The 2012 Emmys flopped on the social media front in comparison to this year’s other prominent awards shows.
While the Grammys, Video Music Awards and the BET Awards set new records across Twitter, Facebook and assorted TV companion apps like GetGlue, the Grammys registered a stultifying 1.56 million interactions throughout the day,
Fall TV Goes Social: What's On Monday Nights? - 0 views
Twitter Ignores the Emmys: Show Falls Flat Across Social Media | TheWrap TV - 0 views
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This year’s Grammy Awards generated roughly seven times more social interaction than last year’s show, according to Trendrr. The Emmys? About one and a half times as much.
Nielsen adapts to track 'TV-free' homes - Business - CBC News - 0 views
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Nielsen Co. started labelling people in this group "Zero TV" households, because they fall outside the traditional definition of a TV home. There are 5 million of these residences in the U.S., up from 2 million in 2007
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Unless broadcasters can adapt to modern platforms, their revenue from Zero TV viewers will be zero.
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For the first time, TV ratings giant Nielsen took a close look at this category of viewer in its quarterly video report released in March. It plans to measure their viewing of new TV shows starting this fall, with an eye toward incorporating the results in the formula used to calculate ad rates.
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TDG: Facebook triumphs while Twitter falls - 1 views
Intel, Apple and Others Rethink How We Watch TV - WSJ.com - 0 views
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With an Intel-designed set-top box, people won't have to own DVRs or even plan to record programs.
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Negotiations with media companies for content rights could delay new services and limit some features, though Intel vows to enter some markets by the end of the year.
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"I've never seen as much innovation in television as there is right now," says Ulf Ewaldsson, chief technology officer at Swedish telecom-equipment giant Ericsson, which plans to step up its own TV efforts
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Twitter Gets TV Tie-Up Deal With Comcast - Peter Kafka - Media - AllThingsD - 0 views
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The gist: Later this fall, Twitter users will start to see a “See It” button on messages about some of Comcast-owned NBCUniversal’s shows, like “The Voice.” Clicking on those Tweets will open up a Twitter “card” with more information about the shows, and Twitter users who are also Comcast pay-TV subscribers will be able to record or watch the show directly from their computer or mobile device.
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“We want to make the conversation on Twitter lead to consumption,” said Sam Schwartz, Comcast’s chief business development officer.
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The deal also includes an “Amplify” advertising deal with Twitter, where Twitter and NBCUniversal will both sell ads against short video clips from the programmers’ shows.
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Why Facebook and Twitter Are Fighting Over Your Television - Claire Peracchio - The Atl... - 0 views
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TV is still the biggest, commanding roughly $70 billion in annual advertising.
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Nielsen reports that online video accounts for a small portion of time spent watching TV, just over 2%, even after including YouTube, Netflix, and Hulu.
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Facebook and Twitter have the same grand strategy to cut a slice of that $70 billion. Unike Netflix and Hulu, their plan isn’t to take attention away from TV, but rather to attract more attention to TV advertising.
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Tech's geek boy blind spot is killing good ideas | News | TechRadar - 0 views
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While brogrammers are brogramming away to suit themselves, they're actually strangling their own chances of success. And looked at like that, it really should be obvious that the appalling record of the tech sector in attracting, employing and retaining women is one that the industry should be looking to remedy urgently and for the basest financial motives.
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geek boy groupthink is a prison. It keeps women locked out, and that's one way in which it's disastrous. It also keeps tech firms sealed in, trapped by an idea of their audience as fundamentally like their nerdy selves which stops them from coming up with any number of good new ideas - good ideas that consumers like you and me would fall over themselves to use if only someone would invent them.
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