Filed under: Feature | Tags: Android, AppStore, iPhone, IpodTouch, New York, San Francisco California, Seattle Washington, Urbanspoon
ONLINE SITE OF THE WEEK: SIT OR SQUAT
For the women out there, I think this site/app will particularly resonate. Ever been out on a Friday night with a need to run to the bathroom but a fear that the one you choose may look something like the bathroom scene from Trainspotting?
Yah, me too. Here’s a site that hopes to help you on your way to pristine porcelain. The site recently launched an iPhone app in the App Store October 19th for the necessary bathroom on the go. Blackberry app to come. So far, the drawback is the fact that they don’t have an extensive collection of neighborhoods included. I searched for the East Village in the list and came up short. The cities included for the time being are San Francisco, Dallas, Atlanta, Miami, New York, Seattle, Chicago, and London. I’d much rather see this sort of functionality worked into an existing application like my beloved Urbanspoon.
If you want the chance to win an easy $500, just add a toilet to the list. Paying for location adds. Tres smart.
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: Brightcove, FeedRoom, Google, New York Times, Saturday Night Live, Tina Fey, Video, YouTube
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
YouTube, the Web site that enabled anyone with a computer to watch just about whatever video they wanted as long as it didn’t exceed 10 minutes, has decided to scrap its time limit, making it possible to stream full TV episodes for the first time on the Google-owned portal. YouTube already has started running full episodes of oldies but goodies such as “Star Trek” “MacGyver” and “Beverly Hills, 90210.” USA TODAY (10/23)
The number of people watching the online clips of Sarah Palin’s appearance on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” is growing and will soon surpass the 15 million that viewed her guest spot on television. Pirated versions alone have been viewed nearly 3 million times on sites like YouTube. (Iwantmedia 10/24, http://adage.com/digital/article?article_id=131981 10/23)
Fans of Tina Fey’s screwball sitcom 30 Rock don’t have to wait until next week for NBC to premiere the show’s third season. As of yesterday, devotees can catch the season’s first episode of the Emmy-winning comedy. (http://blog.wired.com/underwire/2008/10/hulu-airs-seaso.html 10/23)
Bebo‘s latest interactive series Chelsey:OMG! launched this week, its first crack at the comedy genre produced by Channel X. The fish-out-of-water tale stars Kelly Anne Lyons as a rich American girl who is forced to adapt to British culture. (Cynopsis 10/24)
The New York Times is hurting financially
these days, and its online business doesn’t seem to be helping much, but at least it keeps pushing forward. One area where the NYTimes.com has put a lot of effort is in video, and it has just redesigned its video page
around the new Brightcove 3 player. Previously, the NYTimes was using the FeedRoom
as its main video platform. (This swap doesn’t come out of the blue. The New York Times is an investor in Brightcove). (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/24/the-nytimescom-prepares-for-hd-video-drops-the-feedroom-for-brightcove 10/24)
Comcast’s online and VOD network FEARnet will launch the original The Dark Path Chronicles on Nov. 6 – written and directed by Mary Lambert (Pet Sematary I and II, The Attic) – following the journey of a newly awakened vampire and a teen girl. FEARnet will also be profiling 10 new locales this month in a second go around of Street of Fear produced by Atlas Media Corp. Ghost stories behind true places are explored such as Mt. Misery Road in Huntington NY, where a Woman in White was supposedly burned alive in a hospital fire and still haunts the area. (Cynopsis 10/24)
Recently acquired photo archive Getty Images purchased rival Jupiter Media‘s online images business Jupiterimages for $96 million in cash. Jupiter Media will continue to operate its online media business, which consists of internet.com and EarthWeb.com for IT and business professionals; DevX.com for developers; and Mediabistro.com and Graphics.com for media and creative professionals. (Cynopsis 10/24)
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: Apple, Broadcasting & Cable, CBS, Google, Leslie Moonves, NBC Universal, Wall Street Journal, Walt Disney
24 hours have passed since the launch of the Android Market, the Google equivalent to Apple’s App Store. Medialets
