YouTube launches Feather, an ultralight version of the popular video site
"Let's face it: in this age of instant gratification, even several seconds of loading time can feel like an eternity." How true.
With
that precious knowledge in mind, YouTube on Thursday morning
launched
an ultralight version of the video site in beta, called
Feather,
immediately made available for testing through TestTube.
Even
though many computers and network connections today are more than able
to handle the site's onslaught of high quality video, high definition
video, and now even 1080p, users with less powerful systems or weaker
bandwidth may experience crippling slow-downs (that is, waiting a few
seconds for a video to load). In fact, recent research run by the site
itself found that casual YouTube users wanted the site to be trimmed
down for a more optimal viewing experience.
Feather is YouTube's response to that request.
The
video player, which loads standard quality as default, will always be
the most prominent part of the page and has not suffered any changes.
Everything surrounding the actual video (comments, related videos,
sharing options, etc.), however, have all been reduced considerably to
shave off those precious seconds of load time.
Content creators
would be the only group suffering from the release of this version of
YouTube, as they benefit most from user subscriptions and widespread
sharing of their videos. If options for subscribing and sharing
disappear, or are harder to find, content creators may have a harder
time garnering attention. Nevertheless, YouTube has promised that
Feather will not function on videos which are being monetized by their
owners.
YouTube will be monitoring usage and latency in TestTube to see if it should do full release of Feather.