Formatted for Windows Media Player, the site currently offers 30 niche feeds — more are expected — for $49 per month, including both straight and gay content ranging from amateur to Asian and even bisexual and tranny.
Richard Foster, president of technology at WWF, said the technology behind the new streams took six years to develop in the mainstream marketplace. The new content, he said, would always stream in TV-quality video, with little or no buffering on reliable connections.
The interface, he said, also is easy to navigate, allowing users to “switch” channels without closing their player.
“Coming from the mainstream market, I saw an immediate need for user-friendly adult video streams,” Foster said. “Today’s video feeds are cumbersome and typically have a terrible navigation structure. Now, with WWF, video has finally caught up to the Internet revolution.”
Foster said all of the videos in the feeds have been made for full-screen viewing. Webmasters also can try out the content for free through a 14-day trial.
Dial-up users also can access the streams, as content has been narrowbanded to accept 56k transfer rates.