Skip to main content

Home/ Redshift Strategy/ Group items tagged one

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Alex Street

Costs mobile data - O2 - 0 views

  •  
    What is 1MB of data? 1MB* on average is: Browsing - using the internet on your O2 mobile O2 Active 40 pages approx Mobile internet sites outside of O2 (typically 3rd party websites not controlled by O2): 2-10 full web pages (depending on graphics, images, amount of text) 10-20 mobile web pages Sending and receiving E-mail from your O2 mobile 200 emails without attachment 10 emails with simple one page attachment Satellite Navigation 15 hours of Satellite navigation traffic alert service. Please note: Using GPS Sat Nav without the traffic alert service does not incur data charges. Important information The following services when provided by a 3rd party may consume large amounts of data and maybe subject to separate charge. We recommend you take a Browsing Bolt On if you use these services regularly: Downloading video clips from 3rd party: typically between 1MB and 5MB depending on the length and quality of the clip, plus the cost of the video Note - Downloading video clips/music/games from O2 costs the price of the content only with no additional data charges. Downloading high quality music tracks from 3rd party: typically between 1MB and 5MB per track depending on the length and quality of the track, plus the cost of the track Downloading games from 3rd party: typically 300KB, plus the cost of the game We recommend that you avoid the following on your mobile: Using VOIP** uses 1 MB of data every 3-4 minutes. Downloading full-length movies as this may use in excess of 1,000MB. Using video/ audio streaming devices (e.g. 'Sling box'), which connect your mobile device to your TV, also consume large amounts of data. Watching 15 minutes of TV on your mobile using these devices uses around 25MB. * These figures are based on typical usage. Actual data usage will depend on the content of web pages viewed and the length of emails sent/received. ** Typical VOIP usage is around 5KB per second but will depend on a number of variables including codec and voice sample t
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
Sasha Roupell

Sky Store brings 1000+ on-demand movies to Sky Anytime+ | whathifi.com - 0 views

  •  
    Sky Store brings 1000+ on-demand movies to Sky Anytime+ 8 Mar 2012 Sky has expanded its pay-per-view movie offering for customers with Sky Anytime+. The new Sky Store replaces Sky Box Office and has over 1000 films available to watch on-demand. SD movies start at just 99p, rising to £3.99 for blockbuster new movies in HD. Sky also confirmed that Sky Anytime+ will be available to all Sky customers from Easter - a Sky Broadband subscription will no longer be required. Sky Anytime+ delivers a wide range of on-demand content for free as well as offering pay-per-view films. Sky is at pains to point out that its pay-per-view movies, via the new Sky Store if you're an Anytime+ customer, are cheaper than iTunes and Lovefilm in many instances. New releases are £3.49, library movies are £1.99 and special offers are 99p. HD films rather than SD will cost 50p more. Sky Box Office will continue as the place for non-Sky Anytime+ customers to choose from a more limited range of the latest movies on the live channels from £3.49 per title. All Sky TV customers meanwhile can rent movies on a pay-per-view basis from the new Sky Store on laptops via the Sky Go application, which already has a Sky Movies application, too.
Alex Street

FT.com / Management - Apple takes a second bite at TV - 0 views

  • y 8Gb of storage, c
  • 160Gb in the previous version
  • streaming media player
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • jostles with games consoles, laptops that can wirelessly transmit what is on their screen to the TV, and similar media players f
  • $99 price tag marks a recognition of the stiff competition
  • istances it from the Mac Mini, a small-box computer that some Apple fans saw as a better value
  • enabled home-sharing in iTunes on my PC to share its content with Apple TV.
  • Netflix streaming film service, YouTube, Flickr
  • Being able to access a computer on a home network means anything stored in iTunes can be played or watched on the big screen
  • Many set-top boxes and Blu-ray players in the US offer Netflix
  • losest competitor to Apple TV in functionality is Roku’s box.
  • Roku may lack YouTube but it has more than 85 “channels” of internet content, including Netflix, Amazon’s video-on-demand service, Pandora internet radio, the MOG music streaming service,
  • Apple TV’s narrower content is its biggest weakness.
  • s synergies with other Apple devices –
  • Remote app allows control with touch gestures on an iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch.
  • ame kind of apps as an iPhone or iPad in the future
Alex Street

Sony Qriocity service takes on Apple iTunes with streaming music and video | Technology... - 0 views

