Copybox: the copywriter’s Photoshop!

Here is this new application called CopyBox which is trying to become “Copywriter’s Photoshop”. It was selected as one of the 50 applications to be launched at TechCrunch 50.

With the help of this application, copywriters can make their own display advertisements and use “variables” inside their copy to make it more appealing to the web surfers. For example, if you want to mention “Mac” in your ad copy and when somebody see the ad from a Windows you want to replace the word with “Windows”, you can do that using this software.

CopyBox is addressing the divide between copywriters and programmers. You can read more about it and request for a beta here.

I know the website has been set up in a hurry. But a little proof-reading will always help, especially since you are talking to the copywriters. Or, errors like this will happen!

Update: Copybox has corrected the typo on the home page!

Adobe launches new media player, Adobe TV.

Two new products from Adobe. A video player and an online TV channel.

Adobe® Media Player provides the users control and flexibility to view what you want, when you want — whether online or offline.  You can queue up and download your favorite Internet TV content, track and download new episodes automatically, and manage your personal video library for viewing at your convenience.

If you are little technical, Adobe Media Player is nothing but a cross-platform desktop media player and feed management application built on the Adobe AIR™ runtime. It supports the playback of content ranging from low bit-rate videos to high-definition full-screen content. Based on Adobe’s Flash platform video formats, Adobe Media Player can play and manage FLV assets (On2 VP6 and Sorenson Spark codecs) and a variety of possible container formats for H.264 codec (such as .mp4, .m4v, .mp4v, .3gp, and .f4v) that are stored locally on the viewer’s hard drive or delivered via the Internet using either progressive or streaming delivery.

Adobe TV launches with more than 200 videos across four channels: Photographers, Designers, Video Professionals and Developers.

The videos star a variety of “Adobe evangelists, leading trainers, subject matter experts and luminaries,” teaching classes on the Adobe suite of design programs, including Photoshop, Dreamweaver, Flash, Illustrator and others.

I think it is too early to say how many video fans are going use these technologies. We’ll see that in the coming days.

What’s in it for advertisers?

Adobe Media Player supports banner advertising and all sorts of in-stream media. (Implementation is not that simple and requires some coding skills.) Ads downloaded into the files can be changed when the computer is online and even when its not connected as ads can stored in the computer and released at determined intervals.

This is a massive step forward in video advertising that will help push the video advertising economy forward in a dramatic way. This development, coupled with the new IAB digital video advertising standards will pave the way for more and more money to enter the Web video space.

There is video… on flickr!

Yahoo has launched video on flickr! Read more about it here…

http://blog.flickr.net/en/2008/04/09/video-on-flickr-2/

I am still not getting it, What’s the big deal? When iphoto could do it two years ago and YouTube could do it from day one..