The proliferation of media sharing services on the Internet demonstrates the appeal of sharing media, in particular video media. A common approach is to allow users to post videos to a sharing service and then allowing other users to play the posted videos. With this approach, videos are viewed asynchronously. That is, users view videos at a time of their choosing, and with full control of the viewing experience. Although two users may have an interest in a same video, their viewing experiences are generally independent. Another common approach is to allow one controlling user, for example a Vi or Di, to control a video feed, and a virtual audience of users may concurrently experience the same stream of media produced by the controlling user.
These approaches, and others, have failed to produce a collaborative media sharing experience where users with a common interest can collaboratively shape and control the same media that the users are or will be concurrently experiencing. Techniques related to collaborative media sharing are discussed below.
The following summary is included only to introduce some concepts discussed in the Detailed Description below. This summary is not comprehensive and is not intended to delineate the scope of the claimed subject matter, which is set forth by the claims presented at the end.
A media party network service manages a set of media parties and a set of users of the media party service. Managing the media parties can involve instantiating new media parties according to input from the users, allowing the users to join the media parties, and tracking which users are participating in which media parties. Managing a given one of the media parties may include maintaining a queue of media items, allowing users in the media party to provide input to add media items to the queue and to provide input to skip media items in the queue. The media party service streams the given one of the media parties to client devices of the users currently in the given media party such that all of the client devices are currently displaying substantially a same part of a media item in the corresponding queue.
Many of the attendant features will be explained below with reference to the following detailed description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
The present description will be better understood from the following detailed description read in light of the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals are used to designate like parts in the accompanying description.
Embodiments discussed below relate to collaborative media sharing. Discussion will begin with an overview of collaborative media parties, followed by a description of a technical operating environment. User interface features, and collaborative operations will then be described in detail.
The media party 140 data may also include queue data 146. The queue data 146 may have entries 148 representing media items queued for playing to current participants. Each entry 148 may have information about a media item, including a location or uniform resource locator of the media item, counts of votes for and against the media item, the identity of a user who submitted the media item to the media party 140, a query string or keywords associated with the media item, a rank or priority of the media items in the queue, and media data such as a title, duration, etc.
The media party 140 may also have history data 150. In one form, the history data 150 is a log or journal of timestamped events 152 associated with the media party 140. Such events 152 may indicate which media items were previously played by the media party 140 and when they were played, chat comments of participants listening to or viewing the media party 140, participants joining and leaving the media party 140, which participants voted for or against which media items (e.g., “Joe voted to skip the ‘smoldering battery’ clip”), and queue events such as media items being added, removed, reordered, completing or starting, and so on. These are illustrative examples that are neither required nor exhaustive.
A media display area 178 displays the media currently being played for the media party. The media display area 178 may include a progress indicator 180 indicating progress of the current media item. As discussed further below, each current participant in the media party has an instance of the user interface 170, with nearly the same appearance as user interface 170. In other words, each participant sees the current media queue and the current media being played for the media party.
The user interface 170 may include other elements such as a participant display area 182 displaying thumbnails or avatars of users currently in the media party. The user interface 170 may also include an information display area 184 to display information about events related to the media party as they occur. For example, the information display area 184 may display event indicators 186 to indicate: when users join or leave the media party, chat messages from participants, changes to the media queue, both for and against media items, and other information related to the media party. Events represented in the information display area 184 may be captured in a corresponding log such as history data log 150.
To facilitate collaborative media sharing, the user interface 170 and the party-implementing system in communication therewith enable collaborative participant control over the media being queued and played for a media party. With respect to the user interface 170, parts of the graphic queue 174 may be interactive. A media icon 176 may be provided with user interface elements such as vote buttons 185 to vote for or against a corresponding media item, or a button 179 to allow the user to remove the corresponding media item from the queue. In one embodiment, the graphic queue 174 may have an add button 181, that, when invoked, allows the user to specify a new media item to add to the media queue, possibly by putting input focus on a search element 183.
The search element 183 may be included to allow the user to input queries to search for media to add to the video party. When a search is entered, media items matching the search are displayed and the user can select a media item to add to the media queue. Finally, to further enhance collaboration, an invitation button 188 can be activated to invite other users to the current media party.