  • Sony has embarked on an ambitious challenge to Apple's iTunes,
  • based around the PlayStation 3
  • movies and songs
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • web-enabled Sony devices, including its TVs, laptops and digital music players
  • Amazon also thought to be aggressively planning a web-based subscription service
  • online TV-on-demand market is about to expand dramatically.
  • Fujio Nishida, Sony's president for Europe
  • major expansion of its Qriocity
  • Qriocit
  • Qriocit
  • Qriocity
  • Music streaming will be added to Qriocity by the end of this year.
  • pricing.
  • Initially the service will just work on new network-enabled Bravia TVs, Sony Vaios and the PS3
  • Restricting the service to Sony products may damage take-up
  • open it up over time.
  • 54 million registered PS3s in use worldwide
  • move comes three years after Sony decided to abandon an earlier music streaming site, Connect Music
  • sers were restricted to using Sony hardware and software to listen
Alex Street

How much more CPM does interactive video ads command vs typical pre-/mid-roll video ads... - 0 views

  • CPM rates for ads on Hulu and YouTube are, on average, $45 and $10,
  • or Tremor Video, th
  • CPM rates on Hulu far surpass rates on Youtube
Alex Street

Wireless Intelligence - Analysis - Smartphone users spending more 'face time' on apps t... - 0 views

  • study uses the concept of 'face time'
  • long users actively engage
  • 295 minutes per month on gaming.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • most smartphone face time related to apps and features already present on the device platform (voice, messaging, browsing etc
  • Add-on apps accounted for 20 percent of face time minutes,
  • iPhone users generated the most data traffic, consuming 422MB per user per month - over 200 percent more than Android users (133MB
  • f (45 percent) of smartphone users play games on a monthly basis but th
  • 82 percent of new contract subscribers in the last quarter (Q4 2010)
  • 75 percent of its contract net additions were smartphone buyers in the same quarter; t
Alex Street

Bobsled By T-Mobile - 0 views

  • brand aimed at bridging traditional telecommunications and Internet-based voice and data services
  • live voice calls
  • voice messages to their friends either privately or via their ‘walls
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • allowing people on Facebook to more easily connect
  • oice calls to their friends on Facebook with just one click
  • Internet protocol (VoIP) application on
  • Anyone on Facebook can receive a call; no application install is required to receive a call via the Bobsled application for Facebook.
  • Bobsled by T-Mobile also powers the Group Text™ and Cloud Text™ applications on the new T-Mobile®
  • evolve Bobsled by T-Mobile to include video chat
David Astle

BBC - Press Office - Wimbledon Men's Final attracts 11.2m on BBC One - 0 views

  •  
    Wimbledon Men's Final attracts 11.2m on BBC One
Alex Street

How much are users on average spending on a monthly basis on iPhone/Android/Blackberry ... - 0 views

  • 0 percent of paid Android apps have clocked fewer than 100 downloads,only two paid applications have been downloaded more than half a million times in the Google Android Market worldwide to date
Alex Street

The True Cost of Developing Your Mobile App | AppsMarketing Blog - 0 views

  • etter to focus on the value of the service and the benefit to your business than to focus purely on the cos
  • good idea of the value that you should expect from an App Developmen
  • difficult to provide a price without knowing the specific details of the ap
  • ...30 more annotations...
  • first factor in determining the cost of having an app developed
  • Data Driven App
  • Games
  • Device App
  • makes use of the hardware to provide its core functionality
  • Bespoke Functionality App
  • may include ‘data-driven‘ features
  • production of an app is not just about the functionality
  • functionality expected by the user, or an app that is not presented well,
  • Design and the functionality
  • Scale of the project
  • more graphic design work
  • number of device types
  • device types
  • different requirements between the individual devices, i.e. the iPhone 3gs and the iPhone 4
  • production of the separate graphics for each device will increase the costs.
  • Design costs, you should expect to pay between €350 for a small simple app, through to €3500+ for a very large, complex and Graphic centric app
  • additional device type, you should expect the costs to increase by 25%-50% for each additional device type
  • Development Costs
  • any factors will determine the Development Costs
  • Simple App – €1500 to €5000 Data Driven App – €5000 to €35000 Games – €7500 to €175000 Device App – €1500 to €175000 Bespoke Functionality App – €5000 to €175000
  • costs associated with the production of your app will be covered within the Design & Development costs
  • creating the app store account ($99 for Apple apps, $25 for Android apps),
  • scale of the project will have an impact on the costs
  • ome app developers will take the graphics and source code that they have developed for your app and resell it to another business, potentially to one of your competitor
  • guarantee of exclusivity for your app
  • Some app developers will keep all of the design and source code t
  • app developer is suggesting that you have to pay extra for the graphics and source code, walk away.
  • better app development businesses will automatically include the graphics and source code in the price you pay
  • focus on the value of the service and the benefit to your business,
Alex Street

