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Nick Verkroost

Google wins YouTube case in Spain | Technology | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • Google wins YouTube case in Spain
  • Google has won a landmark ruling against Spanish broadcaster Telecinco
  • Telecinco had claimed YouTube was damaging its business by airing TV shows before they had been broadcast in Spain,
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Spanish court said it was the responsibility of the copyright owner to identify and tell Google when material that infringes intellectual property is on YouTube
  • In June this year Google won a similar case against US media conglomerate Viacom,
  • Google could not be held liable for having a "general awareness" that copyrighted videos might be posted to the site.
Alex Street

Ovum Research Store - Consumer Insights: Exploring the TV Apps Opportunity - 0 views

  • new use-cases
  • add value for consumers by augmenting and enhancing the TV user experience
  • overview of consumers' online activities by connected device type
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • long-form video-consumption on non-traditional viewing devices
  • elements of the mobile app store model can be effectively adapted for the implementation of TV apps.
  • opportunity to exploit TV apps as a marketing and distribution channel
  • grouping of TV apps into distinct categories
  • ew modes of content delivery and consumption.
  • marketing, distributing, and accessing online content or services has been instrumental in driving changes in consumer behaviour.
  • direct monetization potential
  • demand for multiscreen access to pay-TV services
  • online activity today is TV-related or video-centric
  • kind of TV apps might consumers be prepared to pay?
  • use cases for apps delivered only to TV set
  • mobile apps environment translate
  • web-based services and applications are consumers
Stephe Taylor

Siemens outlines case for 'Operator as an app' | Videonet - 0 views

  • ‘Operator as an app’
  • Over-The-Top Swipe
  • ability to ‘swipe’ content from one screen to another
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  • Siemens can support over 100 client devices today, including more than 20 tablets and 10 connected TV sets
Alex Street

ARM Holdings - Investor Relations -ARM Holdings plc - Investors - 0 views

shared by Alex Street on 30 Nov 10 - Cached
  • semiconductor intellectual property
  • mobile phones, consumer electronics and embedded digital devices
  • NASDAQ London conference with Morgan Stanley – with investor relations
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Investment Case
    • Alex Street
       
      VALUE CHAIN! 
  • New Products
  •  
    semiconductor intellectual property
Alex Street

Lovefilm International | Case Studies 2009 | Winners | Deloitte LLP - 0 views

  • ith now 2,500 titles,
  • four per cent market penetration in the UK s
Alex Street

Case Studies in Freemium: Pandora, Dropbox, Evernote, Automattic and MailChimp - Tech N... - 0 views

  • 300,000 subscribers, accounts for 1.6 or 1.7 percent of monthly uniques,
  • 2.7 million users
  • 50,000 paying users (
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • 0.5 percent of people who sign up in a given month go premium
  • 2 percent of people who signed up a year ago are now paying Evernote.
Rob Collier

Digital Scotland 2020: Achieving World-Class digital infrastructure: a final report to ... - 0 views

  •  
    "4.4 Rural coverage and take-Up With a population density almost an order of magnitude greater than Scotland's, South Korea does not provide many lessons in rural coverage. However, Australia does. Its overall density is 1/20th Scotland's with vast tracks of land populated by less than one person per ten square kilometers and in some cases per hundred square kilometers. As a result Australia has not been able to escape the urban-rural digital divide, which, as already noted, is embodied in its two-track fast broadband deployment strategy. A large 93% of the population will have access to 100 Mbps service, according to the NBN plan, while the remaining 7%--in rural and remote areas-is being promised up to 12 Mbps only.[6]NBN simply assumes that rural and remote areas do not justify FTTH and that they will be served by fixed wireless and satellite technologies. On the mobile side, on the other hand, Australia has relied on competition between its mobile operators (reduced to three after a consolidation) to extend service beyond urban areas. This has generally produced limited results. Subsidies for better coverage have been applied at the state level, however, with Western Australia being an instructive example. Specifically, the Western Australia government conducted a reverse auction tender to improve mobile coverage in selected areas, which resulted in Telstra, the main incumbent operator, securing A$39.2 million in government aid (on top of committing A$106 million of its own funds) for this purpose. Like Australia, Sweden has large unpopulated areas to serve, yet cannot rely on new-generation satellites, which do not reach these areas. Initially Sweden relied on HSPA mobile coverage but it has recently added a national coverage requirement in the context of its 4G (LTE) spectrum auction. Specifically, the Swedish regulator identified rural homes and businesses that need to be covered, requiring 75% of the indicated homes and businesses to be covered by Decemb
Alex Street

Google pleads for more unlicensed spectrum instead of more auctions - 0 views

  • oogle would really, really like to see the Federal Communications Commission open up a huge swath of unlicensed spectrum for mobile broadband
  • company's case for making more unlicensed spectrum available
  • Google senior policy counsel Rick Whitt o
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Whitt said that an all-licensed approach to spectrum wouldn't give carriers the spectrum they need to build out common infrastructure.
Alex Street

Ofcom asks Arqiva to stick price on 600MHz spectrum * The Register - 1 views

  • stick price on 600MHz
  • building an LTE network or similar would be expensive
  • regulator has asked Arqiva to work out what it would charge someone to broadcast TV in the space
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  • would fit six new HD TV channels
  • band isn't very valuable for anything else, as there's no international harmonisation
  • no economies of scale.
  • working out how much it would cost to broadcast a national TV multiplex
  • Ofcom wants to auction it off,
  • regulator can't do that until the upper part of the Digital Dividend is mapped out (if not auctioned off) and the potential value of the 600MHz band is well understood
  • provide indicative pricing in case anyone fancies launching some TV channels at 600MH
Alex Street

Case Studies | Level 3 Communications - 0 views

  •  
    client list 
David Astle

iPhone App Sales, Exposed - 0 views

  • , let’s take a look at specific applications. I encourage examining the apps themselves to understand what exactly went into them. The production values, complexity, niche, and pricing determine why they produced either excellent or p
  • he average total number of units sold was 101,024 copies within an average period of 261 days. The average number of units sold per day was 387. The average price was $5.49, although the data skews due to the $49.99 outlier. In most cases, the price point was $0.99. The average number of updates released was 3.89, with the average total development cost amounting to $6,453. Several developers omitted development costs and most did not include their personal time in these figures. It is safe to assume the cost would be at least five or ten times more when using a contracted team. But on average here, iPhone developers are seeing a return of more than 15 times their initial, albeit small, development costs.
  • However, when the top 10% of the most successful apps are removed from the data set, the numbers skew much lower, giving a far better impression of what the iPhone industry looks like for most developers. In this scenario, the average sales were 11,625 total units, averaging 44 copies/day. Approximately 23% of apps sold less than 1000 units from launch (ranging from 12 to 370 days in the App Store). Further, 56% of apps sold less than or equal to 10,000 units, while 90% sold less than 100,000 units, with the remaining 10% achieving sales of 127,000 – 3,000,000 units.
Alex Street

How Björk's App Album Was Made: Mixing for iPad, Visualizing Music as Tunnels... - 0 views

  • I haven’t had this experience in 20 years. Before CDs came out, I’d buy an album and hold the 12-inch cover in my hand, sitting cross-legged on the floor while I listened to the music, read the liner notes, and looked at the pictures.” People used to have this very tactile, multimedia experience when they bought an album. But with the digitization of music, we’ve lost that special moment. You can think of the app as, finally, that chance to unwrap the box and have a personal, intimate experience again with music. It might be the case that people spend a lot of time with the app when it first comes out [as they did with album covers] and then perhaps they’ll move on to purely enjoying the music after that
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