Apple’s Potential “Automatic Content Creation and Processing”

EventsTechnologyEducation by: iThinkEd Staff

Yesterday, Jeffrey Young of The Wired Campus posted an article that discusses a recent patent application filed by an Apple employee, which details software that would captureSony DSR VX2100 video and slides from college lectures and automatically edit them into video podcasts.

The application, titled “Automatic Content Creation and Processing,” was originally discovered by AppleInsider. The name on the patent application is Bertrand Serlet, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering. Young asserts that an Apple spokesman could not be reached for comment Monday, but the company is notoriously tight-lipped about products that are still in development.

Perhaps the most interesting feature described in the new patent application is the ability to determine automatically when to run video footage of the professor speaking and when to splice in images of lecture slides. As the patent application puts it, the software would determine “a time to switch the first and second streams from the event data.”

As Young suggests, many college officials are looking for easy ways to record large numbers of lectures and offer video or audio recordings to students. The obvious objective of this prospective application is to capture and distribute lecture podcasts without requiring professors or other staff members to perform time-consuming editing or file management.

Be sure to check out Young’s full article in Wired Campus.

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