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Emily Knab

The #WorldCup Drives 1 Million Downloads Of MobiTV iPhone App - 0 views

  • features live TV programming and video-on-demand content from every major network, and many of the most popular cable channels.
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    app was released in april 2010 only available in US
Simeon Spearman

Qualcomm Flo TV Needs Wider Adoption, More Services - Bloomberg - 0 views

  • “If it’s only mobile TV, we’re dissatisfied, we’re not happy with it,” Bill Stone, the Flo unit’s head, said in an interview. “There are going to be a lot of revenue streams off this service.”
  • Stone says the strain on mobile-phone networks caused by ballooning demand for video and data should make Flo attractive to service providers and phone makers. Flo works on a system using airwaves that Qualcomm bought in federal auctions. Flo- enabled devices have separate radios and chips that enable them to receive the service from Qualcomm’s transmitters. “One person streaming a video takes up as much bandwidth as 100 cell phone calls,” said Stone. “Networks break down and can’t handle it. For me, whether I have one or 1 million users, it doesn’t matter.”
  • Distributing magazines with high-resolution pictures is another area where Flo can send content to mobile devices more effectively than wireless-service providers, Stone said. His network would broadcast the data to everyone at once, with only handsets that have subscriptions enabled to access the files.
Simeon Spearman

Sorry Fiber Fans, I've Got Some Bad News - 0 views

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    Demand for faster broadband stagnating; survey finds most consumers content with current broadband speeds.
Emily Knab

'Party Down' Fans Prompt StarzTo Put Episodes Online Pronto - 2010-08-23 04:01:00 | Mul... - 0 views

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    daily 8.23 will offer downloads of the first two seasons on Amazon, Xbox Live, Playstation 3, iTunes and Sonic/CinemaNow because fans were so upset that they took the episodes off of Starz On Demand and Netflix 30 days after its cancellation
Simeon Spearman

What's 'Mobile' Mean? How Apple And The iPad Are Forcing The Debate | mocoNews - 0 views

  • MobiTV now faces a dilemma: CMO Ray DeRenzo explained the company, which has a number of popular mobile TV streaming applications, needs permission from its partners to sell the same 35 channels that it offers on cellphones today on tablets, too. But currently, the content owners are demanding a different rate structure for the tablet because it’s not clear whether it is a mobile device. MobiTV today charges $10 a month on a cellphone but that could soar to $30 a month on a tablet. “As a distributor, we have to license content, and the value of the content is set by the rights’ holders and content producers. [The tablet is] being priced as a home TV equivalent,” he said. “We have to make sure we can make a product that’s compelling to end users in terms of programming and price.” At the higher rate structure, he doesn’t believe there’s a market.
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    Wrestling with how to define and distinguish the tablet market from the mobile phone market when assigning value to content.
Greg Steen

Controversy in India Over Microfinance - 1 views

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    SKS Microfinance, an organization designed to grant small loans to villagers, has just gone public, raising $350 million through its IPO. There's been a lot of backlash, people comparing them to loan sharks. But with $47 billion dollars in excess demand for such loans, it makes sense.
Simeon Spearman

You are not an eyeball: Why tracking is the ad biz's last gasp - Scott Rosenberg's Word... - 0 views

  • You think the Web is all about making inefficient advertising more efficient, when it’s really about eliminating advertising as we have known it entirely, by giving us “better ways for demand and supply to meet — ways that don’t involve tracking or the guesswork called advertising.”
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    Wall Street Journal ran a scaremongering article on cookies and all the tricks the ad industry is using to "spy" on web users. This article explores the different levels of reaction to the article and how the future of advertising could change.
Greg Steen

Why the Internet Freaked Out When Fox Pulled House from Hulu - 0 views

  • Many observers immediately labeled Fox's block a violation of the principle of "network neutrality"—the idea that Internet service providers should allow subscribers to access all legal content online. Neutrality rules have been the subject of fierce debate in Washington, and activists are constantly on the lookout for perceived anti-neutrality maneuvering.

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    If Fox's move violated "neutrality," though, it wasn't in the way we've long defined that term. Advocates for net neutrality rules have mainly been concerned about the power that cable and phone companies can exert on the Internet. The theory is that in most local areas, broadband companies exist as monopolies or duopolies—you can get the Internet from your phone company or your cable company—and, therefore, are in a position to influence online content. What if, for instance, AT&T demanded that YouTube pay a surcharge every time a customer watches a video? To prevent such abuses, the Federal Communications Commission imposed Internet "openness" guidelines (PDF) in 2005, and since then regulators and lawmakers have been arguing about how to make those guidelines both permanent and enforceable.

    But this Fox-Cablevision-Hulu scenario turns the neutrality debate on its head. Here, it wasn't the broadband company—Cablevision—that blocked customers' access to content. Instead, it was the content company, Fox, that imposed the ban. Why is that distinction important? Because while it's easy to think of justifications for imposing neutrality regulations on broadband companies, it's less clear how we should feel about imposing rules on content providers. Telecom companies are regulated by the FCC, and there's a long history of the government forcing "openness" rules on public communications infrastructure. If the government can prohibit phone companies from deciding whom you can and can't call, shouldn't we have a similar rule preventing ISPs from deciding what you can get on the Web?

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    B/c House is awesome, obviously!  I bet it's lupus!  Srsly though, article talks about how internet content is beginning to be subject to the same bullshit as TV and other traditional media.  And net neutrality comes into play of course.
Simeon Spearman

Ship or Get Off the Pot - 0 views

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    "Snap. Verizon offers iPhone 4. Forget the slight redesign, forget the lack of multitasking between data and voice, forget the pricing models for unlimited, tethering, and video chat over 3G. Now the store brand is competing directly with the actual iPhone. Naturally the pent-up demand by Verizon contractees will blow out the overall numbers. But much more importantly, Apple is free to ship an iPhone 5 across the board, where existing contractees can be marketed to with bundled services, i.e. the new TV, the new Enterprise, the new Office. One device, with the carriers battling for the most attractive rendering of services."
Simeon Spearman

Report: Search Ad Spending Jumped By 23 Percent During The Quarter | paidContent - 0 views

  • The search advertising market is still going strong. The latest report from Efficient Frontier shows that total spending on search-ads jumped 23 percent year-over-year during the most recent quarter, which the search engine marketing firm said was a sign of “larger budget appetite and competition among advertisers as well as increased consumer demand.” All sectors Efficient Frontier tracks showed double-digit gains in spending.
Greg Steen

Retro Hobo With a Shotgun Game Blasts Onto iOS - 0 views

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    This was originally a fake trailer in Grindhouse, then a real movie, and now a game.  Brands could do well by spotting demand for something like this and making it happen.  (movie and game are result of unexpected fan interest)
Simeon Spearman

BEAMLOG: 3D displays coming to Mercedes-Benz. - 0 views

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    Greater demand for 3D design?
Emily Knab

U.S. Demand for Cosmeceuticals to Reach $8.5 Billion in 2015 | GCIMagazine.com - 0 views

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    insights in cosmeceuticals- age range is getting younger as more ppl are interested in prevention products. 
Simeon Spearman

Swap.com's New Scan App Makes Trading for Books & Other Media Easy - 0 views

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    Bartering and swapping services - a more fluid/communal/on-demand sense of ownership
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