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A SMALL Fremont, Calif.-based company hopes its little video application becomes a big hit on the Internet.
Alaris Inc.'s new technology, called Videogram, compresses small video clips into easily transportable sizes, essentially making them video E-mail messages.
These video messages are self-contained Windows 95 and Windows 3.1 applications, since the only other component needed, a software "player," is built into the video messages. That player consists of 150 kilobytes.
Some media companies, such as San Francisco's KPIX television, have begun using the technology on their Web sites. Time Warner...