Posts Tagged ‘video streaming’

Singer Chris Brown, should do something special for the happy accident that created  the JK Wedding Entrance Dance Video which now has 12 million plus video views and counting.

Google has a post on the remarkable impact the video has had for the song and the artist. For example last it helped boost the the “click-to-uby” CTR for Brown’s song “Forever” by 2.5x.

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In an earlier post I complained that Hulu was not easily available in Canada and that in order to access it  IP masking softare was requried to watch the content. That type of software is buggy at best and lately has not been working for me

Well now there is CANULU – a service that promises to give you 24/7 access to just about all the U.S. programming that is currently being blocked from intenret vewiers in Canada.

It costs $11.95 a month – not a bad idea but I wonder how long these cats will be able to do their thing, unfettered, before Canadian Broadcasters or even Hulu comes after them – All the power to Canulu but I hope they have deep pockets for legal a small army of lawyers.

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Here is niffty online service. TubeChop lets you easil edit youtube video and share them with your friends and network.

What I like I about TubeChop is it simply does what it says – and does that one thing shorten, cut down youtube videos very well

Amitabh Bachan | Amar, Akbar, Anthony

Amitabh Bachan | Amar, Akbar, Anthony

It has faint echoes of the now retired online video application JumpCut – while jumpcut was great for people who wanted a fairly robust online flash editing platform it tried to do too much.

TubeChop doesn’t make that mistake. Notice how you can share and embed easily and see the original version too boot

Here is the cut down video, please ignore the fact I butchered a crazy, favourite Bollywood tune

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The television and broadcast industry in Canada are, simply put, a bloody mess and it may only get worse if Hulu fully flexes its muscles.

On the one hand you have the CRTC and the broadcasters squabbling over the fate and financing of local television

On the other hand, you have the most recent report from Comscore on Canadian online video viewing habits – it is through the roof. According to Comscore 21 million Canadians viewed 3.1 billion videos online in February 2009. That works out to about 10 hours per month per Canadian a 53% jump. The vast majority used Google or Youtube (53%  share) , followed by MSN (1.8%) and Yahoo(1.5%)

The only Canadian media company  to register was CTVglobemedia at 0.8%. Granted Canadian companies do use Yahoo and MSN as distribution channels for their content.

However, none of the broadcasters as far as I can tell are contemplating collaborating on a Hulu type model to meet the challenge of the Youtube.  Hulu by the way is now the number 3 video site in the USA, leap frogging past Yahoo.

hulu

Hulu of course is not officially available in Canada but it is easy enough to access by downloading an easily available proxy.

One of the reasons Hulu is not available are those pesky things called contracts – between US producers and networks and the Canadian Media companies.  Territorial restrictions in the broadcast contracts (many of which include digital rights)  prevent Hulu from streaming into Canada – a potentially lush secondary market.

If I was an executive over at Hulu here are the questions and calculations I would be making

1) When do these contracts expire? And are the digital rights the distributors hold negotiated in perpetuity? If so, who ever gave that up committed the biggest blunder in media history.

2) If Hulu can actually secure digital rights  can they then  stream  directly into Canadian households, while granting broadcast rights to the Canadian Networks for those shows? (likely not)

3) At what stage will streaming directly into Canadian household become more lucrative than negotiating these contracts?

Now, none of this will happen overnight but there will soon come a day when the delivery of those American movies and TV shows will make sense economically and technologically – but for those contracts it already does make sense.

The only thing the Canadian Broadcasters can do is somehow convince Hulu that they can serve the exact same function for online sector as they do currently for the television sector -  as a reseller of American content.

In the short term Hulu may well work out a deal with distributors  but in the long term I wouldn’t bet on it.

If they fail to come terms or if Hulu eventually phases out Canadian Broadcasters out of the equation? What will be the future of  the Canadian Private Broadcasting?

Meanwhile, I use the proxy server, and stream Hulu on my HD TV and more more of my friends do exactly the same thing.

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Corporate Espionage, Undercover Invistagative Journalism, Crazy Voyeur check out this new device – a very discreet usb camera that fits in your tie.

I would love to do a whole TV project leveraging the whole new range of  mini cameras out there. This particular device brouth to you by the clever people at Thanko

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