Weekly wrapup, 10 – 14 September 2007

Here’s a summary of the week’s digital lifestyle action on last100. Note that you can subscribe to the weekly wrapups, either via the special weekly wrapup RSS feed or by email.

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Top digital lifestyle news

The biggest digital lifestyle news this week was in the digital music space. UK mobile carrier Vodafone announced that it will offer Omnifone’s MusicStation service, which has been hailed as the most significant online music venture since iTunes. For a weekly fee of £1.99 (just over $4) users can “download” and share with other MusicStation users as much music as they want. Most importantly, this fee covers all data charges, which can be costly and have kept people from downloading more music and utilizing the carriers’ 3G networks. All four music labels are taking part in MusicStation — the Universal Music Group, Sony BMG, EMI, and Warner. Continue reading »

MySpaceTV taps creative professionals for new shows

17-freshman-15.jpgFirst there were TV-like shows on the Internet: “LonelyGirl 15”. Then came big-name backers upping the quality ante: Michael Eisner’s “Prom Queen.” Now we’re seeing the creative professionals of TV Land and Hollywood getting into the mix.

MySpaceTV has teamed up with Seventeen, the teen-ager magazine, to produce a new Web series, “Freshman 15”, which launched this week. “Freshman 15” is a reality show that follows 15 girls as they experience college life for the first time.

And in November, two big-time movie and TV producers will debut an original series, “Quarterlife”, also on MySpaceTV. Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick have made films like “Blood Diamond” and “The Last Samurai” and television series such as “thirtysomething” and “My So Called Life.” Continue reading »

Online video usage on the up; YouTube still dominates

Online video usage on the up; YouTube still dominatesAmericans are watching more streaming online video than ever and the big winner continues to be Google-owned YouTube.

The comScore Video Metrix report for July 2007 — which looked at the usage of streaming video sites only — reveals that nearly 75 percent of U.S. Internet users watched videos online, up from 71.4 percent in March, and the average viewing time per-month was just under three hours.

Google-owned video sites (which basically means YouTube) lead in terms of unique viewers, grabbing 37.6% of the market (67.8 million), with Fox Interactive in second place with 19.9% (35.8 million) and Yahoo! Sites a close third with 19.6% (35.3 million). Continue reading »

Sony execs hoping Home and PS3 will become a family activity

sony homeGames journalist Steve Boxer recently interviewed three Sony executives on the influence of Web 2.0 on gaming, a product the company is developing called SingStar, and its new virtual environment, Home. What caught my eye, and got me thinking, was the admonition that Home will pull in a wider audience to the PS3.

Here’s what Peter Edward, the director of the PlayStation Home Platform Group, had to say:

Let’s be honest, most of the purchasers of PS3s are classic 18 to 34 (year-old) males right now, but there are lots of other family members and friends who might see [core gamers] using Home and think: ‘That looks like fun. I’m not normally the sort of person who would use a PS3, but let’s have a go with it.’

Continue reading »

Apple gears up for UK iPhone launch; mum is no longer the word

U.S. readers look away. UK readers rejoice.

iphone_uk_mum.pngApple has sent out invitations for a special press event to be held next Tuesday at the company’s flagship store in London. The email carries the cryptic message “mum is no longer the word”, suggesting that a previously kept secret will be no more. Our guess, along with Reuters and just about every everybody else, is that Apple will reveal its plans for the UK launch of the iPhone, including carrier details and pricing.

Of course, “mum” may already no longer be the word, if the UK iPhone’s carrier turns out to Spanish Telefonica’s O2 , as everybody suspects it is. Why else would O2 CEO Peter Erskine be talking up Apple’s insistence on sharing call and data revenue with operators. Continue reading »

Internet TV biz news: Hulu acquire Chinese startup?; Veoh gets new heavyweight investors

HuluWhile it’s yet-to-be confirmed, TechCrunch reports that News Corp. and NBC’s joint venture, Hulu, has made its first acquisition: Bejing-based startup Mojiti. It’s thought that Mojiti, an online video platform that enables users to annotate videos at specific time points (while also forming the basis for search functionality) will provide a part of the technology used to power Hulu. Mojiti founder, Eric Feng, was previously at Microsoft Research Asia.

TechCrunch editor, Mike Arrington, expresses surprise that Hulu would go outside for some of its core technology, while conceding that, having missed their previously announced launch date of summer 2007, an acquisition could get things back on track.

VeohTVVeoh, the company behind the video sharing site of the same name, as well as the Internet TV app, VoehTV (see our review), have announced a new set of funders. Joining ex-Disney CEO, Michael Eisner, along with Shelter Capital Partners, Spark Capital, and Time Warner Investments, Veoh’s backers now also include former Viacom and MTV Networks CEO Tom Freston’s Firefly3 and Jonathan Dolgen, former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Viacom Entertainment Group.

That’s a pretty heavyweight media lineup, with plenty of Hollowood/TV network connections, which, moving forward, is likely to be a prerequisite for companies in the Internet TV space whose success will in part be based on their ability to secure major content deals. In this respect, VeohTV competitor, Joost, looks particularly well placed with backing from CBS and Viacom.

Mobile web experience will not improve without new hardware

iphone-web1.jpgTechNewsWorld posted today about the “incredibly weak mobile Web experience” and asked “why mobile Web browsers are still so lame.” My answer: Today’s cell phones, with a few exceptions, are not information devices and should not be compared with the desktop experience.

I’d like to get away from the thinking that most of the cell phones today are information devices. They’re not. They’re phones that are Internet-enabled, so you can surf the Web.

I’d also like to get away from the thinking that the mobile Web experience should be like surfing the Web on our desktops or laptops. It’s not the same experience. It never will be. One is large, with at least a 12-inch display, and the other is tiny, with a match-book-sized screen.

What’s needed to improve the mobile Web experience, first and foremost, is a new cell phone that’s designed and development to meet the information — not just the phone — needs of an on-the-go society living in a broadband world. With the appropriate hardware, only then can we improve mobile browsing. Continue reading »

Universal Music Group exploring ISP file-sharing tax

Universal Music Group exploring ISP file-sharing taxAs the music industry continues to search for an answer to dwindling sales and the continual proliferation of illegal file-sharing, an old idea looks to have resurfaced.

Digital Music News reports that Universl Music Group (UMG) is exploring the possibility of introducing an ISP music file-sharing tax. Called “TotalMusic”, the idea is to charge the customers of ISPs and cellphone carriers a flat-rate fee as part of their data service plan, in exchange for the right to download and share the label’s music over the ISP’s network. Continue reading »

Vodafone to roll out MusicStation in the UK; will people buy mobile music?

musicstation2I have a question for you. How do you like your music?

Do you want to own it?

Do you want to rent it?

Or do you prefer getting it in some back alley on the Web?

The reason I ask is because Vodafone, a leading international mobile telecommunications carrier, will launch Omnifone’s MusicStation in the UK on three handsets in time for Christmas. Omniphone is a mobile music provider, and its MusicStation offers an all-you-can-eat subscription for a small weekly fee. Continue reading »

Poll: should Apple join the wireless auction?

Apple and at&tWhile many expect Google to throw its hat in the ring, and enter a bid in the upcoming U.S. wireless spectrum auction, Apple’s name hasn’t really been mentioned — until now that is. Yesterday, Business Week reported that CEO Steve Jobs and Co. have studied the implications of joining the auction, which will be held Jan. 16, given that the chance to wrestle power away from incumbent telco’s — such as AT&T and Verizon — is too tempting to dismiss outright. Many feel that Apple’s iPhone will be deemed a success in spite of its partnering carriers, not because of them. Continue reading »