FT.com / Media - Television goes smart in dramatic makeover - 0 views

  • Apple TV device is expected to be launched in September
  • smart TV
  • Web TV has failed to catch on in the pas
  • ...25 more annotations...
  • ability to stream in HD quality has transformed the offering
  • “dumb” monitors
  • Retailers are looking to increase their margins
  • Media companies, too, are spreading their bets,
  • Netflix,
  • Technology companies aim to serve all sides
  • network equipment makers
  • fighting among themselves over standards.
  • Walmart bought the Vudu digital media servic
  • Sonic Solutions acquired DivX
  • Pace, the world’s biggest set-top box maker, is buying 2Wire to serve telcos
  • Google’s developer conference
  • Google, Intel, Sony, Logitech, Adobe, Dish Networks and Best Buy appeared on stage together to launch Google TV
  • experimentation.
  • competing services on the same device
  • etflix and Vudu streaming movies and Yahoo Widgets
  • , Google TV represents Google and Intel trying to simplify and spur mass adoption with their own content combinations, operating system and interface,
  • Google TV as a unifying solution
  • app developers to target a Google TV platform and end up on multiple devices
  • Google TV concept allows viewers to find the content they want through search, with results that mix regular broadcast programming with web content, recorded TV and personal media such as photos and music
  • Google’s Chrome browser is the interface to the web and there is a big-screen version of YouTube
  • “Google TV is not designed for local TV needs
  • “Different markets around the world have different requirements,
  • problem with innovation in the TV industry is the go-to-market strategy,
  • TV industry has a subsidised model that gives everyone a set-top box for free. So no one wants to buy a box. Ask TiVo… ask us… ask Google in a few month
Alex Street

BBC - BBC Internet Blog: Introducing the all new BBC iPlayer (This time it's personal) - 0 views

  • simpler to use, personalised and social.
  • iPlayer V2,
  • main problems we had to solve were largely technical things like:
  • ...64 more annotations...
  • Twitterverse is becoming the tastemaker.
  • available i
  • ideo quality
  • reliability of video delivery
  • dealing with massive peak loads
  • iPlayer V2 hosting platform was also designed to scale across multiple platforms
  • Actual Availability,
  • scaling to 1.5 million users,
  • 15 million page views delivering over 1.1 billion(!) minutes of video each month
  • Two years ago when we launched iPlayer our goals and challenges were largely technical - scalability, reliability, video encoding
  • next set of challenges was not so much technical as social
  • "As people begin moving from television to the web, what happens to the role of the linear TV scheduler as the tastemaker
  • platform capable
  • the scheduler is the leading tastemaker.
  • iPlayer does a fine job of satisfying the time-shifted desires
  • BBC schedulers create the desire to watch a programme; iPlayer lets you see it at a time that's convenient to you
  • what if you no longer watched linear TV? Who becomes the tastemaker then?
  • largely theoretical problem
  • iPlayer home page that feels almost more like an application than a traditional web site
  • in the world of YouTube where there is no master scheduler who can shape demand.
  • clear evidence that linear TV created the demand while iPlayer satisfied it.
  • wanted it to become a driver of demand, s
  • The question then is, in a world which cannot be driven by schedulers
  • if schedulers are going to be augmented by your friends as drivers of consumption in the future, the challenge for the team was to integrate friends and social into the iPlayer
  • delights both early adopters and the mainstream audience.
  • folded your personal experience into the fabric of the main site
  • o integrate with Facebook and other social networks
  • make the recommendations and social graph visible within iPlayer,
  • addition of course to any external activity.
  • solution we came up with was to create a BBC login - known as BBC iD
  • can then connect with Facebook, Twitter
  • expandable Favourites zone
  • designed Favourites to be like your mail Inbox, showing the total number of items, how many are newly arrived,
  • rely on Favourites to give me a constant stream of things to watch
  • ll your favourites and other settings can roam across all the devices on which you use iPlayer.
  • So now if I'm bored sitting in a train on the way home, I can look for new programmes to watch, add them to my Favourites,
  • Personalised iPlayer home page
  • default view that everyone sees to something that's, well, just for you.
  • iPlayer traffic is doubling each year, it still only accounts for 2-3% of linear TV viewing.
  • Featured and Most Popular
  • For You and Friends:
  • iPlayer homepage into the tastemaker of your choice
  • connect iPlayer to your Facebook and/or Twitter social graph
  • Player home page to meet the needs of a mainstream audience looking for editorialised
  • My Categories
  • he iPlayer server will keep a lookout for any new content in your selected categories
  • big increase in live TV viewing in iPlayer - and with the upcoming World Cup being a huge driver of live online viewing
  • new Live Viewing page
  • fuel for the Friends drawer on the iPlayer home page
  • something that for some will be the killer feature of the new site
  • sync your iPlayer with theirs
  • Shout button - a
  • shouts only go to your Messenger friends who are in iPlayer right now
  • Watch with Friends is being added to the site in the next few weeks - stay tuned!
  • adaptive bitrate system
  • ch automatically adjusts
  • Adobe's upcoming Flash 10.1 release with H.264 hardware acceleratio
  • New iPlayer Desktop
  • Series Downloads and live radio & TV.
  • favourite programmes already downloaded to your computer ready to view when you're offline
  • Player Desktop will now automatically download every future episode for you
  • new feature in iPlayer Desktop for live TV
  • BBC's 17 network and national radio stations..
  • I am moving on to become CTO of Project Canvas, and this is the last major piece of work
Nick Verkroost

