JW Player

JW Player is a New York based company that has developed a video player software of the same name.[1] The player, for embedding videos onto web pages, is used by news, video-hosting companies and for self-hosted web videos. The company has also created the video management software "JW Platform", formerly known as "Bits On The Run".[2]

JW Player
Private
Founded2005 (2005)
FounderJeroen Wijering
HeadquartersNew York City, New York
Websitejwplayer.com

History

JW Player was developed in 2005 as an Open source project.[2] The software is named after the founder and initial developer Jeroen Wijering.[3] It initially was distributed via Wijering's blog. In about 2007 it was integrated into the advertising company named LongTail, which was renamed after the software in 2013. In 2008 a company, headquartered in New York, was formed which continued to develop and distribute the player.[4]

During the early development, before it was purchased by Google, YouTube videos were streamed by JW Player.[5][6] In 2015 JW Player was rewritten to reduce size and load time. Version 7 was licensed under the proprietary Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 license. It had integrated support for HTML5 Video and Flash Video,[7] allowing video to be watched on phones, tablets and computers. That year the company's paying customer base grew by more than 40 percent to 15,000, 60% from the USA. 2.5 million websites used the free edition, playing about a billion videos per month.[7][8]

In 2016, the company released a new simpler-to-use version of its product, entitled JW Showcase.[6] JW Player continues to be used by many companies, including ESPN,[5] Electronic Arts and AT&T.

Features and licensing

JW Player is proprietary software. There is a basic free of cost version distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States (CC BY-NC-SA)[9] license in which videos are displayed with an overlaid company watermark, and a commercial 'software as a service' version.

JW Player supports MPEG-DASH (only in paid version), Digital rights management (DRM) (in collaboration with Vualto), interactive advertisement, and customization of the interface through Cascading Style Sheets.[7]

gollark: Software is not just the word for "stuff you run on Windows".
gollark: No, *some* software can.
gollark: You could emulate it I guess.
gollark: It won't work any more than I could run a DOS program on my GNU/Linux installation.
gollark: Well, no, that won't run, because it's programmed for x86 CPUs using Windows APIs.

References

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