*** IMPORTANT NOTICE ***

For those of you who are wondering why no new trailers have been posted on our blog in over a month, it’s because the blog was merely a stopgap solution until we were able to automate our RSS feed for all the trailers on our homepage.

We have accomplished that and have stopped posting new trailers on the blog. The blog will remain as to provide new development news.

If you’re looking for our new RSS feed, please read this post.

New Blog Template

You may have noticed that our blog template has been changed! And I think it’s for the better!

I got sick and tired of templates going out of date and having bugs which I needed to fix every time the template got updated. That’s one of the main reasons why I decided to go with Twenty Eleven. For the past 2 years, WordPress has released a new template each year to showcase the new abilities of the WordPress platform. I figured that the default WordPress template would most likely be up to date and have the cool new trinkets that older templates don’t have.

I’ve also been thinking of redesigning our homepage and I really like the header and navigation bar of this template.

Let us know what you think!

More RSS Feeds!

There’s been a couple feature requests to have differentiated RSS feeds and I’m here to announce that the feature is completed.

The resolution-based RSS feeds will contain only download links and enclosures of that particular resolution. If that resolution isn’t available, it’ll fallback to the next highest resolution available.

The trailers / clips only RSS feeds are as the name indicates, it’ll contain only trailers or only clips. I know a bunch of you don’t really care about the clips, so the trailers feed should help you filter those out.

I haven’t found a good way to expose these RSS feeds yet, so for the time being they’ll be displayed on this blog post as well as alternative links inside the <head> of our homepage.

Let us know what you think!

HTML5 Video in Chrome and Safari

We’ve been looking to switch to HTML5 video for sometime, but because Firefox doesn’t support video/mp4 (H.264), we’ve been waiting to see what the final outcome for HTML5 video is. Anyway, I decided to see if there was a way to fall back to Flash if HTML5 mp4 video wasn’t supported.

JW player recently announced that it now supports HTML5 video, with fallback to flash. In concept, it’s a really cool idea. You define if you want to use HTML5 as default and fallback to Flash or vice versa. I created some test pages, but unfortunately, there still seems to be some issues as I was hitting into different bugs running on different browsers.

I then started searching online on how other people dealt with HTML5 video with Flash fallback. Lots of sites recommend including the Flash <embed> or <object> inside the <video> element, but it turns out only browsers that don’t recognize the video tag would render that. In other words if I provided a mp4 video source, it won’t fallback to Flash in Firefox because Firefox recognizes the <video> tag.

After digging around a bit more, the correct logic in JavaScript appears to be:

if( !!document.createElement('video').canPlayType )
{
    var can_play_type = document.createElement('video').canPlayType('video/mp4');
    var browser_supports_mp4 = can_play_type == 'probably' || can_play_type == 'maybe';
}

Initially I had it to return true to only probably, but Chrome, Safari, and IE all returned ‘maybe’ instead of probably. I wonder if I included an audio codec, the return value would be different. Only Firefox returned an empty string which is the correct response if a browser doesn’t support the given codec. The problem with this is that IE also returns maybe, but it can’t seem to actually play trailers from Yahoo! or MovieFone.

In the midst of researching, I landed on VideoJS, and remember Derek had mentioned about it. It’s very similar to JW Player, but backed by the open source community. So I started looking into it and doing a test page. It pretty much worked right out of the box. I did make a couple tweaks here and there to get it to behave the way I want. Looking at it’s logic, it pretty much did the same thing I suggested above.

One of the tweaks we added was in the event neither HTML5 video or Flash was available, we would display the following error:

unsupported browser

Given that it had the same logic as I did, that also meant the IE issue was there, which meant I had to special case Internet Explorer, and make it always use Flash.

There has been another issue I’ve been trying to deal with and that is it’s practically impossible to escape from full screen mode in Chrome. If you missed the initial flash that says to exit full screen mode, hit F11 (or ⌘⇧F in Mac), you’re pretty much stuck. Hitting esc won’t work. It doesn’t seem to use the custom skin which has the toggle full screen mode key. When I first hit this issue, I ended giving up and quitting the app. The next time, I found opening a new tab forces the video exit full screen mode.

