WebProNews

Tag: Entertainment

  • MySpace Holds American Idol Auditions

    MySpace Holds American Idol Auditions

    American Idol auditions are coming to MySpace as the show celebrates its 10th anniversary. MySpace announced today that it has partnered with  19 Entertainment, FremantleMedia North America and FOX on the project. 

    Starting today and ending October 6, people between the ages of 15 and 28 can submit audition videos for the show at MySpace.com/americanidol.

    "American Idol has established itself as the largest stage to find and elevate new artists," said Courtney Holt, MySpace Music President. “Marrying this year’s auditions with MySpace, a platform renowned for discovering new talent, allows the show to broaden its reach online in the search for Season 10 hopefuls."

    American Idol on MySpace

    There is an approved list of songs that contestants con choose from for their auditions. Videos are limited to 40 seconds in length, and are limited to one per person. The auditions will be judged "in a similar fashion to the live audition" according to the announcement. 

    I’m guessing auditions can go viral on the web faster than ever as a result of this news. 

  • Google’s Music Strategy Revealed?

    Google’s Music Strategy Revealed?

    Very interesting article from Billboard today. Apparently Google is circulating a proposal among major record labels regarding forthcoming music service. The proposal provides clues as to what we can likely expect. 

    Billboard’s Ed Christman says the service would include an a la carte digital download store, as well as a subscription-based cloud-based locker. He cites "industry sources", reporting: 

    The search giant has proposed charging consumers about $25 a year to store songs in the locker, from which they could access their music on an Internet-connected device by either streaming or downloading. Google’s download store would operate like a conventional digital retailer, giving the consumers the ability to purchase individual tracks and digital albums.

    Google Music on the Way?But Google locker subscribers would have the additional option of having their purchases transferred directly to their cloud-based account. And the company is seeking the right to provide each customer with the ability to listen to a full-track stream of every song once — as Lala.com did before it was acquired in December by Apple — after which the customer would be limited to a 30-second sample of that song.

    Obviously such a service would be a direct competitor to Apple’s iTunes, adding to the list of product with which the two companies are already competing. In fact, it would likely even compete with the new iTunes feature, Ping. The proposal reportedly includes social networking features, including the ability to send playlists to friends. This would be no surprise, as other reports indicate Google is looking to add social layers to various core products (which appears to be what the whole "Google Me" project entails). 

    A music service from Google has been expected for quite some time, but little has been known about the details of how it would work. We can’t exactly call this a confirmation of what the final product will be, but it certainly appears to shed some light on the strategy Google is trying to carry out. They still have to jump through the licensing hoops and all of that fun stuff. 

    Would you pay $25 a year for such a service? Let us know. 

    (Hat tip to Matthew Ingram at GigaOm)

  • Boxee Box With Intel Atom Processor Coming Soon

    Boxee Box With Intel Atom Processor Coming Soon

    The Boxee Box is due out in November, just in time for the holidays. It will come out looking to compete with the likes of the much-hyped Apple TV and Google TV. Here’s what Boxee’s Avner Ronen had to say on the Boxee blog after Apple launched its newest Apple TV device:
     
    We think people want to be able to watch anything that they can watch on their computer, only on their bigscreen TV.  There is an overwhelming consumer expectation that the content we can consume in our cubicles, our dorm rooms, and in our laps should be available in our living rooms, in full 1080p with a gorgeous interface.  It’s a simple premise, but the challenge is to do it in a way that makes sense in that space, so you can put your feet up, grab a remote and start watching. No keyboards, mice, windows or labyrinthine menus. It should be calm and it should be beautiful. And it *must* be open.

     

    Boxee and D-link announced today that the Boxee Box will be powered by Intel’s CE4100 Atom processor. The Box is touted as the first media device capable of playing all major media formats and codecs within a home network along with free and premium TV shows and movies, videos, music, and photos from the Internet, with support for full 1080p HD and 5.1 surround sound.

