Archive for the ‘Other’ Category

Amazon to launch eBook device and "service" later today

Amazon to launch The eBook is nothing new, and nor are hardware-based eBook readers — I’ve even read a number of eBooks over the years on various Palm devices, for example. However, later today Amazon is set to unveil the latest stab at an dedicated eBook device and accompanying service called the “Kindle”.

Richard MacManus, editor of our sister blog Read/WriteWeb, has the details:

This week, wrote Steve Levy in a rapturous article in Newsweek, Amazon will release the Kindle – an e-reader that uses E Ink and will have Internet connectivity. The latter point is what will differentiate the Kindle from its chief competitor currently, the Sony eReader that was launched in 2006.

Levy wrote in Newsweek that the Kindle ” will change the way readers read, writers write and publishers publish.” He unleashes other doozies of hyperbole too: “the iPod of reading” and “the first ‘always-on’ book”.

The Kindle will cost USD399, which is $100 more than the Sony eReader. But the wireless Internet connectivity easily makes the increased price worth it. The wireless is via a system called Whispernet – which according to Newsweek is based on the EVDO broadband service offered by cell-phone carriers, allowing it to work anywhere and not just Wi-Fi hotspots.

The Kindle will be able to hold 200 books, with new releases being offered for just $9.99. Also, apparently blogs will be part of the service – at a cost of either 99 cents or $1.99 a month per blog.

There are quite a few issues that might hold back adoption of the Kindle, namely the tricky balancing act that is DRM and eBook formats, the user experience of the device itself, and the age-old question of whether people really want to read books — most of which aren’t time sensitive — electronically.

I also have a feeling there maybe another issue at stake.

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Vuze petitions FCC to restrict Internet traffic throttling by ISPs

vuzeVuze, an application that allows users to search, browse, and download “DVD and HD-quality” video content using the peer-to-peer protocol BitTorrent, has petitioned the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to restrict Internet traffic throttling by Internet Service Providers (ISPs).

Vuze’s timing is important. John Hart filed suit in a California state court Tuesday against Comcast, which offers ISP services. The suit alleges that Comcast’s secret use of technology to limit peer-to-peer applications such as BitTorrent violates federal computer fraud laws, the contracts users have with Comcast, and anti-fraudulent advertising statutes. Hart wants the court to force Comcast to stop interfering with Internet traffic. (Wired report.)

Since it uses the peer-to-peer protocol BitTorrent, Vuze has been keenly aware of Comcast and the “bandwidth shaping” issue. Vuze filed its “Petition for Rulemaking” (PDF) to urge the FCC to adopt regulations limiting Internet traffic throttling, a practice by which ISPs block or slow the speed at which Internet content, including video files, can be uploaded or downloaded.

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NewTeeVee Live: How traditional media companies approach new media

VCs predict an uncertain future for Internet TV startupsQuincy Smith, president of CBS Interactive, gave a fast-paced talk at NewTeeVee Live in which he whizzed through a description of how traditional media companies like CBS approach new media opportunities like video and social networking.

He acknowledged that herd mentality rules the day for traditional media, so the objective is to try and get at least a couple of companies to move in the same direction. In general, Smith did his best to bridge the gap between old and new media, though he did defend traditional media execs by arguing that they’ve made more of an effort in recent months to understand the new media space than the other way around.

So what has Big Media learned?

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Shhh! Google in cahoots with Fuller to change the TV industry?

simon fullerA week ago Google took on the mobile industry with the announcement of the Open Handset Alliance, Android, and the “thousands” of Google-powered phones that could result. Today, Google is taking on the television industry.

The Guardian reports that Google is in secret, hush-hush, behind-closed-doors talks with Simon Fuller, the British entrepreneur behind the Spice Girls and Pop Idol, the world’s most successful TV franchise. Its U.S. spinoff, American Idol, is run by Fuller friend and sometimes rival Simon Cowell.

Little is known about the Google-Fuller collaboration. One line of thinking is that Google’s plans for TV include generating original content and competing with major broadcasters — at the same time competing with mobile carriers, Microsoft, and everybody else who wants a piece of the search giant. We wrote about Google and its TV plans back in July.

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Are movie rentals finally coming to iTunes?

itunes movies smallThanks to the snooping of Evan DiBiase, it looks as though movie rentals are finally coming to iTunes.

Before installing any iTunes upgrade, DiBiase dumps the strings from the old iTunes binary, installs the upgrade, and compares old vs. new “to see what shows up.” Well, this is what he found.

rental – content

rental – bag

rbsync

source – rental – info

dest – rental – info

getvodaccountselectionlist

GET VOD ACCOUNT SELECTION LIST

supportsRentals

Although Apple has not announced movie rentals or VOD, it’s long been speculated that these are coming to iTunes, especially in light that Amazon and Netflix are already leagues ahead of Apple in digital movie rentals.

