+---------------------------------------------+
| Upload your clip (5‑15 s) |
| [Drop file] or [Browse] |
| Auto‑tags: #dance #sunset #EDM … |
| [Add custom tags] [Confirm] |
+---------------------------------------------+
| Step | User Action | Result | |------|-------------|--------| | A | Upload a 5‑15 s clip (or pick one from the X Vedos library). | Clip is instantly indexed, auto‑tagged, and added to the Mosaic Pool. | | B | Enter a Live‑Mosaic room (public or private). | The UI shows a dynamic grid of 9‑16 cells, each playing a different clip from the pool. | | C | Drag‑and‑drop or “pin” any cell to make it the focal point. | The chosen clip expands to a larger preview, while the rest keep looping. | | D | Add “Remix Layers” (filters, audio tracks, captions, AR stickers). | AI blends the layers in real time; the mosaic updates instantly for every participant. | | E | React & Share – hearts, emojis, or “re‑mosaic” (fork the whole wall). | A new Mosaic room spawns, preserving the remix history (like a Git commit). | | F | Export – one‑click download of the whole mosaic as a single MP4 or shareable URL. | Viewers can embed the mosaic elsewhere (social media, blogs, newsletters). |
Why it’s interesting:
• Social‑first remixing – users co‑create a living collage, not just a single video.
• AI‑enhanced discovery – the system surfaces complementary clips (by mood, beat, or visual style) to keep the wall fresh.
• Gamified virality – each remix becomes a “branch” that can be liked, followed, or challenged by others.
| Category | % of Total Uploads (Q4 2025) | Typical Length | Monetisation | |---|---|---|---| | Gaming & Esports | 32 % | 5–45 min | Tip‑only, Sponsorship | | DIY & Maker | 18 % | 8–30 min | Affiliate links, Paid courses | | Education (STEM) | 14 % | 10–60 min | Subscriptions, Token rewards | | Music & Performance | 12 % | 3–20 min | Direct tip, Merch sales | | Vlogs/ Lifestyle | 11 % | 4–25 min | Advertising (optional) | | Niche Communities (e.g., retro computing) | 13 % | 2–35 min | Community donations |
| Hook | Description | |------|-------------| | Premium Remix Packs – exclusive AR stickers, cinematic filters, licensed music loops (subscription). | | Branded Mosaic Rooms – brands can sponsor a live mosaic (e.g., “#NikeRun Challenge”) and surface their own clips. | | Export Watermark Removal – one‑click premium export without X Vedos branding. | | Marketplace – creators sell short clip “stamps” that can be used as tiles (micro‑NFT style). | | Data Insights – aggregated remix trends sold (anonymized) to media agencies. | www x vedos com
| Component | Technology | Rationale | |---|---|---| | UI Framework | React 18 + Vite | Fast hot‑module replacement, tree‑shaking. | | State Management | Zustand + React‑Query | Minimal boilerplate, automatic caching of API data. | | Video Player | Shaka Player (customised) | Supports DRM‑free HLS/DASH, integrates WebTorrent for P2P. | | Service Worker | Workbox | Offline pre‑caching of UI assets, background sync for uploads. |
The front‑end is served from Cloudflare Pages (global edge), guaranteeing < 50 ms Time‑to‑First‑Byte (TTFB) for the HTML shell.
If you are looking for a foundational paper about how the internet and websites (like the ones ending in ".com") were created, the most helpful and famous paper is the original proposal by Sir Tim Berners-Lee. | Step | User Action | Result |
Other helpful academic topics in this area:
Originality
Ads & Pop‑ups
User Interaction
| Item | What to Check | Why It Matters |
|------|---------------|----------------|
| Domain name | Look for misspellings, extra words, or unusual TLDs (e.g., .xyz, .info). | Typosquatting or brand‑impersonation often uses look‑alike domains. |
| HTTPS | Is there a padlock icon in the address bar? Click it to view the certificate details. | HTTPS encrypts traffic and shows the site has at least a basic level of security. |
| WhoIs / registrar data | Use a service like whois.domaintools.com to see when the domain was registered, by whom, and for how long. | Very new registrations (especially < 6 months) can be a red flag for spam or scam sites. |
| Contact info | Look for a physical address, phone number, and a functional email/contact form. | Legitimate businesses usually provide multiple ways to get in touch. |
| Privacy policy & terms | Are these documents present and readable? Do they explain data collection clearly? | Lack of clear policies can indicate a site that doesn’t respect user data. |