January 29, 2008

Bebo for Open Media?

Bebo, a large social network that is especially opular in the UK, has launched a sevice dubbed "Open Media" for media companies (that's you and me too, if you create some spiffy videos) to deliver their content directly within the site.

Do you want "The Truth?" Looks like Bebo users do ... at least the U.K. media outfit by that name. I'm not surprised! Here is a VERY original piece from the, appropriately titled "Melting Moms." These people have social conscience.



They allow media companies to use their own video player technology to present videos to Bebo's millions of users, AND let them keep all the revenue from ads within their videos. COOL!

Open Media includes a recommendation feature that shows users what videos their friends like. It also has "channels" where companies can offer only their own videos, with forums, blogs, photos and other features for Bebo users to talk about what they're watching. It already offers a book authors section and a music section.

Video syndication brings in lots of compelling material that keeps people on the site, letting them sell ads that are relevant to what people are already interacting with see.

Bebo claims to have more than 40 million users worldwide, although nobody knows how many of them are active per month. Users spend 40 minutes on the site each day, according to Comscore.

The San Francisco-based company has already signed up a long list of big name partners, including MTV, ESPN, BBC, CBS, Yahoo! and others as well as startup video sites such as Crackle and Ustream.

Notably, Bebo, along with Myspace and many other social networks is a member of the Google-led Open Social project, lets developers build applications that can be implemented easily across social networks. This means video applications for OpenSocial may be introduced to the site which compete with the media companies that are offering videos through Open Media.

Media partners can join Open Media on their own. For partners that don't have a video player or video advertising sales team, Bebo offers its own services.

Cybercast credit: Bebo

January 28, 2008

And Now Miro 1.0...from the Painter's Apprentices

Update, update to my post of August 16, 2007!!!

For a open source project, the Miro folks have been doing an amazing job. Here are the main features of Player 1.0, now officially off the beta threadmill:

* Watch Full Screen
Since Miro works so well for HD content, you'll find lots of video that looks beautiful in fullscreen on even the largest displays.

* Resume from Where You Stopped
Miro will remember where you stopped watching a video and will start at that point when you play it again.

* Play Almost Anything
Forget about the format wars. Miro can play MPEG, Quicktime, AVI, H.264, Divx, Windows Media, Flash Video, and almost every other major video format.

* One After Another
Set your Miro preferences to either play videos one after another (in the order they appear) or to play a video then stop. If you have Miro set to play videos one after another, you can always right-click on an individual video and have it play then stop.

Congrats and lots of luck!

January 25, 2008

VMIX, You Once Sought To Be YouTube

VMIX, a company that once sought to be YouTube, changed direction to provide software to large web sites that provide video sharing. They join a host of companies doing much the same thing, including Brightcove, Reality Digital, Vsocial, and VideoEgg, to name a few.

These now serve third-party sites with video technology, that isn't as sexy as viral user-generated video sharing sites like YouTube.

VMIX had original planned to be such a site (the destination site is still at VMIX.com). But providing quality software to media organizations has turned out to be a bigger business for VMIX: Client companies don't want to put the time and money into building their own online video software.

The San Diego based company offers a video player and a content management system that includes social networking features. Visitors to a company site using VMIX can do things like upload their own videos, share videos with other users and vote top videos. The site owner can customize the VMIX player to match the site's overall design, control the sorts of videos appearing on the site, and upload their own videos.

One of these third party sites is Entertainment Intelligence, although flipping through their videos and movie trailers does call into question their "intelligence:"



VMIX claims to have 190 web sites using its software, including movie studios like Universal, Paramount, Lyon's Gate, Fox Searchlight, MGM as well as newspapers like the Chicago Tribune. Through its partners, VMIX reaches over 60 million unique monthly visitors.

Cybercast credit: VMIX

January 22, 2008

The Apple of NBC's Eye

NBC has launched NBC Direct where most shows can be watched online and some shows are available for full episode downloads. This comes after NBC decided to pull out of iTunes. For now it's Windows only, XP or Vista, IE 6 or 7. No love lost here...!

January 19, 2008

Make YOUR Celebrity Video Widget with Gydget

A fan widget, or "Gydget," by a company of the same name, is a stand-alone viral promotions tool perfect for bands, sports teams, or anyone to get the word out to their fans across ALL social networking sites about news and events.

You can create a customized widget and fill it with a video, events, news and more. Making your widget is, according to the site, fast and easy. Will try it as soon as I get the right project and give you the heads-up, I promise.

Celebrities already using the widgets include Henry Rollins, Paul Oakenfold and Unkle, as well as the whole artist catalog of Curb Records. Two larger labels, EMI and Universal Records, are also preparing to roll out the widgets, according to the company.

Gydget is a good example of a company that seems to have found a viable business plan in the course of an unsuccessful first try. Attendio never gained much traction, but the company tells us that its Gydget widgets are in active use. If they work "as advertised," they will be by me too!


Banner 2 Banner 1 go!

January 16, 2008

How YOU Can Travel to the Stars with NASA

Sign up, create your own page, and add any NASA iTV channel, plus other content that interests you.



Here is what you first on the MyNASA page:

“Register for MyNASA and get the NASA information you want. As a member you can customize your MyNASA page with the NASA channels and content that interests you. Members can also bookmark articles and features throughout the NASA.gov portal for quick access during future visits.”