has conducted a thorough analysis of the two store launches. The verdict: the size of Android Market pales in comparison to Apple’s store at launch, and won’t allow for paid applications until next year. But the stores are more alike than they are different, with very similar applications launching of both platforms, and an overwhelming focus on games. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/23/android-market-takes-on-apples-app-store-games-still-rule-but-should-they 10/23)
So-called “white spaces” in the broadcast spectrum that will lie fallow after the DTV transition next February should not be used for a new generation of wireless devices because they will likely cause significant interference, according to the top executives from NBC Universal, Walt Disney, CBS and News Corp. said in a letter to the FCC. Respectively, Jeffrey Zucker, Robert Iger, Leslie Moonves and Peter Chernin told the commission that the matter needs additional study and peer review and should not be brought up for a vote Nov. 4, as planned. The Wall Street Journal (10/24) , Broadcasting & Cable (10/23) , Broadcasting & Cable (10/23)
Filed under: GAMING | Tags: Business, Convention center, Culture, E3, e3-2008, Electronic Software Association, LA Convention Center, Video Games
Gaming confab E3 is returning to its big bash roots inviting hardcore gaming fans back into the fold for next year’s event, scheduled at the LA Convention Center for June 2-4. The Electronic Software Association made the decision to close E3 to fans in 2007 and has since seen much of enthusiasm around the event dissipate. (Cynopsis 10/24)
Filed under: TECHNOLOGY | Tags: Activision, Guitar Hero World Tour, Logitech, Microsoft, NPD Group, PlayStation 2, Playstation 3, Windows
TECHNOLOGY
Microsoft announced earnings
class=”snap_preview_icon”> yesterday for the third quarter. Overall revenues for the quarter came in at $15 billion, growing a decent 9 percent annually. But its net profits of $4.37 billion rose only 1.9 percent. As usual, Microsoft’s stability came from is Windows client, server, and Office businesses. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/10/23/microsofts-chugs-along-in-the-third-quarter-but-its-online-business-is-sucking-wind 10/23)
Just in time for the holidays, Logitech will begin offering in December a premiere edition of its wireless guitar controller, which will be compatible with all “Guitar Hero” games on PlayStation 3 and “Guitar Hero World Tour” for PlayStation 2. The faux instrument, which will retail for $250, has a wooden neck, rosewood fingerboard and metal frets for extra authenticity. Digital Trends (10/23)
Slumps in its major divisions cost Samsung in the third quarter even though revenue rose 15% from a year earlier as the company reported its worst quarter for net income in three years. The company’s largest profit center, its semiconductor business, performed poorly and profits also tightened on its cell phone and flat-panel units as Samsung’s investor-relations chief warned of “even more challenging” days ahead in the fourth quarter.
ClipSyndicate/Bloomberg (10/24) , The Wall Street Journal (10/24)
Retail consumer-electronics sales fell only a slighter amount last month than a year earlier, according to The NPD Group, which said flat-panel TVs, D-SLR cameras and notebook computers enjoyed solid growth in September. NPD Group said that the 2% drop in sales was an encouraging sign to the CE industry and that high-ticket items were continuing to support the industry. TWICE (10/23)
An MIT project is testing an in-car sensor technology that would help curtail traffic delays by improving the timeliness of receiving real-time data. The CarTel project, which uses a Wi-Fi network to transport the information to an MIT Web server, has installed sensors on 50 cars in the Boston area. Popular Science (10/23)
Multitaskers take note: AVerMedia has introduced the AVerTV Hybrid TVBox 11, a device that, among other things, allows users to watch their favorite HDTV shows on a computer monitor while working on other tasks. The system can go into picture-within-a-picture mode, be viewed in various sizes, pause live TV and set parental controls. Electronista (10/23)
Audi of America has announced that beginning in the 2011 model year, HD Radio will be standard equipment in many of its vehicles. TWICE (10/23) , Radio Ink (10/22)




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