SEW: How has social media created a new and powerful "backchannel" and why does this fuel the renaissance of live broadcasts? The Internet didn’t kill TV! According to Mike Proulx, the Internet has become TV’s best friend.
Even if consumers wanted to engage with multiple news sources, it's difficult to read five newspapers in a day or watch three separate news broadcasts simultaneously. Before the Internet, consumers either got their news from a newspaper, a magazine...
When they do:
say they rely most on the internet, including:
on search engines.specialty websites.rely on social network sites like Twitter.rely most on newspapers, of which only 2% rely on the online version.rely most on word of mouth from family...
Using Twitter during broadcasts seems to now be standard with a number of shows, if Google were to tailor links below their search page based on known previous actions maybe this interaction could be wide reaching.
The pureplay online company to most closely facilitate the traditional media model is Hulu, which licenses content from the main stations (in the same way as local TV stations) and broadcasts it free over the web, to be monetized with...
The truth is that users are skipping the broadcasts anyway. The three biggest U.S.networks have blocked access to full-length episodes of television shows that are available for streaming on their websites, meaning anyone who bought a brand new...
But that's just a software problem; technology under development will, for example, analyze the content of recorded radio broadcasts (or podcasts) and automatically insert relevant advertising during the "commercial break.
Nexidia has indexed all of the station's 7 daily broadcasts and made them searchable. Publishers, such as local TV affiliates, can index all of their long-form content and make it searchable to users.
The video, aimed at promoting the company's broadcasts of the Simpsons, is one that hadn't crossed my desk until today. UPDATE: Ed Martin at Jack Myers Media Village is reporting that the live action Simpsons intro will replace the animated version...
A new free service from multimedia search engine TVEyes lets you search each and every word spoken during TV news broadcasts from well-known news organizations. TVEyes is using voice recognition technology to create a "spoken word index" that makes...
Today's search podcast covers Google getting into radio ads; the v7ndotcom
elursrebmem SEO contest; Google dropping TVbroadcasts from Google Video; seeing
how evil Google is on your Google personalized home page; funky expandable
sponsored...
Podscope has operated a keyword search engine for video and radio broadcasts since 1999. I also mentioned that fee-based services like ShadowTV, Fednet.net and CriticalMention also
offer near real-time searching of TV and some radio and have been...
Podscope is a service of TVEyes Inc.headquartered in Fairfield, CT, which has been indexing television and radio
broadcasts since 1999. As TV and radio migrate to
the on-demand dynamic of podcasts on the Internet, new search tools are needed
to...
We also have a Sky+ box, our version of Tivo here, designed to help us record broadcasts from Sky and locate programs. Part of the system is an incredibly slick way to keyword search through two weeks worth of programs offered by Sky, our satellite...
Greg Linden posts about a paper by Sergey Brin and others that discusses the use of closed-captioning from television broadcasts as a tool to help find related material. Monitor/search news broadcasts from more than 250 stations.
Singingfish, a wonderful resource that I reviewed earlier this year, can locate movie trailers, radio and TVbroadcasts, sporting events and more. Shopping.com kicks off a TV ad campaign. Click here to learn more about becoming a member
Singingfish, a wonderful resource that I reviewed earlier this year, can locate movie trailers, radio and TVbroadcasts, sporting events and more. AOL has acquired Singingfish, a multimedia search engine providing access to audio and visual files...