Do register. The live webcasts are truly awe-inspiring!

January 13, 2008

Ustream.tv Live: Covering the 2008 Presidential Candidates

Video streaming site Ustream.tv (see my previous post) seems to have connected with politically savvy viewers and soldiers. Facing competition from KyteJustin.tv, and others, it has done a great job of carving out a niche for itself. A number of presidential candidates have used it to hold live question-and-answer sessions with the public. Here is a stream (if it's "on air"), captured from Mitt Romney's New Hampshire's primary election night coverage...



Ustream has made it easy for soldiers serving overseas to connect with their families. This must have been a pet project of the company’s co-founders, who were cadets at West Point together and served in the army for a  number of years. Former four-star general and presidential hopeful Wesley Clark also joined advisory board too, and "coincidentally," they received funding from Frank Caulfield, co-founder of Kleiner Perkins , the Silicon Valley VC powerhouse.

They say more than 115,000  people have joined Ustream since it launched in March, spending over one million hours on the site per month. Not bad!

Cybercast credit: Ustream

January 10, 2008

Al Gore’s Current TV Becomes Current.com

Current TV, the media pet project of former Vice President and Nobel Peace Prize winner Al Gore, has undergone a strategic makeover, turning their web site into the cornerstone of the Gore media empire's growth strategy. Launched in 2005, Current has been a cable TV channel that gives documentarians, aspiring filmmakers and reporters the opportunity to submit short clips of their reports and films, to get them on television. And I mean "traditional cable" television, NOT web/iTV.

Current.com

Interestingly (and confusingly), it already had the format of a "free-wheeling, round-the-clock news mashup," designed for the Web, not TV. Yet it was offered on cable. Heeding the call for a more interactive experience, Current launched Current.com on October 15. It borrows heavily from Digg.com's model of letting users post comments and vote on the best stories. The ones with the most votes will air on the site.

The new interactive site aims to create a potentially lasting relationship between the users and the content that's produced. For example, if you are into these kind of things, you can produce commercials that might make it to “real” TV.

I understand all this, What I do NOT get is the switch from dot tv to dot com. Am I missing something here?

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January 7, 2008

Warning: BubblePly Does Not Bubble on Macs

Following up on my December 20th post, I had an excellent discussion with Yoni Silberberg at PlyMedia on January 2. While it looks like we are in the small leauges for them, he suggested we check out BubblePly.com that anyone can use.


Anyone with a PC running Windows, that is. Unfortunately the site doesn't work with any of the Apple Mac browsers: Safari, Firefox, or Opera.

We are a Mac shop, so we need BubblePly/SubPly work on our platform. They do have a unique solution to add value to online video that we would want to use.

I sent Yoni an email with a request to let us know when their site is ready to work with Mac / Linux browsers.

January 6, 2008

In the Wings: The Latest Xtreme Sport

If you though Jet-man (see my previous post) was incredible, you'll love Wing-men - people who jump from planes or other high locations wearing a wing suit akin to a flying squirrel's natural implement.



They have potential military and Xtreme sports applications. One guy wants to be the first to jump from a plane and land without a parachute (and live). Here's a YouTube video of another of these fliers skimming six feet above skiers in the Swiss Alps. As you can see, his suit design features tightly woven nylon sewn between the legs and between the arms and torso, creating wings that fill with air and create lift, allowing for forward motion and aerial maneuvers while slowing descent.

As the suits, which cost mere $1,000 or so, become more sophisticated, so do the "pilots." The best fliers, and there are not many, can even trace the horizontal contours of cliffs, ridges and mountainsides. Wow, wow, and more wow!

Cybercast credit: YouTube

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January 3, 2008

A New Way to Earn from Your Videos via Flixya

Do you need to earn more from your contextual ads like Google's Adsense? I know most of us want to earn much more than we are having right now. Now you have a shot at making more on Flixya by just watching and uploading your favorite videos and photos.

Flixya


This program works the same as Shareapic but with slight differences between them. Shareapic pays you with every photo's pageview and shares Adsense space if people view it on their the public gallery. Flixya however, lets their members upload both photos and videos and shares 100% revenue to their pageviews. Yes, that's right! Everytime people view the photos and videos you uploaded, your ads will be advertised on its specific page. Now that's what I call a perfect way to earn while enjoying.

After registration, Flixya will ask for your Adsense account. This is needed in order for them to set up the 100% revenue sharing for Adsense. You don't need to worry about your account details. They will only ask for your email address (which is your login ID for all Google services, including GMail), but not your password. Your Adsense account does remain secure and your payment details and other information are not accessible to Flixya.

Once you sucessfully register you can start earning by uploading videos from YouTube, Google Video, Metacafe, Veoh, Revver and other related programs. You can also upload your photos in any category like personal photos, celebrities, travels, pets, cars, sports, anime, etc. Blogs and community services for inviting other people to view your own custome gallery are also there for you. My favorite part of this service is that you can easily track your pageview count on your account section page

Im still new to Flixya but it seems works for me just fine. From my first 24 hours in the program, I already received 72 pageviews, with just 6 videos I'd uploaded. That's a good start for a newcomer, I think!

Summary:

1) Make an account on Flixya to start up.
2) Set the 100% revenue sharing up for Google Adsense.
3) Upload videos your (and photos) to start earning.
4) Try their blog and other services to increase your traffic.


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