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May 26, 2012

Hulu Media Player gives Hulu an Apple Front Row feel

by Brad Linder, posted Feb 1st 2008 9:01PM
Hulu Media Player
Flash developer Paul Yanez either has way too much time on his hands, or he really doesn't like the way web video is presented. Yanez has already made browser-based versions of online video services like Joost and Babelgum. And he developed an Apple Front Row-like Flash application for watching streaming video from sites including YouTube, MySpace, and Heavy.

Now he's back with Hulu Media Player, a new approach toward watching videos from online video site Hulu. Like OpenHulu and TV Paradise, Hulu Media Player lets users without Hulu beta accounts watch TV shows and Movies hosted by the service. But unlike other sites, Hulu Media Player doesn't require you to use a mouse and keyboard to search for content from NBC and Fox. All you need is a mouse (although we'd really prefer keyboard shortcuts).

The media player looks a lot like Apple's Front Row interface. When you hit the "show guide" button you get a list of available TV shows. Click on one to bring up a list of episodes available for viewing. Right now only a small portion of the Hulu library is available, but there's still probably more worth watching on Hulu Media Player than there is on TV tonight. Hulu Media Player is still a work in progress. Several times when we clicked on an episode, a different episode began playing. But at least it was from the correct TV series.

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SludgeHeap

I checked out the site and it looks like Paul's revising it now that Hulu has gone live. Can't wait to see the result. In the meantime, I'm watching Airwolf videos over at http://series.airwolf.tv/episodes. Not a bad substitute, eh?

April 17 2008 at 12:16 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Brett

The Hulu Media Player by Paul Yanez is beautiful. Although it has a few functional quirks, like fixed screen size and lack of full screen mode, I'm still very impressed with the aesthetics and similarity in look and feel to the standard Hulu player. I look forward to future improvements. Paul's vision for an internet video framework that allows you to access streaming content from any source or view it on any device is exactly what I'm looking for. I found it so hard to keep track of which shows were on which site that I created my own big list on my blog, with links to content on Joost, Hulu, Fancast, and more. You can check it out at http://tubestream.blogspot.com.

February 02 2008 at 11:40 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply

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