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Solutions Overview
Thanks to the proliferation of broadband access, a variety of Internet-connected devices such as mobile phones, televisions, game consoles, personal media players, media centers, and digital media receivers have the potential to deliver web videos to consumers. But what good is all that potential if consumers can’t find the web video they want?
Unlike the PC, connected devices lack a full-sized QWERTY key board, mouse, and display screen with windowing mechanisms - making it difficult, if not impossible to navigate the tens of millions of choices offered by web videos.
Veveo’s vTap makes finding and viewing web videos on input and/or display constrained devices super quick and easy. Just type in the beginning letters of a title, an actor’s name or any other clue you can think of.
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vTap’s highly-advanced, proprietary algorithms take it from there—pulling and arranging results so you can quickly view and select the one you want—even on a small device with limited display and navigation capabilities. With vTap's unique character-based incremental search—where results are returned
with every character entered—you can perform searches using just a few
characters instead of whole keywords. Simply stop typing characters once the video you are looking for is found. vTap can even detect spelling errors and automatically correct them and display the most relevant results. Even if you don't have a specific keyword in mind, vTap lets you browse for a video you like. Veveo's specialized web crawlers are focused on video, resulting in a web video index that is one of the deepest and fastest growing in the web today - providing an abundance of web videos at the fingertips of consumers.
With vTap, content creators and distributors can drive more revenues from their web-based video asset libraries. Mobile operators can deliver a satisfying web video experience, attract more subscribers and boost data revenues. TV and cable providers can do all of the above while providing web video viewing for their subscribers right on the TV, instead of on the PC. |