The future of ScobleShow?

I’ve been thinking a lot about my future, which is one reason I’ve slowed down my posting, Twittering, reading, and all that. The other reason being this cute kid who keeps smiling at me which is a lot more fun than being online.

Anyway, one technology that really impressed me is Mogulus, a company that lets you do your own streaming video show from your bedroom if you want (competes with Ustream.tv and Justin.tv, but has a lot more features that serious TV stations will want). Mogulus is the company that streamed the NewTeeVee conference. Right after that conference Mogulus’ CEO, Max Haot, came to my house to show me how they did it. If you’re wanting to see the future of TV, this is it so far and Max goes into depth about the whole process and sets up a TV studio in Patrick’s (my 13-year-old son) bedroom.

Is this the future of ScobleShow? Hmmm, Chris Pirillo better watch out! :-)


Filed under: ScobleShow, TV, Video, streaming video @ 1:14 am | 13 Comments

13 Comments

  1. Chris Says:

    I better watch out. I better not cry. I better not pout. You’re telling me why.

  2. Stefan Constantinescu Says:

    While it does look cool, I’m not down with live video. If he made this into a video editing suite … now that would be interesting.

  3. Mogulus Blog » Blog Archive » The future of ScobleShow? Says:

    [...] interview was posted today - here’s what Robert reported on Scobleizer : (http://scobleizer.com/2007/11/27/the-future-of-scobleshow/)- “I’ve been thinking a lot about my future, which is one reason I’ve slowed down my [...]

  4. Orville Chomer Says:

    This is really cool! All sorts of ideas and thoughts are rattling around in my skull now.

    So Robert, when are you going to have your own channel on this thing? :)

  5. Andrew Says:

    Their use of YouTube breaks the terms of service for YoutTube. Mogulus strips the videos off of YouTube and encodes them to run off the Mogulus Server. YouTube’s terms of service say that the content is only allowed to be streamed from their servers. Does this open all the videos stripped from YouTube as acts of Copyright Infringement? The video uploader gave YouTube the right to broadcast the content. Mogulus is basically stealing the content and each producer/user is streaming it. Can the producers/users be held liable for Copyright Infringement or is Mogulus at fault since it resides on their servers? What do you think?!?!

  6. john Says:

    thinking about the future? i have lots of grate ideas. call me.

  7. Aaron Brazell Says:

    That would, of course, mean you would have to move on from PodTech… something you continually deny that you’re planning on doing. ;-)

  8. monkeyleader Says:

    It still creams my machine when I try and run it … needs to be lighter on the processor hoging !

  9. Robert Scoble Says:

    Aaron: I don’t deny I’m thinking of my future after February 1, 2008. I’m still talking with PodTech about that future, by the way and have no decided either way yet.

  10. Aaron Brazell Says:

    No problem, Robert… Just making an observation. :)

  11. Orville Chomer Says:

    Andrew: I saw somewhere in either this video or the one robert did before (I’m pretty sure) where Mogulus made some sort of deal with YouTube. So if they have some contract….

  12. ET Says:

    Wow, this makes things very very interesting in the new media space! This makes the playing field a lot more even. There are endless possibilites for this product. Must work great in countries like South Korea or Japan.

  13. Chris Warner-Carey Says:

    I think Mogulus can be lots of different things–I was able to create a two-camera setup, using my MacbookPro camera and my DV camera, one running in a firefox window and the other in a safari window at the same time–It slows down both feeds a little bit, but I can now switch between two live shots without needing two different computers–for a little bit of visual variety.

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