'BBC axes F1' report inaccurate | Planet F1 | Formula One News - 0 views

  • Sunday Times
  • 'F1 costs £1 a head for every viewer, compared with the average 7p an hour broadcast cost for BBC1 and BBC2
  • Monaco Grand Prix saw a peak of 6.1 million viewers, an increase of 400,000 on 2010, while 6.2m people tuned in for the Spanish GP, an increase of 1.2m
  •  
    Monaco Grand Prix saw a peak of 6.1 million viewers, an increase of 400,000 on 2010
Alex Street

Connected TV sport app from BBC | Advanced Television - 0 views

  • seamlessly integrating linear TV with online and on-demand
  • focusing on Formula 1,
  • Euro 2012, Wimbledon and London 2012 Olympic Games
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • BBC News and Sport apps both launch immediately on Virgin Media’s TiVo
  • t step in the BBC’s strategy to bring its content to audiences across four screens:
  • 36 million connected TVs installed in
Alex Street

All3Media to launch video-on-demand TV app | Media | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • kins, Midsomer Murders, The Cube and Peep Show, h
  • ideo-on-demand app on internet-connected Samsung and LG smart TVs
  • first UK indie to go direct
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • branded A3M and carry the strapline "Best of British TV"
  • app is being viewed as an experiment to test pricing, appetite and extend the reach of its programmes.
  • 49p and 99p per episode to potentially offering shows for free on a promotional weekend.
  • monthly subscription and season pass option.
  • PayWizard,
  • All3Media application has been developed by connected TV software company Easeltv and video technology company Ooyala
  • The Only Way is Essex: online hit in the US
Alex Street

Why doesn't the Apple App Store give download figures? Would the truth be unA... - 0 views

  • This is the third in our series of six app-related articles. See also: • It’s all about the design. Essential tips from user experience gurus • Mobile applications: native v Web apps – what are the pros and cons? • What is a mobile Web app? Here’s expert opinion from the W3C • The open market approach: Q&A with GetJar, the No1 independent app store • How museums bring collections to life with augmented reality
  • will an iPhone app deliver return on investment (ROI)
  • ll you can do are some crude calculations based on the three numbers that Apple releases
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • extra cost of adding a second and third smartphone platform is 30-50 percent of the original investment.
  • Average revenue per paid-app: US $6,259.78.
  • normal for an app to cost US $50,000 to
  • don’t get picked by the Apple reviewers, you don’t get featured.
  • iPhone users have on average 37 apps on their phones
  • cross-promote your app for free
  • SMS/email opt-in lists,
  • media love writing about anything you do;
  • , mobiThinking is not alone in querying the economics of the App Store model: see Tomi Ahonen. And this honest first-hand app experience from Tom Hume, a design director at a London agency called IDEO, is fascinating.
  • What we don’t know is: was it was kept for a year, month, week or day, or did it go straight in the bin.
  • TWC proudly tells us that Weather.mobi gets 25 million unique users a month.
  • same visitor information for the app is confidential.
  • Great apps also have a habit of winning awards
Alex Street

What is the average CPM rate for a 30-second spot during primetime hours on one of the ... - 0 views

  • $22, according to this source.
  •  
    major broadcast networks in 2010
Stephe Taylor

Leading UK digital channels' content spend hits £2.6 billion / TBI Vision - 0 views

  • Within the total there was a sharp increase in the amount spent on UK-originated content, which rose to £625 million in 2013. Of that total, £597 was spent on first-run programming, £124 million on secondary rights to UK content, and £4 million on formats
Nick Verkroost

IBM 'one atom, one bit' storage breakthrough * The Register - 0 views

  • IBM 'one atom, one bit' storage breakthroug
  •  
    h
1 - 20 of 267 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page