     

    Boxee Box Coming in November

    "This represents long overdue innovation to the entertainment experience that D-Link will help consumers quickly deploy through their home network. These exciting new capabilities align closely with Intel’s commitment to improving how people access and enjoy digital content on their TV," said Lou Reda, Vice President and General Manager, Consumer Division, D-Link. "We are leading a revolution that will offer tremendous new possibilities in the home."

    Boxee and D-Link also announced today that Canadian customers can now pre-order the Boxee Box through Best Buy and Future Shop. The Boxee Box will begin shipping in November in the US, Canada, EU and Australia.
  • Mozilla Follows Google Into Gaming

    Mozilla Follows Google Into Gaming

    Mozilla announced that Mozilla Labs is undertaking a new intiative with gaming. The effort will be focused primarily on games built, delivered, and played on the Open Web and in the browser. 

    "We want to explore the wider set of technologies which make immersive gaming on the Open Web possible," says Pascal Finette at Mozilla Labs. "We invite the wider community to play with cool, new tech and aim to help establish the Open Web as the platform for gaming across all your Internet connected devices."

    "Modern Open Web technologies introduced a complete stack of technologies such as Open Video, audio, WebGL, touch events, device orientation, geo location, and fast JavaScript engines which make it possible to build complex (and not so complex) games on the Web," says Finette. "With these technologies being delivered through modern browsers today, the time is ripe for pushing the platform.  And what better way than through games?  Traditionally games and game developers have been at the forefront of technology, often pushing the boundaries of what was thought possible."

    Mozilla Labs Gets Into Gaming

    Mozilla is launching an international gaming competition to kickstart the new initiative. The event, called Game On2010, will be open to all developers using open web technologies. 

    Mozilla Labs Gets Into Gaming

    Mozilla’s sudden interest in gaming comes as Google (a direct competitor with Chrome) has begun placing a great deal of resources in the gaming space. In fact, Google’s efforts (at least some of them) are directly related to Chrome, and the Chrome Web Store.

  • Netflix Makes Deal to Stream First-Run Theatrical Releases

    Netflix announced a new deal with Nu Image/Millennium Films today. The agreement will allow Netflix to stream first-run theatrical films to its members. 

    Netflix says the deal is an example of how it is moving to expand both variety and timliness of its streaming catalog. The deal is expected to provide five to ten theatrical films per year for Netflix streaming. 

    "We are delighted to be in business with Netflix," said Avi Lerner, co-chairman of Nu Image/Millennium.  "This is a groundbreaking deal for our new releases and library titles.  It will allow us to be more aggressive with theatrical releases and will clearly impact our distribution model.  We will be producing more great films for Netflix."

    "Avi Lerner and Nu Image have a remarkable track record of producing crowd pleasing and profitable films," said Ted Sarandos, chief content officer for Netflix.  "Their ability to work across multiple studios and maintain a consistent output of diverse and successful films makes Avi and his company perfect Netflix partners for theatrical features in the pay TV window."

    Nu Image and Millennium Films have been behind titles like "The Expendables," "John Rambo (aka: Rambo)," "Brooklyn’s Finest," "Righteous Kill," "16 Blocks" and "Black Dahlia."  

    The Expendables from Nu Image and Millennium Films

    The upcoming "Son of No One" starring Channing Tatum, Al Pacino, Katie Holmes, Tracy Morgan, and Ray Liotta will be one of the first films covered under the deal. "Elephant White" starring Djimon Hounsou and Kevin Bacon is another title mentioned. 

    Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. 

  • Amazon Acquires Amie Street Music Startup

    Amazon has acquired music startup Amie Street, which the company actually helped fund. Unfortunately for Amie Street users, the service will be shut down.

    Amie Street has an interesting business model, which lets musicians upload music, which starts out free to users. The more downloads the songs get, the more the price goes up (up to a $1). Interesting as it may be, it apparently didn’t work. 

