Daily Marauder


BROADCAST/CABLE by Marauder

BROADCAST/CABLE

When the National Football League broadcasts next week’s San Diego-Oakland game to theaters in three cities, it will mark the first time that the league has used 3-D technology during a live event. The game will be shot using special cameras and broadcast via satellite. CNET (11/24)

nfl

ABC Family on Dec. 5 begins a three-day marathon featuring the first four “Harry Potter” movies. The programming stunt, all part of the network’s 25 Days of Christmas event, includes an extended edition of “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” as well as a first look at this summer’s “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.” Multichannel News (11/24)

goblet-potter

The CW Network announced its new official Sunday evening schedule starting November 30: first season episodes of Everybody Hates Chris at 5p and The Game at 530p; two second season back-to-back episodes of The Drew Carey Show from 6-7p; first season episodes of Jericho at 7p; and MGM movies at 8p. Film titles from MGM include The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course on November 30 as well as Spaceballs, Carrie, Throw Momma From the Train, Mr. Mom and many others. (Cynopsis 11/25)

Alan Colmes, the liberal co-host of Hannity & Colmes for 12 years will exit the show at the end of 2008. Colmes said in a statement he wants to “develop new and challenging ways to contribute to the growth of the network.” He will continue to be a left-leaning commentator for Fox News and host his Fox radio show. The network has not announced Colmes’replacement to sit opposite Sean Hannity. (Cynopsis 11/25)

colmes

A&E Network began production on a new reality series Steven Seagal: Lawman based on the action movie star’s nearly twenty year on/off stint as a New Orleans crime fighter. The series will follow Seagal as he works as a fully-commissioned deputy with the Jefferson Parish County Sheriff’s Office. A&E will roll out the new show late next year. (Cynopsis 11/25)

seagal

Despite the growth on online video, Americans watch an average of 8 hours and 18 minutes of television each day, according to a study from Nielsen. That’s up substantially from a decade ago — before Internet video was part of the culture — when Americans watched an average of 7 hours and 15 minutes each day. Los Angeles Times (free registration) (11/25) , The New York Times/The Associated Press (11/24)

Comcast will launch The Comcast Network by the end of the year in the Philadelphia/Pittsburgh and Washington/Baltimore markets as a way to concentrate on more targeted public affairs and sports programming. The Comcast Network will take the place of CN8, a multiregional channel launched in 1996 that reaches more than 9 million households along the East Coast. Broadcasting & Cable (11/24)

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ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA by Marauder

ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
ComScore released its October search-engine market share figures for the U.S. last night. Overall search volume grew 20.1 percent year-over-year to 12.6 billion queries, a decline in growth from the 25.5 percent pace we saw in September, but still quite healthy. Correspondingly, the annual growth in Google’s U.S. search volume slowed from 38.6 percent in September to 29.6 percent in October. Google still managed to eke out an overall market share gain of 0.2 point to 63.1 percent. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/11/25/google-gains-us-search-market-share-in-october-but-growth-slows 11/25)

search-stats

Blockbuster has started offering customers a small box made by 2Wire that, when attached to a TV set, can play the company’s videos once they’ve been downloaded over a broadband line. The move, according to this report, is an attempt to blunt the success of competitors such as cable companies, with their vast on-demand offerings, and Netflix. The Washington Post/The Associated Press (11/25) , Reuters (11/25)

2-wire

The production arm of Warner Home VideoWarner Premiere – will produce a series of original live action webisodes with top-shelf Hollywood director Bryan Singer, reports THR. The two parties are in talks to develop the cyberpunk sci-fi thriller “H+,” which picks up after a terrorist fries the brains of a segment of the population “jacking” into the net. (Cynopsis 11/25)

Facebook sees a bleak economy as all the more reason to press ahead with growth plans. The social-networking site is said to be gearing up to make acquisitions. Options could include sites in Brazil, Germany, India or Japan, where Facebook is yet to have a strong presence. (Iwantmedia 11/25, http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_48/b4110084423202.htm 11/20)

YouTube has apparently changed all videos on its site to play in widescreen format. Because most videos on the site were originally uploaded in a ratio closer to 4:3 (the standard size used on non-HD televisions), most videos are playing with horizontal black bars on the side. Some videos (like this one) are taking advantage of the full space, but are shrunk down to the normal size when they’re embedded elsewhere. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/11/24/youtube-goes-wide 11/24)

yt1

Online entertainment portal No Good TV christened its own new television production arm with the 8-part VH1 Classic One Hit Wonders. Hosted by NGTV’s own Carrie Keagan, the show re-imagines the well-worn countdown format with irreverent touches, high-end animation and innovative visual effects. VH1 Classic will premiere two new episodes each night beginning Dec. 1. (Cynopsis 11/25)

