When Apple users start upgrading to iOS 6 this morning, it'll be missing an app that's been baked into the operating system since the release of the first iPhone: YouTube. For the first time, consumers will have to search for a video app on their own -- and that has developers eager to get their attention.
Most consumers will doubtless start by simply downloading the YouTube iPhone app that Google released last week. But for now, that one's iPhone-only -- an iPad version is months off. In the meantime, makers of other so-called video discovery apps are pouncing on a rare opportunity to gain users in large numbers.They're launching new versions to capitalize on YouTube's sudden absence. They're courting the tech press to get the word out. And they're hoping users will follow. No one expects these apps to dethrone YouTube. But they've never had an opportunity like this before -- and might not have another for ages. Also in their favor: Apple is doing its best to help them along. Last week the company updated its App Store to showcase a wide range of video apps on the store's "Featured" page, in a collection called "TV Time." Notably, as we reported last week, YouTube was left off that list -- while discovery apps like Squrl, ShowYou and Vidyou get prominent placement."Now all users will be faced with at least making a decision," said Mark Gray, co-founder and CEO of Squrl. All these apps make use of YouTube's content, piping videos into their app using APIs. The value they add lies in the way they organize and surface videos to people looking for something interesting to watch -- something that YouTube seems to be growing less interested in over time. Building a better searchThe question is whether, over time, users come to prefer a kind of universal search app to YouTube's, which has become more narrowly focused on channels and subscriptions. Spend some time playing with apps like Squrl and ShowYou, and it's easy to make a case for the former.Squrl, which launched last year, launched a redesign today aimed at making finding easier. In addition to YouTube, it searches Netflix, Hulu, Ted, Vimeo, AOL and Blip.TV. You can also connect accounts from Twitter and Facebook to Squrl; it will collect all the links shared there over the day and show them to you whenever you're ready to see them. The app uses algorithms to track your video-watching habits and to suggest things it thinks you'd like to see. It also tracks videos that are trending across the Web.In short, it finds videos in places that didn't even exist when YouTube was created in 2005. YouTube remains the top video search engine, handling billions of queries a month. But it won't find videos across the range of popular sites that have sprung up in YouTube's wake, like Hulu, Netflix and Vimeo. Squrl and its fellow apps will.For your basic cat videos, YouTube search will more than suffice. But what happens when you're looking for a TV show or movie and aren't sure which service it's available on? Or when a video you thought was posted to YouTube is actually hosted on Vimeo?As high-quality video migrates onto an ever-increasing number of platforms, YouTube search could become less useful. The need for an app that searches more broadly will only increase.A changing YouTube
There's a second factor that could play to the advantage of apps like Squrl: YouTube is changing.
Greg Sandoval 19 Sep, 2012
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/cnet/tcoc/~3/DfN_FKZQub0/
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