    Amie Street goes to Amazon

    According to Michael Arrington, the Amie Street team will focus on Amazon’s Songza, a custom playlist-based music service.  He says, "While the users and the brand are being acquired, Amazon will most likely ditch the business model, say the founders (stressing that they don’t know for sure)."

    Songza from Amazon
    Peter Kafka shares a letter from Amie Street to its users, informing them of the Amazon takeover. The letter says that the site will redirect to Amazon starting September 22. Users do get a $5 promotional code to use in Amazon’s MP3 store, so that’s a bonus. 

    The financial terms of the acquisition have not been revealed, but the price isn’t expected to be incredibly high.

  • Google TV to Arrive This Autumn

    Google TV to Arrive This Autumn

    When Google unveiled Google TV at Google I/O in May, the company said it would be out for the holidays. CEO Eric Schmidt is now saying more specifically, this autumn, according to Reuters. It’s unclear whether this is ahead of the originally planned schedule or if it was always intended to be Autumn (as opposed to Winter), but Apple’s release of Apple TV may provide a little motivation to get Google TV on the market as soon as possible. 

    Apple TV and Google TV will compete with one another, but they offer different functionalities. Apple brings web content to your TV, but Google’s aim is to let you search across your existing TV service provider and the web in one "seamless" experience. There is more to both than that, but that is the main difference. More about Apple TV here and more about Google TV here

    Don’t expect Google to create its own content. Schmidt reportedly told Reuters, "We will work with content providers, but it is very unlikely that we will get into actual content production." 

    Creating content has never really been Google’s style anyway. Google TV should do for finding TV shows what Google the search engine has done for finding web results, or what Google News has done for finding news articles. 

    Both Apple TV and Google TV should be able to find their audiences. Apple’s $99 price tag may go a long way into getting it into more living rooms, while Google’s integration with Dish Network will likely appeal to customers of that service. 

    Either way, one thing is clear: TV watchers are going to get more and more choices for connected TV, and this space is getting more and more interesting by the day.

  • Wetpaint Launches Content Network for TV Fans

    Wetpaint is launching a new content network of 15 sites, dedicated to popular television shows. "Wetpaint has created a sophisticated prescriptive publishing system that taps into trending data, commentary, tweets, Facebook comments, forum topics to build a network of sites that focus on what we all love best – TV," a spokesperson for Wetpaint tells WebProNews.

    "As you know, social media has changed how content is discovered," she adds. "A new network from Wetpaint is launching squarely focused on providing a 360 degree view of each show, powered by technology that brings the 360 view to consumers in real time." 

    Shows include: "The Vampire Diaries," "Grey’s Anatomy," "America’s Next Top Model," "Castle," "Hellcats," and "Nikita." "Glee," "Dancing With The Stars," Top Chef," "Pretty Little Liar," "Bachelorette," "The Bachelor," "Gossip Girl," "Jersey Shore" and "The Real Housewives of DC."

    Wetpaint

    "Wetpaint editors comb the web, social networks, forums and jump on the hottest news for fans – linking photos, the latest videos and gossip to provide one place to find all of the information on their favorite show," the company says. "Additionally the Wetpaint Network includes Facebook pages which enable consumers to keep up on the biggest news – in the pre-launch phase, 400,000 Facebook fans have already joined."

    As Wetpaint launches its entertainment network, it is also launching a sweepstakes in which fans can win box sets, and the grand prize – a shopping weekend in NYC.
  • Apple’s Ping Draws a Great Deal of Criticism

    Apple’s Ping social network, which the company launched as part of the new iTunes 10, has drawn a big mix of excitement and criticism. While most seem to agree that the concept beind Ping is a pretty good idea (social network-meets-music-buying) it’s not exactly the seamless experience one might hope for.

    Let’s take a look at some points made around the Blogosphere.

    Erick Schonfeld at TechCrunch says, "The biggest problem I have with Ping is that it lives in iTunes. Not only does it live in iTunes, it is isolated there. iTunes is not social. It is not even on the Web. And Ping doesn’t communicate with any other social networks. I can’t see people’s iTunes Pings in Twitter, Facebook, or anywhere else. While Ping does make iTunes itself more social, the problem is that I don’t live in iTunes. It is a store. I go in to buy stuff and get out as fast as I can. I am not sure Ping is going to make me want to hang out there more." 

