Red5 is an Open Source Flash Server that streams audio, video and data to and from the flash plugin live and on demand. Codegent is a full service web development new media agency, based in clapham, london, uk, that specialise in flash design and development work and helped pioneer the open source red5 flash server.

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Murdoch still hasn't found what he's looking for

Posted by Nick Woodbine on 22 April 2010 at 04:26 PM
Categories: Musings, Online Innovation, Press
Nick Woodbine
Nick Woodbine
Production Lead
BLOG: Murdoch still hasn't found what he's looking for

Newspaper owners across the land must have been breathing a sigh of relief when Rupert Murdoch stuck his head over the parapet and declared that he was no longer prepared to give his company's journalistic content away for free. Finally someone was standing up and saying what the vast majority of Fleet Street must surely have felt for a decade; if we want to prevent the newspaper industry going the same way as the music industry, we need to start putting a price on quality journalism.

To fill you in if you don't already know; Murdoch's plan is to erect a pay-wall around the Times Online and Sunday Times websites this summer so users will need to pay a charge of £1 per day or £2 per week to access the content online. He is also threatening to remove News International's content from Search Engines due to his insistence that Google et al are leeching it and becoming absurdly rich off the back of it - a fair accusation despite the rallying cries of the 'free web' evangelists.

Let me pin my colours to the mast; I believe in rewarding the quality, integrity and thought that goes into top-tier journalism. I believe we need to safeguard it as a legitimate career to prevent the next generation of free-thinking reporters becoming bankers, lawyers and web designers. I don't, however, want digital journalism wrapped in a sickly layer of advertising and i do want to dive in and out of content from different providers without paying for the bits i don't use. Demanding, aren't I?

News International's move is brave for a number of reasons, not least of which is that they are taking the gamble that the rest of the mainstream press will follow their lead. What they are demanding is a change in mentality of internet news consumers.

But in my view Murdoch's assumption of how online consumers perceive news is way off the mark. Rightly or wrongly, we simply don't attribute the same value to content discovered towards the top of a Google search or via a bookmark as we do to a tangible product we purchase in a newsagent. As such, if similar content is available for free from any of his mainstream competitors, Murdoch is going to lose all but the most partisan of his readership. So far, some months after the Wall Street Journal became the first of the mainstream to charge for its content, only the Economist has joined him in the UK and unless the figures start to look good pretty quickly, I would expect a fairly dramatic about turn after just a few months.

Whilst I don't think the traditional web user is ready to voluntarily pay for content they have been getting for free for a generation, I do think that the acceleration in uptake of mobile devices could be the catalyst that the newspaper industry is looking for in their hunt for revenue streams outside of advertising. The main reason for this is the emergence of the applications market. Suddenly digital content is available in product form. It is portable, available offline and, crucially from a revenue point of view, free from an expectation of freeness.

Apps such as the Guardian's are also superior to their mobile web cousins due to faster load times and the ability to tailor the content through the setting of personal preferences making it a smoother user experience.

When done well, the result is a premium product which users are willing to pay for. The Guardian iPhone App, priced at £2.39, for example, racked up 100,000 downloads within 10 weeks of launch and although that cost is a one off payment I believe that a licensing model where users pay a couple of pounds per month for the App would be met with a sizeable uptake and provide an ongoing and sustainable financing model.

Furthermore, if he carries out his threat to shut off the Search Engines, Murdoch is stifling a significant and valuable conduit to his content - latest estimates are that a third of traffic to the Times comes through search engine referrals.

As much as it pains me to say it, I agree with the premise of what Murdoch says but his approach is a metaphorical bludgeon. I believe that the way to monetise content is to look at the traditional web as a shop window, supported in part by a conventional advertising model. The main revenues should come outside of this traditional format and away from the expectation of free content and the enormous amounts of open source alternatives. It should come through the creation of paid-for applications for an ever-improving world of handheld devices, providing easily accessible content with real differentiation and quality that can be accessed where and when the user wants it; be that on the daily commute or on the loo.

In the words of Jorn Lyseggen, CEO of Meltwater, "Getting the balance right between the availability of free content and access to paid-for content will be crucial [to the future of journalism]".

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Eastern Promise...

Posted by Mark McDermott on 23 January 2008 at 03:32 PM
Categories: It's a Random World, Codegent News, Press
Mark McDermott
Mark McDermott
Co-Founder
BLOG: Eastern Promise...

Since we launched our new website we have been featured on quite a few portals as an example of good web design and coding standards. Its been great for traffic as well as the ego!

However, today broke boundaries as our global reach stretched as far as China and Japan! That's why I love this medium, things crop up in the most unlikely of places :)

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More column inches

Posted by David Hart on 22 January 2007 at 03:42 PM
Categories: Press
David Hart
David Hart
Co-Founder
BLOG: More column inches

More column inches

This is becoming odd - four bits of press in the last 7 days. This time a double page spread in today's Guardian. Not about 'us' exactly (or at all, really if we're honest), but about the site we designed, built and developed over the last 2 years or so for Meet the Author.

Whilst it's still available, you can check it out on the Guardian Unlimited website here:

Read the article about Meet the Author in the Guardian »

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Almost famous

Posted by David Hart on 19 January 2007 at 03:41 PM
Categories: Press
David Hart
David Hart
Co-Founder
BLOG: Almost famous

Almost famous

It's been quite a good week for us in terms of press. We were in Marketing magazine for our latest Detox with Evian campaign. Then yesterday we were in New Media Age about the Passport to Music project we won for Youth Music. We also heard something is being written about us in AMO magazine.

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Historic ARTwork

Posted by David Hart on 31 August 2006 at 03:30 PM
Categories: Codegent News, Online Innovation, Awards
David Hart
David Hart
Co-Founder
BLOG: Historic ARTwork

Historic ARTwork

It was a bit of a surprise to see a screengrab of our work representing a milestone in flash history! Adobe have featured the OSFlash community in their official presentation for 10 years of the Flash platform.

Codegent are significantly involved in OSFlash through Luke's work with red5 and we actually designed the site's mascot and logo as well.

Good work Art (no pun intended, that is his name) for the cool designs! Check out Adobe's History of Flash »

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Oasis and The Daily Mirror

Posted by Mark McDermott on 1 July 2005 at 02:26 PM
Categories: New Wins, Press
Mark McDermott
Mark McDermott
Co-Founder
BLOG: Oasis and The Daily Mirror

2.7 million copies of the CD Rom deisgned and built by Codegent appeared in the 4th June edition of the Daily Mirror.

For more details read about the site in our portfolio section.

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Codegent in the Press

Posted by Mark McDermott on 2 March 2005 at 04:47 PM
Categories: Codegent News, Press
Mark McDermott
Mark McDermott
Co-Founder
BLOG: Codegent in the Press

Codegent pick up industry press interest in New Media Age as our client portfolio and staff headcount grows!

This was swiftly followed by another piece in Media Guardian :)

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