QlipBoard, a handy tool for blending voice and video mail

qlipboard.jpgQlipBoard is a nifty application, just released, that is a cross between voicemail and a video email.

It’s a quirky sounding thing, because it doesn’t fit the mold of other products on the market — but it’s simple and useful enough that it could well catch on.

qlip.jpgFirst, you download a small application. Then, when you’re surfing the Web or scrolling through documents, QlipBoard lets you take snapshots of pages, or of images — putting them on a clipboard. Next, you can record a message to layer on top of the images, by hitting a little red record button on QlipBoard’s dashboard — the technology is designed so that you speak into your laptop. With one click, you can then share the voice/video clip with friends.

You can also draw or paint on the content you’ve collected.

It’s handy for recording a message over slideshows, such as family pictures.

Qlip Media’s co-founder Swamy Viswanathan demoed the service for us earlier this week, and recorded this Qlip for me, based on photos he took on a vacation in Hawaii. We tested it in a crowded cafe, with plenty of background noise, but QlipBoard picked up his voice — free of microphone — with very good audio quality.

Here’s a step-by-step demo of how it works.

QlipBoard reminds mostly of the elegantly voice-over-photo album product, Voicethread, which we reviewed here. However, Qlip Board’s technology allows it to be a more routine communication product in daily work — with a production feel like Techsmith’s Camtasia or SnagIt products or Microsoft’s Photo Story.

The technology isn’t trivial. The company has worked for more than a year on the problem of maintaining voice and picture quality while turning it real-time into a small compressed wmv file. You can save the file to your desktop. Or, if you decide to share it, QlipBoard turns it into a flv file, where it can play from any browser. You can also submit Qlips easily to YouTube or Photobucket.

QlipBoard is part of QlipMedia, a company headquartered in Mountain View, Calif, with development in India. It has a first round of venture capital from Norwest Venture Partners.

The company hopes to eventually run ads on the right side of the Qlips when they are shared — at least within the free consumer version. The registration process forces you to divulge age, gender, country, zip-code — for advertising purposes. Thats an unfortunate load of info, and is the one thing that may turn people off.

It offers an enterprise version for companies (managers can record video/voice Qlips for employees, and vice versa, recording over group documents, etc) for $89.55/yr/person, and it plans to offer a “pro” version soon for small businesses, at $9.95/mo/person.

qlipboard-screen.jpg

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About the Author,

Matt launched VentureBeat in September of 2006, with the realization that no one else was covering the entrepreneurial and tech innovation scene with the velocity or depth that he was. Prior to founding VentureBeat, he covered venture capital for the San Jose Mercury News from 2001 to 2006. In 2002, Matt was awarded "Journalist of the Year" by the Northern California Society of Professional Journalists. Prior to working at the Merc, he was a correspondent for the Wall Street Journal in Bonn, Germany from 1995 to 1998, and a writer for the Washington Post in 1994. Matt holds a PhD in Government and an MA in German and European Studies from Georgetown University. In addition to VentureBeat, Matt is also the Executive Producer of DEMO, the leading launchpad event for emerging technologies.

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