    WebProNews blog partner Bruce Houghton, who writes for the blog HypeBot, says, "Say what you will about iTune’s new social network Ping, but it’s going to be a great place to market music.  So imagine the frustration of the many indie artists – many of who are selling music on iTunes – when they learned  that there was  no obvious way to create an an artist profile in Ping."
     
    "We asked Apple to explain and just heard back from a spokesperson that ‘artist profiles were launched by invitation, but we’ll keep adding more and more.’  No information was provided on who is handing invites or what criteria they are using," he adds.
     
    Mashable founder Pete Cashmore says in a CNN piece, "iTunes Ping is a worthy concept: By adding social interaction to the music-buying experience, Apple could see a significant increase in sales, and artists could form a more direct connection to their fans. But until the majority of artists are able to create official accounts, iTunes Ping merely benefits the privileged few."

    iTunes 10

    Wade Roush at Xconomy has some interesting ideas about Ping: "It’s easy to see how Apple might expand Ping beyond music to facilitate conversations around media of all sorts, including movies, books, and mobile apps…Adding a social networking interface, on top of all of iTunes’ other functions, is like grafting another limb to the forehead of an octopus. It’s just too much." 

    Robert Scoble says, "By the way, if I were @loic I’d be PISSED that Apple infringed his ping.fm trademark." @loic, would be Loic Le Meur, founder of Seesmic, who also has a service called Ping.fm, for updating multiple social networks. 

    The best commentary I’ve seen about Ping so far has to be Paul Carr’s take though. He says, "Ping ping ping ping. Ping. And yet and yet…Ping?"

    Apart from all of the opinions and criticism, Ping is already facing a more concrete problem of spam. Chester Wisniewski of security company Sophos has a post up describing the comment spam that’s already flooding the iTunes social network.

    Google should be launching a music service in time for the holidays if reports are accurate. 

  • Google, Facebook and Boxee Respond to Apple

    Update 2: Swisher reports that Facebook blocked API access to Ping after failing to strike an agreement with Apple, so Apple removed the feature after launch. She credits "sources familiar with Facebook’s platform" with this information. 

    Update:
    With regards to Facebook and Ping, Dan Frommer points out that the screenshots Apple used in its prsentation actually did show Facebook integration. MG Siegler also notes that he actually was able to connect to Ping with Facebook, but then it disappeared. It appears that Apple may have pulled Facebook from it at the last minute. Siegler writes:

    I can tell you for sure that yesterday Facebook Connect was a part of Ping — because I used it.

    When I first loaded iTunes 10 yesterday and started up Ping, connecting with Facebook was the first thing I did to find friends. At first, I will say that it didn’t work. I hit the Connect button, entered my credentials, and nothing happened. But I tried again and it worked perfectly. I found a handful of Facebook friends who had just started using Ping as well and connected with them.

    He also claims that he’s still connected to the Ping app from within Facebook and that while Facebook isn’t on iTunes, it’s still live. 

    Original Article: At Apple’s music event yesterday, where the company launched a new version of iOS, a new version of iTunes with a new social network (Ping), a new line of iPods, and a new version of Apple TV, Steve Jobs took a shot at Google involving numbers of smartphone activations.

    Last month, Google CEO Eric Schmidt said that Android gets over 200,000 devices a day.

    "People throw out a lot of numbers about how many devices they’re activating per day," Jobs is quoted as saying. "We are doing 230,000 activations a day.  We think our friends may be counting upgrades – if we were counting upgrades, that would be way higher."

    Fortune has a quote from a Google spokesperson responding to those comments: "The Android activation numbers do not include upgrades and are, in fact, only a portion of the Android devices in the market since we only include devices that have Google services."

