(Video) Kit Digital Introduces Social TV Platform at NAB
LAS VEGAS -- Kit Digital, the big global, Prague-based provider of digital video services, has introduced a set of social media tools to its platfor...
LAS VEGAS -- Kit Digital, the big global, Prague-based provider of digital video services, has introduced a set of social media tools to its platfor...
Andy Plesser | Posted 04.19.2012
LAS VEGAS - Thanks in part to the wide-spread use of paid services for video on demand including Amazon, Netflix and Hulu, it is now "acceptable to p...
Andy Plesser | Posted 04.18.2012
LAS VEGAS -- Adobe is readying the release its latest video production and editing package Creative Suite 6 (CS6). The company has announced a ...
Andy Plesser | Posted 04.17.2012
LAS VEGAS -- Some 50 of the industry's leading video services companies are rallying around a unified live video streaming protocol known as DASH, sa...
Mike Smith | Posted 07.19.2011
A Brookings Institution report says 99% of smartphones will have WiFi capability within the next two years. Goodbye TV? In South Korea 23 million people use digital mobile broadcast. They watch content and TV programs on smartphones.
Brett King | Posted 05.25.2011
Getting to the bank of tomorrow seems daunting. For banks that are entrenched in physical elements such as branch distribution networks, long-held con...
Dave Taylor | Posted 05.25.2011
Positioning themselves as David to the broadcasters' Goliath, Ivi TV has launched a streaming TV service built around their own player and clearly tapping network TV channels in New York City and Seattle.
Jeff Pollack | Posted 05.25.2011
Despite the increased competition from the Internet, mp3 players, and other forms of radio, terrestrial radio remains an essential medium in the lives of Americans.
Gary Shapiro | Posted 05.25.2011
Should we protect old media by hindering market competition? Of course not. But try telling that to the National Association of Broadcasters and the Recording Industry Association of America.
Patrick Maines | Posted 05.25.2011
There's this one small problem with the government picking the winners and losers in the media and telecom world: What happens if they're wrong?
Youth Radio -- Youth Media International | Posted 05.25.2011
By owning the day to day computing experience of so many people Apple is looking to lock down how people expect technology to work, and in doing so limit where their competitors can make headway in nearly every market.
AP | Posted 05.25.2011
LOS ANGELES — Extra revenue being pulled in by 3-D movies at the box office can more than make up for the money lost from falling sales of DVDs,...
Youth Radio -- Youth Media International | Posted 05.25.2011
The NAB Show is all about the big new toys that filmmakers and TV production companies will build their budgets around for the next year.
Youth Radio -- Youth Media International | Posted 05.25.2011
Youth Radio -- Youth Media International | Posted 05.25.2011
Originally published on Youthradio.org, the premier source for youth generated news throughout the globe. By Noah J. Nelson The National Associatio...
Brett King | Posted 05.25.2011
If you go to just about any banking website today, the customer experience is pretty poor. Why is it that banks have no idea how to engage me?
Harold Feld | Posted 05.25.2011
While conventional wisdom holds that the Comcast/NBC merger will be approved with conditions, I think there is a small but not unreasonable chance that it will collapse under its own weight.
Shelly Palmer | Posted 05.25.2011
Twitter has switched default URL shorteners from Tinyurl to Bit.LY, Amazon unveiled the big screen Kindle DX, News Corp operating income fell 72% during the first quarter, and more.
Timothy Karr | Posted 05.25.2011
One of Washington's most powerful corporate lobbies is at it again, raising a dust cloud of lies in a last-ditch effort to stop new technology that could better the lives of millions.
Timothy Karr | Posted 05.25.2011
An unusual skirmish over the future of the Internet is being waged this week at New York City Hall, where city council members are weighing whether vacant television airwaves should be opened to the Internet.
Andy Plesser | Posted 04.20.2012