
Nearly two million well-wishers descended upon Washington D.C. as Barack Obama was sworn into office earlier today. For the millions of others who were unable to attend the inauguration and couldn’t watch it on TV, there was a third option: watch it online.
But online viewing wasn’t as easy as social networkers thought.
Lindsay Wells, a 26-year-old teacher and Obama supporter, sat in a N.Y. Starbucks with her laptop resting on her knees trying unsuccessfully to hear Obama’s speech The video kept freezing and was very choppy, which Wells attributed to an overabundance of users attempting to view the video at the same time. What’s more, CNN’s website didn’t have enough bandwidth and thus couldn’t support all of its subscribers. Frustrated, Wells resigned to listening to the audio without the video of the inauguration events. It wasn’t ideal, but she claimed to have no other option.
“I don’t own a TV,” she said.
The process was supposed to be easy and a plus for adults and students who didn’t have access to a television at noon. Once signed onto Facebook, users registered for the event. They were then directed to click on a link to CNN Live where they could watch a real time streamed video of the Inauguration, complete with a right hand sidebar to follow their friends’ status updates. By Tuesday morning, over 1.2 million users, both in the U.S. and abroad, had registered to watch.
In a rare merger, the popular online social networking site Facebook teamed up with CNN to offer its users a live streamed video of today’s Inauguration, and many New Yorkers were signing on.
Jacqui Kinner of upstate N.Y. also experience technical difficulties with Facebook’s live coverage of the inauguration. Like Wells, she had arrived in Starbucks eager to watch from her laptop. Unlike Wells, she didn’t receive the audio. An unpromising message popped up on her screen: “You made it, unfortunately so did everyone else.” She was then put a digital waiting line.
“I guess I should’ve found a TV,” Kinner lamented.
Informations specialist Ray Wong felt the poor video feed was inevitable. “That’s what happens when you have millions of people who don’t have TV access,” he said. Adding that he guessed that the majority of viewers were people at work or on the go.
According to the Los Angeles Times, CNN’s live inauguration video streaming set web traffic records. By 1:00 pm Eastern Time, 18.8 million viewers had logged on to watch the video. This well surpassed the previous record of 5.3 million viewers logged onto CNN on Election Day.
To assuage irritated viewers like Wells and Kinner, CNN will replay the live video at 9pm and midnight.
Here's the Link.