Posts Tagged YouTube
Yahoo! Expands Yahoo! Video

A week after introducing their new Lifecasting streaming service, Y Live, and a matter of days after buying video advertising firm, Maven, Yahoo continues to expand their online video offerings by rolling out a brand new version of Yahoo Video. Among the site’s new features is a wider screen. The new Yahoo! Video supports a 16:9 player that’s “far ahead of what most sites are offering,” according to Yahoo. The site has upped its capacity, as well; filmmakers can now upload videos up to 150 MB. Yahoo Video’s content has also been expanded, featuring videos on topics including music, movies, TV, news, and sports.
Taking a cue from Google-owned YouTube, Yahoo Video is also expanding its sharing options, letting users embed videos in their blogs and Websites. Users can also create and embed video playlists.
On the social side of things, Yahoo Video is seeking to expand its community by adding more in-depth profiles, letting users create nicknames, design user playlists, add contacts, and leave comments.
According to a post of Yahoo’s Video Blog, the site will be rolling out even more features in the near future.
Source: PC Magazine
Add comment March 12, 2008
YouTube rival Hulu debuts with lineup of TV shows, movies and sports
Hulu LLC, a joint online video project of NBC Universal Inc. and News Corp., is set to go live Wednesday with programming from Time Warner Inc.’s television group, Lions Gate Entertainment and sports groups. A beta version of the site was launched in October.Hulu, described as a YouTube rival, will offer full-length episodes from more than 250 televisions series, including The Simpsons and Buffy the Vampire Slayer along with more than 100 movies, according to a report from Reuters. Hulu has also signed video licensing deals with the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League, Reuters said.
A spokesman from NBC Universal parent company General Electric Co. did not return a call requesting comment on Hulu.
Liz Cannes, a blogger for NewTeeVee, noted that Hulu is reporting an audience of 5 million viewers on the site in the past 30 days, which she described as “pretty insane for a semiprivate beta.”
Cannes added that the site’s viewing experience has improved since the beta program started by instituting full seasons of some current shows and movies supported by trailers rather than interrupting ads.
“We’ll be watching to see if it can hit the mainstream,” Cannes noted. “We know some 16% of American Internet households are watching TV online already. Streaming Web video is never going to be the be-all and end-all, but as a happy Hulu beta tester, I would bet it’s gonna be big.”
Paul Glazowski, a blogger at Mashable.com, noted that he expects ABC and CBS to join the effort at some point, “which would undoubtedly offer considerably more weight to Hulu’s long-term business prospects.”
“Though (ABC and CBS) both presently operate stand-alone video portals of their own, there’s little reason to suspect that a partial migration to Hulu will occur,” he said.
“Web video, despite its fresh-faced allure and burgeoning consumer demand, is one that is for the most part unprofitable for large networks now. Web advertising prices don’t yet amount to a valuation that can be considered amply supplemental to the networks’ present-day income. The tried-and-true standard broadcast and cable television mediums are by far the cash kinds of television at the moment,” he added.
Therefore, he said, the more viewers the networks can reach online to generate more ad revenue, the better. The best way to reach more viewers online would be to participate in a concentrated effort like Hulu backed industrywide, he noted.
Source:Computerworld
Add comment March 11, 2008