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New YouTube is faster, slicker and better

by Steven Williamson on 2 December 2011, 11:23

Tags: Google (NASDAQ:GOOG)

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Log onto YouTube this morning and you’ll be greeted by a snazzy new redesign, which certainly looks more visually potent than it did yesterday with its barren white background and video clips scattered willy-nilly across the screen.

One of the reasons for the major change to both style and format is to make navigation simpler and allow users to find their favourite channels quickly. To facilitate this, the new site now features three vertical columns. On the left-hand side, users can access their account and browse videos, including "trending clips" by channel. The middle column is where the videos now appear, all neatly laid-out running vertically down the screen. The right-hand column showcases a handful of TV shows and featured clips.

The overhaul of YouTube is the next part in a long-running plan by Google to rejuvenate the video channel since it took over the site five years ago for a whopping $1.76 billion. With the new change comes better integration with a range of Google’s other products.

New YouTube pages makes it easy to synch channel updates to subscribers' Twitter, Facebook or Google+ social network accounts,” said YouTube vice president of product development, Shishir Mehrotra



Of course, this new look should also make the site much more appealing for viewing via Google TV, which the company has recently upgraded following a luke-warm reception to the service, which was hampered at launch last year by major Hollywood networks blocking their content from the platform.

The new design also lays things out nicely for the introduction of premium paid-for channels, which are going to be lucrative for Google with such a bold-looking new homepage ripe for advertising. A preview site for a host of premium channels launched a while back, showing the type of content users will be able to access, ranging from lifestyle channels to educational programmes.

Having spent some time browsing YouTube this morning, the site does exude a more vibrant, current feel, and it is much quicker to navigate thanks to the new layout. It also appears to have been speed optimised as we’ve been whizzing around the site and loading clips much faster. Overall, the new site gets the big thumbs-up from us.

Do you like YouTube's new look? Let us know your thoughts in the HEXUS.community forums.



HEXUS Forums :: 9 Comments

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Personally I think it's long overdue and fantastic.

Before, youtube was a series of orphan pages that I really only went to by following links direct to clips.

Now the interface is actual usable and far far easier just to “flick through”.


Bravo Google.


PS, I like the fact the black bard of ugly doom is going from the other Google services too :)
I like it.

But please, *please* *PLEASE*, YouTube, add a video rating bar to each video in the ‘Suggested Videos’ column you see on each video page. I've probably lost 20 seconds of my life every time I've followed a video link only to discover it has 97% thumbs down ratings, is dreadful, and I've had to hit ‘Back’, which probably adds up to around 6 hours of my life wasted.
Now we just need Google to make the HTML5 player not suck and dump flash altogether.
I'm loving the new design. I hoped they'd sort YouTube out after seeing the good work done with Google Docs and Gmail.

ThumbsUp :)
AlexKitch
But please, *please* *PLEASE*, YouTube, add a video rating bar to each video in the ‘Suggested Videos’ column you see on each video page. I've probably lost 20 seconds of my life every time I've followed a video link only to discover it has 97% thumbs down ratings, is dreadful, and I've had to hit ‘Back’, which probably adds up to around 6 hours of my life wasted.

Superb suggestions Mr Kitch! All that wasted time on faketrailers, slideshows and other non-videos… If Google really thinks (and they do) that their instant search is clever by saving 2-5 seconds from each of our searches (and therefore 100s of years of waiting when scaled globally), then the same logic applies to youtube.

As for increased speed - I'll have to see - I'm sick of seeing even 360p videos constantly pausing and buffering on my 20mbit connection (I get at least 8mbit actual on download test sites/usenet) - it's pathetic. Maybe if google could sort that out before changing their window dressing I'd be a lot happier…