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in title, tags, annotations or urlThe future of TV is more than social, it's a multi-screen experience that needs design - Brian Solis - 0 views
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ewers don’t “turn off” so why wouldn’t a great story continue to live on across distributed platforms where consumers are more than willing to engage?
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What it is you want them to do or say requires explicit design for each screen.
Smart TV: The industry push to keep getting smarter - latimes.com - 0 views
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Still, you might say a revolution is brewing in the living room — and this one will be televised. It portends not only a change in the TV viewing experience but also poses a threat to cable and satellite TV distributors. Even network executives' notions about scheduling — how positioning a new show adjacent to a popular program in the evening lineup to drive ratings — look anachronistic at a time when Nielsen estimates that 47% of all American households have DVRs and can watch recorded shows whenever they choose, and 55% of broadband homes have at least one TV connected to the Internet, according to market researcher the Diffusion Group.
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Concerns about how to reach this group known as the "never connecteds" and count their viewing in a show's ratings adds to a list of headaches that include slumping prime-time broadcast TV ratings and the flight of advertisers to cable.
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these smart TVs may look dated compared with what Silicon Valley giant Intel has in store for later this year, not to mention whatever Apple Inc. is planning with its mysterious but hotly anticipated flat-screen TV.
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Viacom, Fremantle execs say second screen is key to broadcast strategy - FierceCable - 0 views
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Viacom, for one, is actively using social media applications, such as a subscription-based app for MTV Europe and a soon-to-be-launched "Mon Nick Junior" application targeting preschoolers. It's also studying different demographics, particularly millennial and post-millennials, to glean ideas for additional multiscreen products.
Xaxis Promises to Bring Second-Screen Viewers Back to TV - ClickZ - 0 views
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"This is not a Shazam-like feature. It happens before the ad is even broadcast,
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ble to read the digital signals coming from the TV satellite feed (used for both satellite and cable TV), telling it when a TV spot from a specific brand has begun. It then triggers the launch of a mobile ad within three seconds of its detection of the TV spot.
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On the other end, Xaxis targets users using data from TV audience measurement firm Kantar, which taps into about 1 million U.S. TV households. This could tell Xaxis, for example, which viewers index high for consuming television dramas or live vocal competitions. The campaigns are only designed to reach connected devices on a home Wi-Fi, rather than those who are on mobile devices, Finnegan says. "We want to reach people who are stationary and if they are on Wi-Fi we can assume they are hanging out at home," he notes.
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TV, video streaming, at a turning point - Business - The Boston Globe - 0 views
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Whether you watch TV via cable, Internet, or rabbit-ear antenna, you’ll see the same thing — a massive industry-wide upheaval, as new technologies and business models reshape what we view, and how we view it. “The television industry is in transformation,” said independent media analyst Jeffrey Kagan. “This entire space is going to be a completely different space in five years.”
WE KNOW WHERE YOUR TV IS: Why Location-Based Marketing Matters to Connected TVs | InteractiveTV Today - 1 views
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Location technologies like GPS are sharing analytics on where and how this content is being viewed. The good news? Connected TVs definitely have a role to play in the multiscreen IoT – especially in the area of building new models of marketing and advertising relationships.
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The way we look at location-based marketing (LBM) is unique – our definition is basically: The intersection of people, places and media. We don’t equate LBM to just mobile [devices]. – Asif Khan, LBMA
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once you know the location of the person you’re trying to influence – the question you should ask is: what media happens to be near them in that particular place? Could be a billboard, radio, television – anything. We’re very focused on media context.”
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Winners and Losers in TV's New App Economy (Guest Column) - Hollywood Reporter - 0 views
Apple TV is a radical rethinking of your relationship with the hardware and games you own | Polygon - 0 views
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developers — including game makers — must constrain their initial app downloads to 200 MB or less. That size seems paltry on a device that ships in 32 GB and 64 GB flavors. Even on smartphones, games can be much larger than 200 MB. On Apple TV, there's far more to the story.
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Apple's vision for a future where apps download quickly and transparently and nobody has to worry about managing storage space. tvOS will do that for you.
YouTube said to be planning paid streaming TV service - LA Times - 1 views
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YouTube is reportedly in talks with those same networks to stream TV through a paid service called Unplugged that could serve as a Web-based alternative to the cable box.
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The moves highlight the massive shift taking place in the TV industry as networks seek to stanch the flow of cord cutters by looking at former adversaries in the tech world to help recapture audiences, particularly younger ones
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The plan, which has reportedly been in the works since 2012, would package the four major TV networks with a smattering of cable offerings.
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