advertising sales.[18]
In November 2008, YouTube reached an agreement
with MGM, Lions Gate Entertainment and CBS
which will allow the companies to post full-length
films and television shows on the site, accompanied
by advertisements. The move is intended to create
competition with websites such as Hulu, which
features material from both NBC and Fox.[19]
Video format
YouTube's video playback technology for web users is
based on the Adobe Flash Player. This allows the site to
display videos with quality comparable to more
established video playback technologies (such as
Windows Media Player, QuickTime and RealPlayer) that
generally require the user to download and install a web
browser plug-in in order to view video.[43] Viewing Flash
video also requires a plug-in, but market research from
Adobe Systems has found that its Flash plug-in is
installed on over 95% of personal computers.[44]
Videos uploaded to YouTube are limited to ten minutes in
length and a file size of 1GB. When YouTube was
launched in 2005, it was possible for any user to upload
videos longer than ten minutes, but YouTube's help
section now states: "You can no longer upload videos
longer than ten minutes regardless of what type of
account you have. Users who had previously been
allowed to upload longer content still retain this ability,
so you may occasionally see videos that are longer than
ten minutes." The ten minute limit was introduced in
March 2006, after YouTube found that the majority of
videos exceeding this length were unauthorized uploads
of television shows and films.[45][46]
YouTube accepts videos uploaded in most formats,
including .WMV, .AVI, .MOV, MPEG, .MP4, DivX, .FLV and
.OGG. It also supports 3GP, allowing videos to be
uploaded directly from a mobile phone.[47]
YouTube's videos are distributed through streaming
media technology in a range of formats, with the video
and audio quality dependent on the platform. YouTube's
website interface offers users the choice of two quality
levels, normal and high, both of which are based on the
Flash Video container format. These videos are
Sorenson Spark H.263 encoded, with the audio in mono
MP3 format.[48] The normal quality videos have a
resolution of 320x240 pixels and have been in use since
the launch of the site in 2005, while the high quality
videos launched in March 2008 have a resolution of
480x360 pixels.[49] YouTube chooses which videos are
made available in the high quality format by analyzing the
quality of the uploaded videos.[50] YouTube's high
quality videos are also available in H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
format with stereo AAC audio. The MPEG-4 videos can
be played by adding &fmt=18 to the web address of a
video.[51]