Fox Interactive Media’s gaming-themed IGN.com announced a series of production and distribution agreements with nearly a dozen publishers to distribute original IGN video productions across their sites including Black20 Digital Studios, Machinima.com, CollegeHumor, ScrewAttack.com, g-NET and Comedy.com. (Cynopsis 11/25)

Video online and on mobile devices remain additive to the overall pie as total viewing hours continue to rise across all available platforms, according to Nielsen‘s Q3 A2/M2 report. Television remained the dominant choice for video consumption as viewers watched more than 142 hours/month – 5 hours more than last year. The amount of hours audiences spent watching timeshifted TV rose by 34% year-over-year as DVR penetration increased to 27%. Major online events such as the Olympics, Major League baseball and political conventions contributed dramatically to the growth of online video usage. (Cynopsis 11/25)

Monthly Time Spent in Hours: Minutes – 3Q 2008
K2-11 T12-17 A18-24 A25-34 A35-44 A45-54 A55-64 A65+
Watching TV in the home*    108:34 110:59 108:36 133:00 134:51 159:23 175:18 196:23
Watching Timeshifted TV*       5:25     4:55    4:36   10:04     8:15     7:19    6:32     3:44
Using the Internet**              5:38    12:48  12:59   28:40   37:56   35:24   35:05   26:39
Watching Video on Internet**  2:05     2:55    3:57    3:21     2:44     2:17     1:37     1:07
Mobile Video Subscribers          n/a      4:20    3:15     4:20    3:37     2:10      2:53      n/a
Watching Video on a
Mobile Phone

Video Audience Composition by Age – 3Q 2008
K2-11 T12-17 A18-24 A25-34 A35-44 A45-54 A55-64 A65+
On TV*                 11%     7%       7%      13%     14%     17%    14%  17%
On the Internet**    7%     9%       8%      15%     19%     20%      6%   7%
On Mobile Phones     n/a   18%     15%      32%     20%     10%       6%  1%

Video Audience Composition by Gender – 3Q 2008
F2+ M2+
On TV*                  54% 46%
On the Internet**   55% 45%
On Mobile Phones    40% 60%
FOOTNOTES FOR ALL CHARTS:
Source for all charts: The Nielsen Company Check the Nielsen blog for footnote references

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WIRELESS by Marauder
November 25, 2008, 10:36 PM
Filed under: WIRELESS | Tags: , , , , , , ,

WIRELESS

TiVo is introducing a mobile site at m.tivo.com (warning: link may not be live yet) that will let subscribers with Internet-connected DVRs schedule their TiVo’s remotely from their phones, just like they can today via their laptops. (http://www.mobilecrunch.com/2008/11/24/program-your-tivo-from-your-cell-phone 11/24)

m-tivo

Samsung Electronics has reached an accord with InterDigital over the latter’s patent for 3G-network technology for which the company has earned a total of $1.5 billion in licensing fees from companies including Apple and Research in Motion. The agreement, which came just as the International Trade Commission was set to decide whether Samsung should be allowed to import its Instinct and Blackjack II 3G-equipped cell phones, means that Nokia remains the only major phone maker without a licensing deal with InterDigital. The Wall Street Journal (11/25)

Apple’s iPhone infringes on a patent EMG Technology holds for navigating the Web over cell phones, EMG claims in a suit filed in a Texas federal court Monday. EMG argues that its patent refers to an “apparatus and method of manipulating a region on a wireless device screen for viewing, zooming and scrolling Internet content,” and includes 76 individual claims. Macworld (11/24)

Online video network Blip.tv added support for the iPhone enabling users to view blip videos directly from their phones. Blip.tv’s new embed code now allows show creators to utilize the same embeddable player code they use for delivering videos to desktop PCs. This opens up the hottest new video platform for independent producers who go reach beyond bite size clips. Outside of Apple’s integration with YouTube, distributing web video shows to the iPhone has been impossible because the platform still doesn’t support Adobe’s Flash format.  (Cynopsis 11/25)

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TECHNOLOGY by Marauder

TECHNOLOGY

Amazon’s Kindle 2 was scheduled to be released in October in time for this holiday season, but Bezos himself reportedly pulled the plug for last minute changes to the software. Techcrunch’s sources now say it’s tentatively scheduled to go on sale in “early next quarter.” (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/11/25/amazon-kindle-2-slated-for-early-q1 11/25)

kindle-2

Sony, according to this report, appears to be the mysterious TV maker that will distribute a set-back box developed by Advanced Digital Broadcast that incorporates tru2way technology, a device that Sony could use with its Bravia line of TVs. ADB confirmed earlier this month that it had started shipping the unit to a consumer-electronics company that it declined to name. Light Reading (11/24)

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