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Klewel: The Next Generation of Conference Videos

Written by Frederic Lardinois / March 4, 2009 9:50 AM / 11 Comments

klewel_logo_feb09.pngVideos from conferences, seminars, and talks have become a standard way to ensure that even those who can't attend an event are able to at least get access to the presentations after the fact. However, video recordings from conferences are often somewhat sub-par and even the best videographers can have a hard time capturing both the speakers and their slides. Klewel, a Swiss startup, has developed an innovative system to replay videos and slides which we hope other services will soon implement as well.

Klewel's Flash-based player displays a video recording of the talk right next to the slides. The bottom of the player shows the upcoming slides, and you can navigate through the presentations by simply clicking on a slide and the video will jump right to that point in the presentation. Another neat feature of the player is that you can easily switch between watching a full-screen version of the video and the slides.

klewl_sshot.jpg

Sadly, Klewel has not made its software available to the public yet. For now, the company specializes in providing its own services, and Klewel's team creates the presentations for its clients. Among those clients are Nestlé, UNICEF, and a number of high-profile academic conferences.

Of course, even the best videos won't make up for bad PowerPoint slides, but Klewel has come up with a solution that makes watching conference videos a lot easier and which allows viewers and videographers to focus on the speaker (or the slides) without having to constantly switch back and forth.

Klewel is one of the most recent and interesting examples of innovative ways to record and replay talks, but surely there must be others out there that we are not aware of. If you know of another system - maybe one that is even available to the public - feel free to let us know in the comments.


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  1. We use echo360 at NYU for recording in-class lectures which is similar and frankly, works quite well.

    Posted by: sm | March 4, 2009 1:01 PM



  2. It's not the same thing, but VIDDIX.com is a useful service to merge online videos with presentations (and not just slides but also animations, polls and many other elements).

    Posted by: alex | March 4, 2009 1:32 PM



  3. I dont know much about this but what all i know is that the one used by our university is good enough :p

    Posted by: Ankit | March 4, 2009 4:16 PM



  4. This technoilogy will be further enabled along at the start due to the economy, and companies trying to cut back on traveling expenses.

    Posted by: Mike | March 4, 2009 5:27 PM



  5. http://parleys.com/ has been doing this for quite a while now. It's used for developer (mainly Java) conferences only (?) though.

    Posted by: Dennis Laumen Posted on FriendFeed   | March 4, 2009 11:13 PM



  6. Has everybody forgot about omnisio.com

     Posted by: Kazantsev Author Profile Page | March 5, 2009 3:34 PM



  7. The URL above takes you to a system I've been interested in for a while. The Socrates Project is directed at Education.

     Posted by: Sarah Author Profile Page | March 5, 2009 6:27 PM



  8. http://demo.hosted.panopto.com/CourseCast/Viewer/Default.aspx?id=d0b6b2b4-d3b1-41d4-b427-44c76da3d9bf

    Link to an example

     Posted by: Sarah Author Profile Page | March 5, 2009 6:30 PM



  9. The URL above takes you to a system I've been interested in for a while.

    Posted by: mantolama | March 19, 2009 1:05 AM



  10. We use echo360 at NYU for recording in-class lectures which is similar and frankly, works quite well. right sm

    Posted by: video izle | April 7, 2009 7:43 PM



  11. This would make calls much more productive, if you an just view the recording later, and focus on the task at hand-

    Posted by: IT Support | July 26, 2009 3:15 PM



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