Syndication for Higher Ed   
Exploring emerging media in Higher Education

January 23, 2006

Embedding Google Videos

Filed under: Search Engines, Video blogging, RSS — Dan Karleen @ 12:25 pm

Google has recently added a feature enabling websites to embed videos from the Google Video site. The feature is available for certain free videos.

The embedded video appears as a player with controls, displaying an early frame in the video. I found a handful of college promotional videos on the site, but so far only one that has the “Put on site” feature enabled–a promotional video for Multnomah Bible College, which I embed below as an example.

I was surprised not to find more college promotional videos in the Google Video search. I was also surprised that many of the ones I did find didn’t have the “Put on site” feature enabled. This seems like a great way to encourage the distribution not only of promotional videos, but also classroom videos and screencasts. TILT (Teachers Improving Learning with Technology) has already picked up on the idea, and is embedding videos it uploads to Google back on its own blog (cool idea!).

It would be great to see someone begin to include the code for embedding these videos in an RSS feed (perhaps someone with a classroom video or screencast), as a way to begin syndicating embedded video. Perhaps, in the future, Google will offer an easy way to make this happen, possibly by offering publishers a way to syndicate what they publish on Google Video.

If the feature is enabled for a given video (see, for example, this video), you will see a “Put on site” link on the page for the video itself. Clicking the link reveals a window containing HTML code for embedding the video on your site, which you copy into the page where you want to embed a video.

(Disclosure: Multnomah Bible College admission office is a client of Thomson Peterson’s.)

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August 11, 2005

Google News Alerts Available Via RSS and Atom

Filed under: Search Engines, RSS — Dan Karleen @ 7:26 am

Now that Google is offering RSS feeds of news alerts, I’m testing them out on 15 terms and phrases. I have set up many of the same alerts in Technorati, which mainly indexes blogs. (The Google News position on indexing blogs is unclear; however, some blogs or quasi-blogs, such as this one from ZDNet, appear to be indexed.) I am curious to see what the overlap between Technorati alerts and Google News alerts is like.

Unfortunately, Google still isn’t offering RSS or Atom feeds of search results from its main search engine. I suspect there will be considerable duplication between my two sets of Google alerts–email alerts from the main engine and RSS alerts from the news engine.

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