With regard to the collaborative control of the media, it should be noted that control of the content and ordering of the media queued for a media party can be open to more than one user. In one embodiment, any user is allowed to join any media party, and each member of a party has some control over the media party. Several techniques for facilitating control can be used. As mentioned above, votes can be collected from participants in a media party, and actions on the queue of the media party are taken according to the votes. Voting is described in detail with reference to
Further regarding collaborative control of the media, one embodiment includes a scrubbing control 190. The scrubbing control 190 can be displayed on various of the instances of user interface 170. The scrubbing control 190 can indicate progression of the current media being played. In various embodiments, the scrubbing control 190 can also control the network service 120's playback of the current media item; any scrubbing by one participant is synchronized to the other participants so that each sees the scrub operation and the playback stays synchronized. In an embodiment where all participants have full control over media playback, any participant can manipulate their respective scrubbing control 190 to change the playback point of the current media item. Optionally, the user interface 170 of other users may display a graphic 192 indicating the user who is currently scrubbing the media item. In the example of
In one embodiment, the video party system is a web application that is an integral party of an open social search engine of the type described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/105,914, filed May 12, 2011, and titled “SHARING PUBLIC SEARCH QUERIES AND INTERACTIONS” (attorney docket number 332486.01). In this embodiment, not only is media searching readily available, but invitations can be obtained as part of the process of receiving a social stream in which the media party appears. For example, a social stream can be subscribed to by a user according to the social stream's relation to a particular topic or a particular user. A new media party can be advertised in such a stream. In addition, when a media item is added to a media party from search results supplied by an open social search engine, party-related interactions with that media item (e.g., addition to the party, votes, advancing or skipping, number of chat comments, etc.) can be used as search engine feedback. For instance, when a video is added to a media party of a particular topic, the video can be labeled as related to that topic and then used to help train statistical models or machine learning algorithms of the search engine. Generally, actions that indicate relevance of the video or media, such as “for” votes, increases in current participants when the video is played, etc., can indicate relevance. Other actions can indicate irrelevance, such as skipping a video or a drop-off in participation when the video is being played.
In addition to live participation, a video party can be experienced asynchronously. This can be enabled by tracking the history of video or media items played as well as comments, user-joins, and other events discussed above with reference to
In one embodiment, a participant who is playing back the history of the media party is accelerated to catch-up to the present real-time media party. This can be accomplished with a number of known techniques for increasing the play speed of media in unobtrusive ways. For example, frames or chunks can be dropped during periods of somewhat constant video data, or play speed can be increased a small fraction above normal play speed. In yet another approach, a user settable play speed (e.g., “2×”) can be set to catch up to the current play point of the video party. Subtle changes in playback speed or rate can be automatically adjusted by the media party application to help keep live participants continuously synchronized (e.g., within three seconds of each other). If one participant falls behind due to connectivity or performance problems, the participant's feed can be transparently accelerated to keep the participant synchronized.
Embodiments and features discussed above can be realized in the form of information stored in volatile or non-volatile computer or device readable media. This is deemed to include at least media such as optical storage (e.g., compact-disk read-only memory (CD-ROM)), magnetic media, flash read-only memory (ROM), or any current or future means of storing digital information. The stored information can be in the form of machine executable instructions (e.g., compiled executable binary code), source code, bytecode, or any other information that can be used to enable or configure computing devices to perform the various embodiments discussed above. This is also deemed to include at least volatile memory such as random-access memory (RAM) and/or virtual memory storing information such as central processing unit (CPU) instructions during execution of a program carrying out an embodiment, as well as non-volatile media storing information that allows a program or executable to be loaded and executed. The embodiments and features can be performed on any type of computing device, including portable devices, workstations, servers, mobile wireless devices, and so on.
This application is a Continuation of prior application Ser. No. 13/325,873, (attorney docket no. 334594.01), filed Dec. 14, 2011, entitled “COLLABORATIVE MEDIA SHARING”, which is now allowed. The aforementioned application is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its originally filed form.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13325873 | Dec 2011 | US |
Child | 14973730 | US |