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August 26th, 2008

How the world watched the Olympics online

Posted by Ryan Stewart @ 4:33 pm

Categories: Rich Internet Applications, Microsoft, Adobe, Flash, Rich Media, Online Video, Silverlight

Tags: China, Olympic Games, British Broadcasting Corp., Video, Flash, Corporate Communications, Marketing, Ryan Stewart

How the world watched the Olympics onlineMuch has been made of NBC’s Olympic numbers, which had the rights for online video in the US, and what that means for Silverlight. I thought the app was solid, the video quality was good, and all in all it was a win for Microsoft and RIAs. In that vein, I’m pretty impressed with how Adobe did across the rest of the world. The BBC in the UK and CCTV in China were both big Flash users. There were a number of other countries using Flash as well (and a couple using Silverlight). I think the numbers show that there’s worldwide interest in rich media and strong adoption of Flash.

In fact, the majority of online video for the Olympics was delivered in Flash. There’s a great blog post up by John O’Donovan, the Chief Technical Architect at the BBC about their Olympic numbers. For Beijing they streamed nearly 40 million videos with up to 5.5 million Olympic videos watched each day at an average of around 3 million. In total there were 6.5 million hours of video delivered using Flash by the BBC. What those numbers don’t include are streams from the BBC iPlayer or the mobile platforms. It’s all Flash in the browser. Compare that to 72 million videos in the states, and it shows that in a country much smaller than the US, online the Olympics was a hit.

More importantly, the numbers out of China are fantastic. In the first 10 days CCTV’s website streamed Olympic coverage to 100 million people according to the New York Times (registration required). CCTV used an innovative system which combined Flash Media Server with their own P2P technology which made it easy for anyone in China to watch the Olympics regardless of bandwidth. So in China we’ll have 2,900 hours of Olympic content backed up and ready to watch with Flash Video.

What’s also interesting to see is how the BBC got more comfortable over the course of the Olympics with their video content. By the end of the Olympics they were actually putting the live video stream on the front page of the BBC News homepage as the lead story. That’s pretty impressive and I think it’s a very good sign that rich media is creeping even more deeply into a role as a primary way to consume content.

Ryan Stewart, a Rich Internet Application developer and industry analyst, recently joined Adobe's Platform Team as a Rich Internet Application Evangelist. See his full disclosure.
  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 7 Talkback(s)
Canada's CBC also used Flash video for the Olympics
I just got back from the Toronto Flash User Group and a company called Indusblue, that did a lot of work for CBC's Olympic website, did a presentation showing how parts of the website was built. Overa... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Matt_Fabb@... Posted on: 08/27/08 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
RE: How the world watched the Olympics online {Maz}   | 08/27/08
I got sick of it patibulo   | 08/27/08
RE: How the world watched the Olympics online Lost Target   | 08/27/08
If NBC had allowed LBiege   | 08/27/08
Thumbs Up for Silverlight HENpp   | 08/27/08
Two Words andycher   | 08/27/08
Canada's CBC also used Flash video for the Olympics Matt_Fabb@...   | 08/27/08

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    Trackback by Beet.TV — August 25, 2008 @ 1:33 am

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  • How the world watched the Olympics online (Ryan Stewart/The ...
    Ryan Stewart / The Universal Desktop: How the world watched the Olympics online — Much has been made of NBCs Olympic numbers, which had the rights for online video in the US, and what that means for Silverlight. ...

    Trackback by digimarket.net Features — August 27, 2008 @ 5:30 pm

  • Adobe Flash powers dramatic increase in Olympic online video ...
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    Trackback by arena — August 28, 2008 @ 7:10 pm

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