YouTube to support 1080p high-definition video; mobile video uploads up 2,000% this year

youtube_logo1YouTube is going to roll out 1080p high-definition video later this week, as the video portal steps up its quality to compete with other sites. (That’s 1,080 lines of vertical resolution or horizontal scan lines, a notch above the current highest level at 720p.)

“For our content creators, we want it to look as good or better than the source’s quality,” said Hunter Walk, a director of product management for YouTube, at GigaOm’s NewTeeVee conference in San Francisco today. High-definition video now makes up about 10 percent of uploads on the site.

Walk revealed a few more interesting tidbits at the conference — mobile uploads are up 2,000 percent this year thanks to a raft of smartphones including the iPhone and an oncoming wave of competitive Android-enabled devices like the Droid.

“Everyone is going to have a camera in their pocket at all times,” Walk said. “Every time a new device rolls out like the iPhone 3GS, we see a new spike in mobile uploads.”

Walk said YouTube is also working on refining its personal recommendations.

“I don’t think the future is many channels. I think the future is just one channel — it’s a personalized experience,” he said. That perfect channel, as he envisions it, would blend the content a user knows they’re looking for with great search quality, and mix it with content they wouldn’t have known they’d be interested in. YouTube is also bringing more professional content providers in with revenue-sharing deals to show movies and short films.

“We’re not a media company — we’re a media catalyst,” Walk said. “What we really try to do is connect content creators with content viewers. We focus on doing a better and better job of serving those two constituencies.”

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About the Author, Kim-Mai Cutler

Kim-Mai was born and raised a stone's throw from Apple headquarters in Cupertino by a devout Hewlett-Packard family. After attending UC Berkeley, Kim-Mai worked for Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires in New York, Los Angeles, London and Buenos Aires. Follow her on Twitter at @kimmaicutler, and follow VentureBeat on Twitter at @venturebeat.

  • 2828
    That is good news.
  • jam
    1080p... the p does not stand for pixel its progressive. because there is also interlaced
  • Thanks, just fixed!
  • Karl
    This is great but unless they can stick to a standard aspect ratio like 16:9, this going to be a waste...
  • Rockme
    where's my frigging repeat button instead of having to push repeat every goddamn time
  • Still waiting to hear from HULU.
  • http://www.nlslimming.com
    powerful