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Auto-Play is a feature used by some websites containing at least one embedded video or audio element wherein the video or audio element starts playing, automatically, without explicit user choice, after some triggering event such as page load or navigating to a particular region of the webpage.
YouTube offers users the ability to view its videos on web pages outside their website. Each YouTube video is accompanied by a piece of HTML that can be used to embed it on any page on the Web. [95] This functionality is often used to embed YouTube videos in social networking pages and blogs.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
The <video> element started being discussed by the WHATWG in October 2006. [2] The <video> element was proposed by Opera Software in February 2007. [3] Opera also released a preview build that was showcased the same day, [4] [5] and a manifesto that called for video to become a first-class citizen of the web.
The Video Player by Comcast Technology Solutions THEOplayer by OpenTelly: HLS and MPEG-DASH player for cross-platform HTML5 support without the need for Flash fallback [ 22 ] Viblast Player: HLS and MPEG-DASH player for HTML5 MSE and EME, with Flash fallback [ 23 ]
YouTube announced that cumulative views of videos related to Minecraft, some of which had been on the platform as early as 2009, exceeded 1 trillion views on December 14, 2021, and was the most-watched video game content on the site.
The AutoPlay dialog box on Windows XP showing an option for non-volume device or digital camera. Certain types of devices do not appear as drive letters in "My Computer". These are called non-volume devices and AutoPlay handles them somewhat differently from volume devices like CDs and DVDs. Many digital cameras and video devices fall into this ...
Invidious is a free and open-source alternative frontend to YouTube. [2] [3] It is available as a Docker container, [4] or from the GitHub master branch. [5]It is intended to be used as a lightweight and "privacy-respecting" alternative to the official YouTube website. [2]