Mar
12
2009
For the past two weeks, the market share of US Internet visits to Gmail has been higher than visits to YouTube. Previously, YouTube consistently ranked 10th among all websites by market share of visits until the week ending Jan. 10, 2009, where Gmail moved up one rank to reach #10. The websites have been swapping positions regularly ever since.
Comments Off on Visits to Gmail surpass YouTube | tags: gmail, web, youtube | posted in technical news
Mar
12
2009
Jamie gave me a nice writeup of a mashup where the writer shares some random youtube mashup video that you maybe have seen before called the Mother of all Funk Chords. It’s a pretty amazing artistic achievement and probably worth at least a quick glance of your time. But the larger point should be taken seriously. He says “If your reaction to this crate of magic is ‘Hm. I wonder how we’d go about suing someone who “did this” with our IP?’ instead of, ‘Holy crap, clearly, this is the freaking future of entertainment,’ it’s probably time to put some ramen on your Visa and start making stuff up for your LinkedIn page. Because, this is what your new Elvis looks like.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on So Amazing, so Illegal. | tags: google, youtube | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
ChunKing writes “YouTube is to block all premium music videos to UK users after failing to reach a new licensing agreement with the Performing Rights Society. For many of us in the UK this is great news. The two main music licensing agencies in the UK — Phonographic Performance Limited and PRS — have a stranglehold on music use in this country and are stifling creativity.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on YouTube To Block Music Videos In the UK | tags: google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Mar
9
2009
Muziic, is an application that harnesses the power of YouTube to offer music lovers access to the world’s largest searchable database of songs. Muziic lets you stream music from YouTube without ever again having to visit the site. Could this legal application be seen as not so legal by Google?
Comments Off on Will Google Uphold its Motto With Muziic? | tags: database, google, youtube | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
theodp writes “On Thursday, Barack Obama tapped Vivek Kundra for the post of Federal CIO, giving him responsibility for establishing and overseeing enterprise architecture across the federal government. So what might that look like? Well, little more than a month ago Kundra was slated to sing the praises of Google Apps to government officials in a webcast. A Kundra quote from the presentation slides: ‘Why should I spend millions on enterprise apps when I can do it [with Google] at one-tenth cost and ten times the speed? It’s a win-win for me.’ You can follow Kundra’s love affair with Google on YouTube, from his announcement of the Google-Washington DC partnership he brokered through a co-starring role with a Google attorney on a video pitching Google-enabled technology for the Obama Administration. Not surprisingly, some say Obama’s choice of a Google-party-goer who worships Google could cause big headaches for Microsoft.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on America’s New CIO Loves Google | tags: google, microsoft, news, obama, technology, web, youtube | posted in technical news
Mar
2
2009
An anonymous reader writes to tell us that in an apparent response to privacy complaints, the White House has quietly moved off of YouTube as a method for serving the President’s weekly video address. Choosing instead to use a Flash-based solution and Akamai’s content delivery network, this comes just days after YouTube began to roll out their own new policies regarding privacy of visitors.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on White House Ditches YouTube | tags: google, network, news, privacy, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
25
2009
theodp writes “It wasn’t so long ago, but Slate’s Farhad Manjoo notes that The Internet of 1996 is almost unrecognizable compared with what we have today. No YouTube, Digg, Huffington Post, Gawker, Google, Twitter, Facebook, or Wikipedia. In 1996, Americans with Internet access spent fewer than 30 minutes a month surfing the Web and were paying for the Internet by the hour. Today, Nielsen says we spend about 27 hours a month online (present company excepted, of course!).” I thought in 1996 all we did was idle in IRC channels while we wrote code in other terminals.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Jurassic Web | tags: facebook, google, twitter, web, wikipedia, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
23
2009
In a 90-second video that’s popping up on tin-foil-hat sites everywhere, 28-year-old software engineer Adam Chronister is seen cracking open his government-subsidized Magnavox converter, and revealing to the world the tiny video camera and microphone hidden inside.
Comments Off on DTV Converters Have Hidden Cams? YouTube Hoax Fools Gullible | tags: Phone, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
23
2009
In these days of high definition videos everywhere (even YouTube), only the truly geeky would decide to watch their movies in ASCII text in a terminal window. The surprising thing is that some videos are even fairly watchable.
Comments Off on How to Watch Movies in Your Linux Terminal Window | tags: linux, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
18
2009
As The Pirate Bay trial wraps up its third day, the defendants claim that they should have a “safe harbor” from all the alleged infringement in the case, since it was all initiated by users. The Bay, they claim, is just like Google or YouTube, and its admins are schooling the opposition in PR and tactics.
Comments Off on Pirate Bay floats safe harbor claim, owns Big Content on PR | tags: google, pirate bay, youtube | posted in technical news