Quick registration, so I came very quick to the upload form, which nearly takes the same input a s the Yahoo! Form: Because it’s a HTML-Form with no process being shown I don’t like it very much. IFILM is a company from Hollywood, my be of this, the accept submission of VHS and co,….
But I’ll writle no longer about this, because Firefox crashed right now while uploading and this means, that the Uploading Form is not well programmed, so sorry iFilm, but please remove your bugs…..
Sevenloadis a not so known service from Germany, but it has a nice subscription, which should take only 1 min, I finished in <30sec…. The upload was through a very nicJS(and I think Flash too) upload form, the only one showing the remaining time. Also a really great feature: you could add the informations about the video while the upload is proceeding. They were the fastest too in processing the upload until it was available. The player has some too big buttons, but you had the choice between some video sizes:
Next Coming: The direct opponent of Google: Yahoo!. Here I was only able to upload via a simple HTML-Form. After some waiting some time with unknown speed, the video was again pending, like at the two other services too. The informations were alredy asked before uploading. There was no remarkable loss of quality which was very fine, but the player looks really chlidish:
In the future, I would like to post some screencast, in cause of my small(some people wouldn’t call 10GB small, but I have to care about the traffic and that I host pages for other people too) webspace, so I’ll post them on a “Video Portal”. The first one, that I like to test is Google Video.
After logging in with my Google Account, I could directly upload a video over a POST-form, the other solution was, to use the Google Video Uploader. I choosed the second method because I hate uploading without knowing the process. My example file was a 18MB avi-video from my England holiday this summer(yes, uncompresse avi, I wanted to check the upload rate too). It uploaded very well with the maximum possible upload rate. After the upload had finished, I added some Information about the video on the Google Website and then I had to wait until it was processed. Then I was able to see it through the GVideo GUI without noticing any loss of quality. The playler looks nice too, so here’s it: