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Friday, April 01, 2005 |
Dan Gillmor picked up on an important report
for the Carnegie Foundation. Entitled "Abandoning the News." For
any mainstream media (MSM) outlet that's doing some soul searching (which
they should be doing) and that's looking for some survey data on the
perception of their medium (newspaper, TV) versus the Internet,
this report is backed by a revealing PowerPoint presentation that gets
into the heads of 18 to 34 year-olds (obviously, a very important
group).
Why the established media should care: In no small way, it articulates the the challenges that the MSM will face as a result of democratized news provision.
Relevance to transparency: First
and most important, trustworthiness is listed as one of the top three
criteria in selecting information sources (it appears at the top of the
list but it's not clear whether list order is an indicator of
importance). Timeliness is listed second. While
the Internet gets high marks for timeliness, it's perceived to be the
second worst in terms of trustworthiness. So, given that
transparency is about credibility and trustworthiness... well, now you
understand the relevance.
9:34:38 AM
RadioEdit
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Thursday, March 31, 2005 |
From the below press release: "a one to sixty minute video uploaded to
MPEG NATION, encoded into Microsoft(R) Window's Media(R) Format (150k,
300k & 700k), costs just $4.95 including unlimited streaming (viewing)
bandwidth and storage for six months."
Long term, given the efficiency and convenience of time-shifted
consumption of text, audio, and video (and a fourth medium like Flash
that I call i-media... the "i" is for "interactive" and implies a form
of audio or video that the end user can interact with), and the fact
that portable hard drive space simply isn't an issue, I wonder whether
streaming will finally give way to downloading for all but the most
incredibly time sensitive news and information. About 99.99 perecent of
the content we consume doesn't have to be consumed live or while
connected to some network.
MPEG NATION Launches Powerful Broadband Streaming Video Service for the
Masses
Stream your video world-wide to millions of people for less than $1 per
month!
CHICAGO, March 30 /PRNewswire/ -- MPEG NATION, a division of Digital
Silo, Inc., a global provider of integrated content delivery and
streaming media services, today announced a new, first ever, low-cost
service to encode and stream consumer and commercial video content via
its worldwide content delivery network, within minutes, via a simple
upload.
MPEG NATION enables individuals and companies to inexpensively begin
streaming video across a high-performance, reliable content delivery
network without having to spend hours encoding and transcoding formats,
negotiating rates, or worrying about ongoing storage and bandwidth
costs. MPEG NATION is the first-ever "one-price-fits-all solution" for
placing video in blogs, auctions, personal and corporate websites.
"We are working towards a world where television and video
distribution are much more democratized and where a creative spark, a
camera, and a computer are all it takes to put video content before the
eyes of thousands of people. MPEG NATION is excited to announce the
first affordable streaming video service for delivering streaming
solutions to meet market demand for
Microsoft(R) Windows Media(R), RealNetwork's RealPlayer and Apple's
QuickTime video formats," said Scott Wolf, president and chief
technology officer of Digital Silo's MPEG NATION division. (more)
8:39:32 AM
RadioEdit
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This sounds to be true. But even if it isn't, it suggests that
entrepreneurs are out there thinking about interesting ways to move
broadcast media onto the internet. So, the theme is convergence and
broadcast media execs (radio and TV) have to be thinking about what
entrepreneurs like this mean to the their business. Whether this really
does what it says it does doesn't matter. Sooner or later, someone will
figure out how to do this and the international nature of the Internet
could will affect the legal options that are available to broadcast
media outlets.
From: Jonathan Rodriguez [mailto:JonathanR@bitmar.com]
Sent: Friday, March 25, 2005 1:33 PM
To: David Berlind
I am the creator of WebBrowserTV and WebBrowserRADIO; two new,
revolutionary, upcoming computer softwares. Basically, by inserting
these CD-ROM softwares into a computer, any user can watch live
worldwide television and/or radio, right from their computer. An
Internet connection is used as the receiving via (no antennas and/or
cable box needed).