    Ping, the iTunes social network, is like Facebook or Twitter meets iTunes. That’s the way Jobs described it in the announcement, anyway. While that may be the case, and it may even resemble Facebook, there is no integration with either Facebook or Twitter (or other social networks).

    iTunes 10

    Kara Swisher was able to speak to Jobs about this, who said Facebook wanted "onerous terms that we could not agree to." When asked about integrating Facebook Connect to help people find their friends, Swisher quotes him saying (or shrugging rather), "We could, I guess."

    She also got this statement from Facebook on the matter: "Facebook believes in connecting people with their interests and we’ve partnered with innovative developers around the world who share this vision. Facebook and Apple have cooperated successfully in the past to offer people great social experiences and we look forward to doing so in the future."

    Om Malik at GigaOm calls Ping "the future of social commerce". "From a content perspective, there are three different types of media we love to talk about: movies we see, music we listen to and books we are reading," he says. "These are accepted social norms. In fact, many relationships are made on the basis of collective love of a movie and many friendships have started with mixed tapes."

    Boxee, whose Boxee Box is due out in November, had some comments on Apple’s Apple TV announcement. These two are now direct competitors. On the Boxee blog, Avner Ronen writes:

    We think people want to be able to watch anything that they can watch on their computer, only on their bigscreen TV.  There is an overwhelming consumer expectation that the content we can consume in our cubicles, our dorm rooms, and in our laps should be available in our living rooms, in full 1080p with a gorgeous interface.  It’s a simple premise, but the challenge is to do it in a way that makes sense in that space, so you can put your feet up, grab a remote and start watching. No keyboards, mice, windows or labyrinthine menus. It should be calm and it should be beautiful. And it *must* be open.

    We all watched the Apple announcement. We walked away feeling strongly confident about the space it left for Boxee to compete. We have a different view of what users want in their living rooms.  We are taking different paths to get there. The Boxee Box is going to be $100 more expensive than the Apple TV, but will give you the freedom to watch what you want.

    We think it’s worth it.

    NewTeeVee has a comparison of Apple TV, the Boxee Box, and Roku, which some have also said is superior to the new Apple TV.

     

  • Apple to Update Apple TV (with Netflix), iTunes, iPod Touch

    Apple announced that it will be streaming an event online today at Apple.com, at 10:00 AM Pacific/1:00 PM Eastern.

    "Apple will broadcast its September 1 event online using Apple’s industry-leading HTTP Live Streaming, which is based on open standards," the company says.

    The whole thing is so open, you have to use a Mac running Safari on Mac OS X version 10.6 Snow Leopard, an iPhone or iPod Touch running iOS 3.0 or higher or an iPad. In other words you have to have bought an Apple device to view it.

    Apple to Host Event It is also so open that the announcement makes it a point to say, "This broadcast is the property of Apple and is protected by US copyright law and international treaties. Any reproduction or distribution is strictly prohibited without prior written approval from Apple."

    The event itself is expected to center around updates to iTunes, iPods and possibly TV. According to the Wall Street Journal, FOX and ABC will announce 99 cent rentals of TV shows through iTunes. "People familiar with the matter" are cited.

    According to Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Apple will announce a set-top box for video that will include Netflix programming and a revamped version of Apple TV that will cost $99. The publication also says that Apple will release a revamped version of iTunes and an upgraded iPod Touch with higher screen resolution.

    The whole thing should be a big win for Netflix.

  • Booyah Utilizes Facebook Places for Standalone App

    Booyah, makers of the check-in app/game MyTown, have unveiled a new game today, and it is is the first standalone app to utilize the recently launched Facebook Places API.

    "In addition to being the first app built exclusively for Facebook Places, it is the only app that accesses Facebook Search," says Booyah.

    "In InCrowd, players create their own customizable avatar, socialize, meet new friends and track popularity when they check-in to their favorite real-life places using their iPhone or iPod touch," the company explains. "InCrowd players gain popularity when others respond using a series of in-game actions, such as hi fives, fist bumps, winks, or posting about a venue. Players can also utilize the always popular Dropkick to take popularity away from a chosen individual. The more a player socializes with others, the more in-game points are rewarded to them for use in upgrading and personalizing their virtual avatar."

