- From: Joakim Söderberg <joakim.soderberg@ericsson.com>
- Date: Tue, 5 May 2009 15:06:43 +0200
- To: "David Singer" <singer@apple.com>, <public-media-fragment@w3.org>
- Cc: <public-media-annotation@w3.org>
Received on Tuesday, 5 May 2009 13:07:21 UTC
Hi, thanks! I was concerned about how to refer to a temporal decomposition without knowing FPS, "File Length" and other details. Is there a standard agreement of what 20s-50s refers to? Perhaps the "beginning" is not the same for all "expressions" of a work? /Jkm ________________________________ From: David Singer [mailto:singer@apple.com] Sent: den 1 maj 2009 18:40 To: Joakim Söderberg; public-media-fragment@w3.org Cc: public-media-annotation@w3.org Subject: Re: video annotation At 16:00 +0200 28/04/09, Joakim Söderberg wrote: Hello, I wonder if it is possible to refer to a fragment of a video without referring to an actual file? yes, of course. For example if you want to annotate a scene in the Hollywood movie "Nottinghill". You would need to identify the movie "Notting Hill" unambiguously, and I'd say someone would need a URN scheme. For example URN:imdb:tt0125439#time="20s-50s" Regards Joakim Co-Chair of Media Annotations group ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Joakim Söderberg, M.Sc, Ph.D Multimedia Indexing Senior Research Engineer, Media Protocols and Applications Ericsson Research, Multimedia Technologies -- David Singer Multimedia Standards, Apple Inc.
Received on Tuesday, 5 May 2009 13:07:21 UTC