Videvo was created with one simple mission: to make stock footage more affordable, and in doing so empower creators worldwide to produce awesome visual content. Originally started as a free stock footage service, we've added sound effects and music tracks into the mix too, as well as an extended collection of 500,000+ premium stock assets.
We only work with a select number of trusted providers for our premium content, and we give each a bigger cut of the pie, so that earnings are not diluted across thousands of contributors. By working with fewer, more well established contributors, we can also be sure that the content has been sourced responsibly and is safe to use. Furthermore, our content is provided in 1080p HD minimum resolution, and most of our content is now provided in 4K.
Headquartered in rural Oxfordshire, UK, we're a small and passionate team who love to chat. If you're ever this way, look us up, or you can contact us by submitting a message through our contact page , or by emailing us at .
Web Video Caster® allows you to watch on your TV videos from your favorite websites including movies, TV shows, live streams of news, sports, and IPTV. It also lets you cast local videos stored on your phone. Photos and audio files are also supported. Subtitles are detected on the web page, you can also use your own subtitles, or you can use the integrated search of
SUPPORTED STREAMING DEVICES
Web Video Caster® supports the most popular streaming devices, allowing your TV to stream videos directly from the web.
• Chromecast.
• Roku.
• DLNA receivers.
• Amazon Fire TV and Fire TV Stick.
• Smart TVs: LG Netcast and WebOS, Samsung, Sony, and others*.
• PlayStation 4 - by using its web browser.
• Most web browsers by visiting http://cast2tv.app (PS4, Smart TVs, other consoles and set top boxes).
• And more.
*If you experience compatibility issues, contact us and include the brand and model number.
SUPPORTED MEDIA
• HLS live streams in M3U8 format, where supported by your streaming device.
• Movies and TV shows.
• MP4 videos.
• Live news and sports.
• Any HTML5 videos*.
• IPTV (M3U8, W3U, RSS).
• Photos.
• Audio files including music.
*Your streaming device must be capable of decoding the video you are playing. Web Video Cast™ does not perform any video/audio decoding or transcoding.
GET STARTED
Follow these simple step-by-step instructions to start streaming:
1.- Browse the web or the local file explorer to find the video, audio or photo you want to cast to your tv.
2.- If the video or audio is on a website, try to play the video inside the web page. If it is a photo, you can long press on it to cast it.
3.- Connect to your streaming device to cast the video, music, or picture.
PREMIUM FEATURES**
• No in-app advertising.
• Bookmarks.
• Home page setting.
• Video history.
• Queue.
• Homescreen shortcut.
• Most visited site.
**This functionality does not apply universally to all streaming devices.
LIMITATIONS & DISCLOSURES
As with all apps, there are some limitations we are aware of and want you to know about up front.
• We are in no way associated with any web media providers and we do not have control over the content they provide.
• The app does not support tab casting, like the Chromecast extension for the PC web browser.
• We cannot do anything to fix issues that arise on the server side (media content provider) such as failure to play or buffering, which is especially common during heavy load times and weekends.
• Refunds are only issued within 24 hours of purchase and you must submit the order number in text, not a screenshot.
SHARE YOUR FEEDBACK
We are committed to open communication with our users. Please contact us first with any questions or support issues before leaving a review. We will respond and address your concerns promptly. Contact us through our user community https://wvc.page.link/c or https://wvc.page.link/f our website contact form.
PERMISSIONS
• Phone state - To allow the pausing of videos on incoming phone calls.
• Wi-Fi connection information - Required for streaming devices and for the browser.
• Photos/Media/Files (storage in general) - Required for the download functionality.
• In-app purchases - For premium version.
• Wake-lock - To keep phone awake while routing videos through phone. Should only affect live streams and authenticated videos.
• Accounts/Identity - Required by Google Play Services (7.5+).
• Location - This is only requested on devices with Android 6+ so the user gets a chance to decide and it is only requested when the website you are browsing wants to know your location. You can always say deny it, it will not affect anything other than that website.
Updated on May 23, 2022
How to reference a YouTube (or an online) video in Harvard style
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This guide covers how to reference YouTube videos in the Harvard referencing style. Since YouTube isn’t a conventional source for academic research, the rules for citing YouTube videos are a little different from those you have used for other sources. This guide will look at the conventions to be followed when referencing YouTube videos.
Citing a video from YouTube
Keep in mind that if you are referencing a section of the video, you should include a time code in your in-text citation. The format for the time code is minutes:seconds.
Alternatively, if the entire video is relevant, then you don’t need to include the time code. You’ll find two examples for each scenario below.
In-text citation template:
(Username/screen name, Year in which video was posted, mm:ss)
Reference list template:
Username or screen name (Year in which video was posted) Video title. Upload Day Month. Available at: YouTube or URL of the video (Accessed: Date).
When a specific part is highlighted
In-text citation
George Smoot states that it is now possible to map an entire human brain and turn it into a computer model (TEDx Talks, 2014, 12:17) …
Reference list
TEDx Talks (2014) You are a simulation & physics can prove It: George Smoot at TEDxSalford. 12 February. Available at: (Accessed: 24 September 2020).
When the whole video is relevant
In-text citation
Elon Musk thinks that it is possible to make Mars habitable by nuking it (SciShow Space, 2015) …
Reference list
SciShow Space (2015) Let’s nuke Mars! 18 September. Available at: (Accessed: 20 July 2020).
Citing a video embedded in a website
Sometimes, you’ll find videos embedded on a web page. To reference these, Harvard style recommends pointing the reader to where you found the source. It is possible that you will need to click through to the original source of the embedded video to obtain all the information you need to reference it, but you can still use the original URL to build your citation.
In-text citation structure:
(Username/screen name, Year in which video was posted, mm:ss)
Reference list structure:
Username or screen name (Year in which video was posted) Video title. Upload date. Available at: URL (Accessed: Date).
In-text citation
During the annual Groundhog Day celebrations in Punxsutawney (CNN, 2020, 01:12) …
Reference list
CNN (2015) Punxsutawney Phil predicts an early spring. 2 February. Available at: (Accessed: 20 July 2020).
Key takeaways
Keep in mind that if you are highlighting just a section of the video, you should include a time code in your in-text citation. The format to be used is minutes:seconds.
Alternatively, if the entire video is relevant, then you don’t need to use the time code.
Published October 29, 2020.