So if you’re using Chrome or Safari, let us know what you think of the new HTML5 video player.

Blog Movie RSS Feed is now officially discontinued

The Death of RSSJust wanted to remind you if you haven’t already switched to our new movie RSS feed, you should do it now! Because as of right now, the blog movie RSS feed is officially discontinued. New movie trailers will no longer be posted to the blog, meaning if you’re depending on the blog RSS feed for movie trailer updates, they’ll no longer appear. Instead the blog will be kept mainly for development news announcements.

New RSS Feed: http://feeds.hd-trailers.net/hd-trailers

You also have the option of following us on Facebook and Twitter for new trailer announcements.

Image courtesy of Isaac’s COM125

Please Point To Our New RSS Feed Location

RSS IconWe’ve finally gotten around to automating our RSS feed and will shortly stop posting movie trailers to our blog. The current scheduled cut off date is Saturday 11/19. So for the next week, we’ll still be posting trailers to our blog, giving any application or service that uses our blog feed a chance to update.

Previously we used the blog to post HD clips and trailers from other sources, but with the most recent set of updates we’ve made, it’s rendered all movie trailer blog postings as duplicates.

The new feed location is at: http://feeds.hd-trailers.net/hd-trailers

The formatting of the new feed should be pretty much identical. If you hit into issues, please let us know.

Our blog will remain as a source of development news afterwards.

If you have any suggestions, please feel free to contact us.

We’ll post a final update on 11/19.

ClipConverter.cc (YouTube Video Downloads / Converter)

ClipConverter.cc

So for the longest time, I’ve tried to avoid posting YouTube videos because there wasn’t a simple and easy solution to download them. Sure there were a bunch of browser add-ons and extensions that one can use, but I don’t consider installing an extension simple and easy.

However, I finally gave in and began to include YouTube videos, while also including a link to KeepVid. But KeepVid was horrible, requiring you to use Java and who knows what other crap they install on your machine, but there just wasn’t a better solution at that time.

There’s also a bunch of smart Javascript bookmarklets that reveal the video download links, but I couldn’t easily expose them since you have run the script after loading the YouTube page first.

@boxofficeBUZ suggested I check out File2HD.com and it was awesome. The interface was exactly what I was looking for, but it didn’t include the HD versions (480p/720p/1080p) of the videos, which is the main purpose of this site.

I did some more searching and ended up with ClipConverter.cc. It was elegant and simple to use. Provide it with the YouTube url and it’ll give you the option to download or choose from 11 different formats to convert it to (mp3, aac, wma, m4a, ogg, mp4, 3pg, avi, mpg, wmv, flv).

Enjoy!

Google Search to Include Thumbnail Images?

So I was doing a random search on our site and noticed that Google now began including thumbnail images in custom search results. An example:

Google search results with thumbnail images

I tried a similar search on Google’s main search engine, but the thumbnails didn’t show, so I’m guessing it’s something they’re experimenting on custom search and may or may not bring to their main search engine in the future.

At first I thought Google had some deeper integration with WordPress, since the results only seemed to show thumbnails for my blog results. But I’ve noticed a small amount of pages on our main site also had a thumbnail images (as the 1st search result above shows).

As you probably noticed, some of those images are obviously wrong and the purpose of this post is to see if anyone knows what Google is keying off of or if we can provide better guidance as to what the thumbnail image should be. The rest of the internet seems to refer to the image_src link tag for thumbnail guidance, but Google doesn’t appear to be using that.

<link rel="image_src" href="http://static.hd-trailers.net/images/the-darkest-hour-8f0-4aa2fcd932500-poster.jpg" />

If anyone has any idea, I’m all ears!

Update: Found the answer: Custom Search Help: Specify thumbnails

Quicker Yahoo! Updates and HD Clips!

Yahoo High Definition Trailers

For anyone that’s been monitoring Yahoo’s High Definition Trailers Page, you’ve probably noticed they’ve really been slacking off, only updating once or twice a week, while new HD trailers come out everyday.

I’ve decided to go a different route and monitor their recently added trailers page instead and this should provide quicker updates to new trailer releases.

Another good thing that came out of this is now the main catalog will also include HD clips from Yahoo!, something I had been planning to do for some time.

Enjoy!