As DiBiase writes, “It sure looks like video rentals . . . are coming to iTunes soon. If they did, I would sure get more use out of my AppleTV.”

Ditto.

Nokia's Ovi stumbles as N-gage is delayed and Warner doesn't want to play

nokia oviNokia’s newest brand, Ovi, hit a bit of a snag this week. Touted as “the key that unlocks every door”, Ovi apparently isn’t unlocking the game portion of its site, N-Gage, until December.

Nokia, which introduced its long-awaited gaming service at a large media event in August, said N-gage would be available globally in November. Due to software testing issues, Nokia said today it is delaying N-gage’s launch until December.

“Software testing is taking a bit more time than we expected,” Nokia spokesman Kari Tuutti said.

Additionally, the Warner Music Group Corp. said today it is withholding its music from the just-lauched Nokia Music Store over concerns about illegal downloads at Nokia’s file-sharing site, Mosh, The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) noted today.

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NBC's Zucker blasts Apple for ruining everything

zuckerForget Google vs. Microsoft. Or MySpace vs. Facebook. The real action these days is NBC Universal vs. Apple.

The latest verbal volleys — and these are doozies — come from Jeff Zucker, NBC Universal’s president and chief executive officer. Zucker, who was interviewed by the New Yorker’s Ken Auletta at a benefit for Syracuse University’s Newhouse School (Variety report), is obviously still pissed at Apple and its CEO, Steve Jobs.

At the root of the school-girl spat is NBC’s insistence that Apple increase the price of the TV shows it sells on iTunes, from $1.99 to $2.99. Jobs has stubbornly resisted, insisting on uniform pricing for music (99 cents) and TV downloads. This disagreement has led Zucker to pull NBC U content off iTunes by the end of the year.

For the most part, the Zucker-Jobs rift has been civil, with both sparring friendly and respecting each other’s position while publicly disagreeing. Now, as they say, the gloves are off.

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Early reactions to Hulu are encouraging, if not cautious

hulu showsAs expected, the so-called YouTube killer known as Hulu debuted today in limited form. Reaction around the Web from those who got to play with it (or just viewed a demo) was encouraging, if not cautious.

Liz Gannes provided one of the best, most thorough preview looks at Hulu for NewTeeVee. She notes that Hulu is as different of a Web video service as can be from YouTube, the market leader. Hulu, known first as “NewSite” when parents NBC Universal and Media Corp. announced their joint venture in March, was initially touted as a YouTube killer.

Gannes notes a number of weaknesses. Hulu just offers Web-based advertising-supported streaming. It also shuns user-generated content — meaning that only its professionally-produced, TV Land content is available — and misses on opportunities for viewers to participate through ratings, reviews, and playlists.

However, Gannes and other say, Hulu has an impressive library of old and new content that’s easy to view using Hulu’s Web interface. Uniformly applauded, but not completely understood, is giving viewers tools to embed clips or full-length episodes and movies wherever they want. Since Hulu only makes available a show’s last five episodes, what happens to the embedded links once the show is no longer on the site?

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Hulu set to debut; critics see NBC, News Corp. venture as "failure"

huluWe asked at the start of the month if Hulu’s impending debut is already too late. Well — drum rolls please — Hulu is set to open its doors, at least in beta form, on Monday. And lining up are even more critics.

Investor’s Business Daily writes that the “picture isn’t pretty” for the launch of NBC Universal’s and News Corp.’s online video joint venture, according to people in the industry.

“Some observers foresee failure,” Brian Deagon writes for IBD. “They say it suffers from not enough content and from having two partners that are rivals with poor track records in partnerships.”

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Poll: Half of U.S. residents want Internet video ratings, but not 'Net implant device

youtube ratingsTime to get out the proverbial salt shaker and look upon these poll results with a wary eye.

On the one hand, more than half of U.S. residents sampled want the government to regulate Internet video, according to a just-released poll by 463 Communications, a Washington, D.C., public relations firm that specializes in high tech issues.

463 works with Zogby International on periodic polls asking “quirky” questions about technology and the Internet (463 Blog). Sometimes these surveys yield interesting results, like the regulation of Internet video.

Twenty-nine percent surveyed said Internet video should be regulated just like TV content, and another 24 percent said the U.S. government should push for an online rating system similar to the one used by the movie industry. Not surprisingly, only 33 percent of 18-to-24 year-olds support government-regulated video content, while 72 percent of those over 70 years old do.

“I was really shocked that people look at the Internet the same way they look at TV,” said Tom Galvin, a 463 partner. “People see (online video) as spiraling out of control, and they want the government to do something about it.”

On the other hand, quirky polls leave you shaking your head, wondering about the validity of the overall effort.

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