    Booyah InCrowd App

    The company also points out that it has spent a lot of time working on privacy features. There is an invisible function in the game that lets users hide their locations and check-ins if they wish to do so.

    The InCrowd app is free and available in Apple’s App Store.

    Booyah recently launched product check-ins as a feature of its MyTown game, which gives businesses new product marketing opportunities.

  • Amazon to Take On Netflix With Subscription Service?

    Amazon to Take On Netflix With Subscription Service?

    The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Amazon is working on a subscription service for TV shows and movies. The company has reportedly been talking with NBC Universal, Time Warner, News Corp. Viacom, and others about such a service.

    The offering would appear to be a direct competitor to things like Netflix, iTunes, and Hulu plus. According to the WSJ, it would focus on old catalogue content, and would work through the browser or connected devices like TVs, Blu-ray players, Xbox, etc – very much like Netflix.

    Amazon already offers movies and TV episodes for download, but a subscription service could attract a different audience, and Amazon probably has the power to be a bigger threat to Netflix than some other competitors.

    Amazon On Demand Music and Movies

    The battles for web television are seriously going to be heating up soon. Apple is expected to announce an update to its Apple TV offering today. Google TV will be here in the coming months. Yahoo has its Connected TV offerings. Samsung is pushing development on its platform hard right now. It’s going to be very interesting to see how things unfold in this industry. 2011 is going to be a very interesting year for television.

    Netflix itself is doing all it can to expand. The company is expected to be feature on the new Apple TV offering, and it has recently launched an iPhone app, with an Android app on the way.

  • Vevo iPhone App Launches with a Bang – Over a Million Downloads in a Week

    Last week, Vevo launched its mobile app for the iPhone and iPod Touch. Today, the company announced that the app has already been downloaded over a million times.

    "Our new app for iPhone and iPod touch is a huge success! Since we debuted VEVO Mobile last week, it has ranked #1 among Free Apps and Music Apps in the iTunes store and was named iTunes App of the Week! We’ve also delivered 1 million App downloads – proving fans want to watch their favorite music videos wherever, whenever," Vevo says in a blog post.

    The App lets users access over 20,000 videos from over 7,000 artists, and lets them create and save custom playlists for on demand playback, view what videos are being watched in their area, and share videos with friends through Twitter, Facebook and email.

    Vevo-iPhone

    Vevo is giving away a $100 iTunes gift certificate for one person that retweets its announcement.

    Upon launch, Vevo said it was also working on an Android app and an iPad app, as well as apps for other mobile platforms. The iPhone/iPod Touch app is currently available in the U.S. and Canada, but will launch in other countries, pending rights agreements.

  • Boxee Gets a Whole Lot of Indie Films

    Boxee Gets a Whole Lot of Indie Films

    Boxee announced today that it is adding the foundations of a movie library to go along with its existing TV show library. Boxee is tapping EZTakes, Indie Movies Online, MUBI and Openfilm to add thousands of movies to its offerings.

    Most of the movies in the library will be free and ad-supported, Boxee says.

    "The Movie Library makes it easy to find, watch, or queue movies you like," says Boxee’s Andrew Kippen. "Moving forward, it will include movies from additional online movie services and directly from studios, so while the movie selection will grow, the experience and ease of discovery will remain the same."

    EZTakes specializes in art house, independent, classic and cult films. IndieMoviesOnline is pretty self-explanatory. MUBI is a social network for movie discovery, and OpenFilm is another online community for indie film discovery and distribution.

    Indie Movies Online - Part of the New Boxee Movie Library

    Boxee also reminds users that the latest version of the Boxee Beta includes numerous bug fixes (over 100). It can be downloaded here.