Please take under consideration that most people are now, more than ever
before, going online for everything. Television networks and radio
stations are now realizing that the computer business is taking over the
world, including their own industries (TV and radio industries). As a
result of our constantly-changing competitive world, new technological
products are always arising, re-shaping each of the industries they fall
under. I feel that I may have a product line (these two products) with a
great possibility of becoming a major deal in the market, especially if
large chains (like Wal-Mart, Staples, Best Buy, Radio Shack, etc.)
decide to add these products to their catalogs. That could mean a
tremendous amount of long-term business. The other good thing about
these products, in particular, is that they are both hybrids of very
stable industries: The Internet, TV, and Radio... (more)
8:00:10 AM
RadioEdit
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I received the following email on March 30, 2005. I'm not sure how many
people realize how vast the Windows Media empire is. In the traditional
ecosystem sense, where more developers begets more content and more
content begets more users and more users attracts more developers (all
to the benefit of the underlying platform), is there any digital media
ecosystem (the choices are quicktime, real and flash) that matches the
depth and breadth of the Windows Media ecoystem? The
e-mail does a great job of describing the reach of the Windows Media
empire. Don't forget that media platform pervasiveness begets
digital rights management platform pervasiveness.
(ps: I normally don't publish emails without the
permission of the sender but this e-mail is obviously a boilerplate with
nothing specific to me or other recipients. I redacted the sender's
contact information)
==Email Begins Here=
Microsoft Corp. today will announce the launch of MSN Video Downloads,
which provides daily television programming, including content from
MSNBC.com, Food Network, FOX Sports and IFILM Corp, for download to
Windows Mobile(tm)-based devices, such as Portable Media Centers and
select Smartphones and Pocket PCs.
Since launching the Windows Mobile-based Portable Media Center last
fall, more than 20 new partners, including CinemaNow Inc., MLB.com,
MSNBC.com, MTV Networks Music, Napster Inc., SnapStream Media Inc and
TiVo Inc., have agreed to make video available online specifically
formatted for Windows Mobile-based multimedia devices.
In addition to MSN Video Downloads announced today, there are a number
of ways to obtain legal content that can be transferred to Windows
Mobile-based devices:
* People can transfer recorded television to Windows Mobile
devices from any Windows XP-based PC, either with Media Center Edition
PCs or PCs with built-in TV-tuner cards from companies such as ATI and
NVIDIA and third-party PVR software such as SnapStream Beyond TV 3.
Soon, via the TiVoToGo service, people can take their TiVo Series 2
content from the PC and transfer it to a Portable Media Center.
* The recently launched Napster-to-Go service allows people with
a monthly subscription to have unlimited access to hundreds of thousands
of songs that can be transferred to Windows Mobile devices. In
addition, online movie provider CinemaNow will have hundreds of movie
titles formatted specifically for viewing on Portable Media Centers.
* On March 16, CinemaNow and MediaPass announced it will make
music videos available specifically for Windows Mobile devices.
Following is a summary of today's announcement. The full press release
is below.
* The MSN Video Downloads service is one of the first online
video download services dedicated to portable entertainment and is
designed to keep people better entertained and informed, wherever and
whenever they want. MSN Video Downloads debuted in a preview of the
service at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January
2005.
* New in the launch of the service is the ability to select the
specific content downloaded to the subscriber's Windows XP-based PC each
day. Also people will be able to activate a new "automatic deleting
feature," which specifies how long video from the MSN Video Downloads
directory remain on the PC, avoiding a large backlog of clips.
* Along with our CinemaNow and MediaPass partnerships announced
last week, content from MSN Video Downloads is for use with PlaysForSure
compliant devices that play video, enabling people to download to their
Windows(r) XP-based PC and transfer to any Windows Mobile-based Portable
Media Center, or Smartphones and Pocket PCs equipped with Windows
Media(r) Player 10 Mobile.
The Following Companies Have Announced Support for Windows Mobile-based
Devices : (more...)
7:46:34 PM
RadioEdit
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Hollywood seeks iTunes for film.
Sony Pictures, other media giants mull "anti-Napster" for movies and
the future of advertising at Digital Hollywood conference.
This is a story about digital rights management and sooner or
later, Hollywood will be forced to talk to Microsoft since it's media
client is the most pervasive (not just in computers).
7:25:23 AM
RadioEdit
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© Copyright 2005 David Berlind.
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