Presidential parody draws millions of viewers
News This land is your land, this land is my land, and during the month of July, the landscape of online political satire belonged squarely to JibJab. Upon strolling into the offices of JibJab Media on Monday, company co-founder Gregg Spiridellis was...
[August 17, 2004, 9:55]
Viewers Choice: IPv6
White Papers Offered in response to viewer surveys, this webcast is devoted entirely to a deep technical exploration of the next generation of Internet Protocol. The presenters of this webcast will reveal everything one needs to know about IPv6.
[March 24, 2008, 0:02]
Bin Laden tape draws Net viewers
News Web sites on Thursday raced to post a grainy and virtually inaudible video allegedly linking Osama bin Laden to the 11 September terror attacks. MSNBC.com Webcast live the poor, amateur-quality footage, which shows bin Laden eating dinner at an...
[December 14, 2001, 10:32]
EV Green Bar Viewers Register 87% More Often for Papercheck
White Papers Papercheck is a San Francisco-based company that offers document editing and proofreading services, especially to academic users, over the Internet. The company wanted to eliminate credibility as an issue with customers and get more site visitors...
[November 7, 2008, 23:00]
Akamai Delivers Over 6 Gbps of Live Adobe Flash Video Streaming to 23,000 Simultaneous Viewers for Stickam
White Papers Off late, Los Angeles-based radio station KLOS and The Mark & Brian Radio Program ran a contest pair up two strangers who would ultimately wed. The station turned to Stickam for access to two-way live communications enabled by Stickam's rich...
[January 9, 2009, 0:00]
Google tests ads on YouTube mobile site
News The test "will give [YouTube viewers] a new way to interact with content on the go, while allowing us to learn how video viewers engage with mobile advertising. Google, eager to make money from YouTube, is testing ads for the mobile version of the...
[August 19, 2008, 10:09]
Candor Gallery
Downloads The Candor Gallery Widget provides artists and viewers alike with a rotating display of artwork which is submitted by their peers. Viewers can always learn more about the artist and his or her work by clicking on the image which will launch that...
[February 12, 2007, 6:00]
Open Source Strategies for Educational Multimedia
White Papers ePresence is an educational multimedia system for producing interactive webcasts that are accessible in real-time by remote viewers and retrospectively by archive viewers who can browse and search for what they want to see.
[February 5, 2009, 0:00]
Not possible on a Mac
Blog Comment The difference between classic fm and the BBC is that all TV viewers pay a licence fee (tax) towards the public broadcaster and therefore the broadcaster will have to provide content to all paying viewers, they would be open to criticism and/or...
[June 15, 2008, 18:48]
QuikViewer
Downloads Sure, there's plenty of other image viewers, but most of them hog the memory or bog down the computer. Also, the time it takes in QuikViewer to open an image is significantly less than most image viewers, including QuickTime itself!
[January 18, 2003, 6:00]
Major League Baseball takes swing at Sling Media
News Sling enables TV viewers to access their set-top or TiVo boxes from anywhere in the world via any device that connects to the Web. MLB says that's fine, but if viewers want to watch on multiple devices, they have to pay multiple times.
[June 7, 2006, 11:10]
Internet users will have control of Big Brother cameras
News Big Brother will put viewers in the director's chair this Friday when the programme's Web site goes live with groundbreaking Internet technology. The second instalment of last summer's voyeuristic experiment in television will let viewers control...
[May 22, 2001, 16:33]
A Year Ago: Digital TV 'tax' slammed by media alliance
News The government will be guilty of "inconsistency and favouritism towards the BBC" if it approves an increase in the TV license fee for viewers of digital TV according to an alliance of broadcasters. TV watchdog, the Independent Television Commission...
[August 1, 2000, 7:00]
2000 Roundup: Big Brother craze hits Britain
News Millions of viewers immersed themselves in the lives of ten contestants who willingly renounced their privacy for nine weeks living under the scrutiny of myriad high-tech surveillance equipment. Watching their every move using Web cams, viewers...
[December 24, 2000, 6:16]
Techie comedy draws flak and some fans
News According to industry figures, 1.8 million viewers watched the first episode, which is relatively poor return for the prime 2100 slot. AA Gill wrote in The Sunday Times that one problem with the programme is that a lot of viewers, including himself...
[February 6, 2006, 17:15]
A Year Ago: Government panel recommends digital poll tax
News The row over the future of digital TV -- described as the fourth broadcasting revolution -- hotted up Thurday as the government-appointed Davies panel recommended an increase in the licence fee for digital viewers.
[August 8, 2000, 7:06]
Online papers prevail, Star plans to shine on Web
News It said it has over 30,000 readers a day, and regularly launches new sites, such as its Fantasy League, which is based on the Fantasy Football section of the paper where viewers can pick their own players and teams.
[August 13, 1997, 12:13]
'Free' digital TV arrives this week
News The Freeview service, available through digital terrestrial television (DTT) adapters, will be the first time viewers will have access to a wide range of digital television programming without needing to pay a subscription fee.
[October 28, 2002, 15:50]
Chicken Tonight goes interactive
News Chicken Tonight -- the cooking sauce famed for its catchy "I feel like chicken tonight" theme tune -- will become the first product to offer viewers a link through to interactive TV. Viewers of BSkyB will be given the option to click on the ad and...
[March 29, 2000, 10:08]
Broadcasters question BBC's role in digital age
News At the time, the government-appointed panel -- headed by economist Gavyn Davies -- sparked controversy by proposing an extra £24 for digital viewers. He believes the BBC should not be using license fee funding to create channels such as News 24...
[February 22, 2000, 11:48]