  • Pandora Improves Its Music Discoverability

    Pandora Improves Its Music Discoverability

    Pandora announced today that it is giving users the ability to launch genre-based Internet radio stations.  While Pandora is known for the creation of personalized stations, based on artists or songs, this gives users the opportunity to listen to broader stations, while remaining in their musical comfort zone.

    "Our listeners have been telling us for a while that they’d like an easy way to start a station from popular genres with the option to personalize the station from there," says Senior Music Curator Michael Zapruder. "We wanted to find a uniquely Pandora way to address this consumer need so we created a number of genre stations that are carefully seeded with relevant songs and constantly refreshed with new releases."

    This should indeed make Pandora a more useful tool for music discoverability. It should make for a good way to find unknown artists within a given genre that may or may not be considered similar to an artist a user already likes. There is a reason this feature has been heavily requested.

    The stations include genres like:

    – Today’s Hits
    – Today’s Adult Hits
    – Today’s Hip Hop and R&B Hits
    – 80’s Pop
    – Today’s Country
    – Classic Rock
    – Today’s Hip Hop and Pop Hits
    – Smooth Jazz
    – Today’s R&B and Old School
    – Club/Dance
    – Today’s Alternative
    – Love Songs

    There are over 100 micro-genre stations that users can choose from.

    Pandora Micro Genres

    Last month, Pandora announced that it had surpassed its 60 million-user milestone. Recent integration with Facebook has attracted some more interest to the site. It was a launch partner for Facebook’s Open Graph. Mobile apps will no doubt continue to fuel growth as well.

  • Apple Turns Down Apps for Requiring Registration?

    According to the Next Web, Apple may be rejecting apps that require user registration first. The publication looks at an email a developer reportedly received from Apple saying:

    Thank you for submitting Read It Later Free & Read It Later to the App Store. We’ve reviewed your apps, but cannot post these versions to the App Store because they require customers to register with personal information without providing account-based features. We have included additional details below to help explain the issue, and hope you’ll consider revising and resubmitting your application.

    Applications cannot require user registration prior to allowing access to app features and content; such user registration must be optional and tied to account-based functionality. If you have any questions about this response, or would like to discuss it further, please feel free to reply to this email. We look forward to reviewing your revised apps.

    Leo Laporte's following on TwitterLeo Laporte has an interesting article about how nobody (including himself) noticed when his posts stopped appearing on Google Buzz and Twitter. "It makes me feel like everything I’ve posted over the past four years on Twitter, Jaiku, Friendfeed, Plurk, Pownce, and, yes, Google Buzz, has been an immense waste of time," he writes. "I was shouting into a vast echo chamber where no one could hear me because they were too busy shouting themselves. All this time I’ve been pumping content into the void like some chatterbox Onan. How humiliating. How demoralizing."

    Considering the man has over 222,000 followers on Twitter, it’s pretty interesting.

    Seth Godin announced that his next book Linchpin will be the last book he publishes the traditional way.

    According to the New York Times, the Dish Network will begin offering a video portal called DishOnline.com this week, making it the latest distributor to provide online benefits to paying subscribers.

    TechFlash reports that Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has sold a million Amazon shares for about $138 million. This comes after other Amazon stock sales earlier this year. These sales now reportedly total about $640 million.

    Microsoft posted a developer roadmap to the Windows Phone 7 Launch timing today.

  • Verizon Revamps its On-Demand Games App

    Verizon Revamps its On-Demand Games App

    Verizon has launched a new, enhanced version of its Verizon Games portal and app. Based on feedback, Verizon says the new design caters to a more interactive experience.

    Verizon describes the new experience as more game-like and more engaging. The company says it is designed to appeal not just to hard core gamers, but to first-time players as well.

    "The early positive feedback from our test gamers has been overwhelming, and we’ve been looking forward to the opportunity to open up the new Verizon Games experience to all of our customers," said Jason Henderson, games product manager at Verizon. "With the new app and website, people will get the same unparalleled customer experience from their PC games service as they do from Verizon’s TV, Internet and phone services."

