Index  ›  tech  ›  BBC
tech · BBC ↗

BBC iPlayer integrates Twitter and Facebook

BBC Published May 26, 2010 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The BBC iPlayer service has undergone three regenerations since its launch in December 2007.
3 · regenerations
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The BBC iPlayer service hit 20 downloads.
20 downloads · downloads
Erik Huggers, director of Future, Media and Technology at the BBC
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The BBC iPlayer service is now available on 25 devices.
25 devices · devices
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
In April, the BBC iPlayer received 88 million page requests from computers, 20 million via Virgin Media, 6 million from mobiles, 5 million from PlayStation 3 consoles and 4 million from the Nintendo Wii channel.
88 million page requests · page requests from computers20 million page requests · page requests via Virgin Media6 million page requests · page requests from mobiles5 million page requests · page requests from PlayStation 3 consoles4 million page requests · page requests from Nintendo Wii channel
View source ↗

The BBC iPlayer has launched a trial service inviting users to share favourite programmes via social networks such as Facebook and Twitter.

People can now choose to log-on to the revamped video player, allowing them to personalise the service and see recommendations based on prior viewing.

It will also aggregate content from other broadcasters including Channel 4.

Users will also soon be able to chat using Microsoft's Messenger service while watching live TV streams.

"We spent more time designing [the new interface] than building it," said the BBC's Anthony Rose, chief technology officer for Project Canvas, a new online broadcast initiative currently under development.

Mr Rose also addressed complaints about dips in the streaming quality sometimes experienced by viewers.

A new "adaptive bit-rate system" will continually adjust video to changes in individual broadband connections, he said.

This means that the quality should adapt more quickly when the connection is slower and improve as it gets faster.

The new personalisation features relies on a log-in using the same credentials people already use around the BBC website, including commenting on blog posts, added Mr Rose.

This log-in can be linked with Twitter and Facebook so that friends on those networks can see what they are watching or listening to.

Later in the year the BBC iPlayer will begin to take data feeds from other catch-up services including 4OD, Demand Five, ITV Player and SeeSaw as well as Welsh broadcasters S4C and Clic. However, it will not feature content from the Sky Player, as the broadcaster had not responded to an invitation to take part.

The feature means that if a person searches the service for a non-BBC programme they will be directed to the site where it appears, unless it is only available on Sky.

The trial launch marks its third regeneration since the BBC iPlayer service first launched in December 2007.

"It was unproven content - I used to come in to look at the stats and do a high five when we hit 20 downloads," recalled Erik Huggers, director of Future, Media and Technology at the BBC.

The service is now available on 25 devices but the majority of users still access it via a computer.

In April this year 88 million page requests came from computers, 20m via Virgin Media, 6m from mobiles, 5m from PlayStation 3 consoles and 4m from the Nintendo Wii channel.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error