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July 14, 2006

Video-sharing sites raise concerns over crude clips

The explosion in online video-sharing sites, where clips of any nature can be easily uploaded for the world to see, has become the latest challenge for parents trying to protect their children and for Web sites coping with obscene submittals.

Popular Web sites such as MySpace, YouTube, Yahoo, Google and soon also Microsoft Corp.'s MSN are featuring user-generated videos that quickly have become a phenomenal form of entertainment. YouTube, the leading video site that helped catapult the genre with its public launch in December, attracted more than 20 million visitors in May. The company says it averages 50,000 new video uploads per day.

The infectiousness of the video-sharing sites -- users can quickly e-mail friends and family to alert them to favorite videos -- has created feverish sensations: The uncanny star of "The Evolution of Dance," a comedic performance of different dance styles, has amassed more than 25 million page views in two months to become the all-time most viewed video on YouTube, and the explosive backyard science experiment of mixing Mentos candies with Diet Coke has snowballed into hundreds of copycats, remixes and spin-offs.

You can view more info at CNN.


Category : Industry News

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July 13, 2006

Microsoft developing portable music device

Finally, Microsoft wants to get a share on portable music device which is now dominated by Apple's iPod.

With the help of its popular Windows Media Player and MSN music service, Microsoft is very likely to gain a relative share in a short time.

Until now, Microsoft has stayed out of the digital music player market while licensing its Windows Media Player technology to Creative Technology Ltd., iRiver Inc., Samsung and other device manufacturers.

But those companies have struggled to compete with Apple Computer Inc.'s line of iPods, which have dominated the market partly because of their seamless integration with the iTunes Music Store.

IPods account for roughly 80 percent of the portable music player market, while iTunes has sold more than a billion tracks since it launched three years ago.

"The combination of the independent manufacturers trying to use the Microsoft technology to integrate with independent vendors such as Napster, Yahoo Music and Rhapsody ... has resulted in an experience for the consumer that simply does not measure up to the experience of the iPod and iTunes," said Phil Leigh, an analyst with Inside Digital Media.

The stakes for Microsoft extend beyond the online music market, Leigh said.

"It's becoming increasingly evident that video is migrating to the Internet, and Apple is getting a lead there as well," Leigh said. "That is a lead that Microsoft cannot afford to let them build upon and maintain."

More deep analysis is available at CNN.


Category : Non-DVD Tech News

Posted by dvd software at 09:08 AM | Comments (0)