    Verizon Games gets a makeover

    Verizon worked with digital entertainment media company Exent on the redesign. The firm specializes in marketing, merchandising, and broadband distribution of video games.

    "The Verizon Games platform is the result of much end-user research," said Jason Akel, VP/general manager of Exent. "We are quite proud of the resulting interface, which is highly accessible to gamers of all types. At the same time, it was important to us that the interface emphasizes function over form so as not to distract from what the users are really there for — the world’s largest catalog of PC downloadable games."

    Verizon is giving new customers a 14-day free trial of the service, with unlimited access to all of the games it provides.

  • Facebook Creeps Up the Charts as 178 Million Americans Watch Online Video

    comScore released its Video Metrix data for July today. According to this, 178 million people in the U.S. watched online video content during the month, watching an average of 14.7 hours per user.

    During the month, Facebook moved up from the fourth position to the third position behind Yahoo properties, and of course Google properties at number 1. Facebook accounted for 46.6 million viewers.

    Hulu generated the highest number of video ad impressions at 783 million in July. Americans viewed nearly 3.6 billion video ads in all. NewTeeVee notes that four out of five Hulu videos are ads.

    Top Video Properties in July

    Ranked by Video Ads - Online Video Properties

    84.9% of the total U.S. Internet audience viewed online video during the month. The average video duration was 4.8 minutes. The average duration of online video ads was 0.4 minutes.

    Video ads accounted for 9.8% of all videos viewed and 0.9% of all minutes spent viewing video online.

  • Cable TV Coming to the iPad, Twitter Gets a Movie Trailer

    Cable TV Coming to the iPad, Twitter Gets a Movie Trailer

    Rupert Murdoch’s not the only one with tablet fever. The Wall Street Journal reports that at least seven of the ten largest subscription-TV providers in the U.S. are building new tablet apps to offer TV content to subscribers. Some might even be free.

    The New York Times reports that Dell has been accused of withholding evidence in a lawsuit over faulty computers it sold to businesses. Said evidence includes emails among company executives.

    There is a parody Twitter movie trailer going around, and it’s actually pretty funny:

    An intern at Digg created a platform for setting up monitoring dashboards, called AWACS. It was designed for internal use and he notes that "there is zero security and anyone can create or update any existing dashboard, widget or display." Learn more about it here.

    PaidContent talks about Blockbuster’s struggles in the second quarter and the growth of bankruptcy fears, despite its new release advantage over competitors like Redbox and Netflix.

    The LATimes has a post about Apple’s iAd mobile ad platform. Advertisers have been pleased with the results according to the piece.

  • Facebook to Broadcast Live Announcements, Celeb Events

    Facebook is launching a new live video cahnnel today called Facebook Live. This is the company’s official live channel, broadcasting from Facebook Headquarters in Palo Alto.

    "Facebook Live will provide a deeper, more interactive look into what’s happening at Facebook," a representative for the company tells WebProNews.

    Users can submit questions to those featured in videos. For  example, America Ferrera and Wilmer Valderrama will appear today, and Facebook users can interact with them through this channel. They can also engage with other viewers, as there is a special feed alongside the video in which viwers can update their status about the event. There is also a chat option.

    Facebook Live - New Video Channel

    The video is powered by Livestream. The video player itself comes with options to share on Facebook or Twitter, as well as an embed option.

    It appears that while there isn’t a live event going on, the channel just shows past broadcasts, while providing the following message scrolling across the bottom: "Facebook Live is curently off-air, but please feel free to explore our archived videos! Our most recent episode will be available shortly."

    It will be very interesting to see what kind of guests stop by the Facebook HQ to do interview and Q&As. I’m guessing we’ll see some pretty big names.

    "After today’s interview, Facebook Live will continue to be your window into what’s new at Facebook," Facebook’s rep says.

    "All of the content featured on Facebook Live will tie back to Facebook products, features or how people are using Facebook," she adds. 

    Note: This article was updated after talking with Facebook. (HT: Sarah Perez).