
Best of all, though, is that it is run by a non-profit organisation and is open source. Previously, this same group provided 'Broadcast Machine' an impressive tool for uploading, cataloguing and serving video content, but that is now being frozen with a decision to start building a replacement system from scratch that incorporates new technological advances and is more robust and resilient. Miro, itself, though is worth a try and it happily trundles away in the background scurrying around for updates on my favourite subscritions (mainly documentaries and news).
Iain,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the awesome review!
A while back, I read an interesting post by an educator who is actually using Miro in the classroom: http://educationaltechnology.ca/couros/643
Just figured there might be some useful info there :)