Sims Digital Media

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Sat 30 August 2008

Web-crawling absurdists tipped as the 'future of comedy'
Source: Media Guardian

Google CEO confident Yahoo! deal will go ahead
Google CEO Eric Schmidt says the company's search ad deal with Yahoo! will go ahead by October, according reports.
Source: NMA

Internet Traffic Begins to Bypass the U.S.
During the Internet’s first three decades, most traffic flowed through the United States. In many cases, data sent between two locations within a given country also passed through the United States. Engineers who help run the Internet said that it would have been impossible for the United States to maintain its hegemony over the long run because of the very nature of the Internet; it has no central point of control.
And now, the balance of power is shifting. Data is increasingly flowing around the United States, which may have intelligence — and conceivably military — consequences.
Source New York Times

Friday, August 29, 2008

Fri, 29 August 2008

Podcasts' popularity surges in US
Internet users are increasingly time-shifting their media consumption by downloading podcasts to watch or listen later, according to a US study.
A research group looking into the habits of web users, the Pew Internet and American Life Project, found that 19% of internet users had downloaded podcasts to listen or view at a later date.
Source: Media Guardian

Does Silicon Valley Face an Innovation Crisis?
Judy Estrin, who has built several Silicon Valley companies and was the chief technology officer of Cisco Systems, says Silicon Valley is in trouble. In a new book, “Closing the Innovation Gap,” which will be in bookstores Tuesday, she writes that the valley’s problems are symptomatic of a crisis in innovation facing the country as a whole.
In an interview in her Menlo Park office Thursday, Ms. Estrin said that the United States is stifling innovation by failing to take risks in sectors from academia to government to venture capital. “I’m not generally an alarmist, but I am really, really concerned about this country,” she said.
Source: NYTimes

Web news aggregators rise despite papers woes
Local newspapers may be faced with hard times, but the ability to get news on a mobile device is flourishing, with several outlets providing context that helps explain particular stories' places in the larger universe of world events.
The need for this becomes more apparent when you consider the thousands of newspapers, broadcasters, wires, and blogs around the globe. Until recently, few sites tried to make it easier for you to negotiate through the thicket.
Source: Reuters

More Artists Steer Clear of iTunes
ITunes has been the runaway hit of the music business, selling more than five billion song downloads since it started five years ago. But a growing number of record companies are trying to steer clear of Apple Inc.'s behemoth music store, because they say selling single songs on iTunes in some cases is crimping overall music sales.

Kid Rock's "Rock 'n Roll Jesus" album was kept off iTunes' virtual shelves. It has nonetheless sold 1.7 million copies in the U.S. since its release last year -- a sizable number for the depressed music industry. Sales of the album have increased in 19 of the past 22 weeks, according to Nielsen SoundScan, vaulting it to No. 3 on the Billboard 200 sales chart. After witnessing the album's performance, his label, Warner Music Group Corp.'s Atlantic Records, last week yanked an album by R&B singer Estelle from the iTunes Store, four months after it went on sale there -- and the same week that one of its songs entered the top-10-selling tracks on Apple's download service.
Source: Wall Street Journal

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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Irish FA Podcast

The first IFA Podcast is ready and should be available on the IFA Web site in a day or two. But you can preview it here.


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Thurs, 28 August 2008

Violent comic book doesn't meet Apple's standards
Apple recently took an axe to Murderdrome, an electronic comic book in its App Store that the company deemed too violent.
Murderdrome, created by the [Northern Ireland] United Kingdom-based Infuriouscomics, had been created especially for the iPhone. Apple turned down Infuriouscomics' application to put the comic in the App Store
Source: CNET

Yahoo! kicks off major ad offensive across Europe
Source: NMA

Virgin Media plans music portal
Source: NMA

Sport and the media are natural bedfellows
Source: Economist

Matchmaking mobiles ring in weddings in India
Looking for a partner? For millions of Indians, taking the first step towards getting married could be as easy as picking up a cellphone. Online matchmaking services in India have announced tie-ups with telecom service providers, enabling subscribers to view profiles of eligible partners on their mobile phone screens.
Source: Reuters

Man arrested for posting Guns N' Roses songs on Web
Federal officials on Wednesday arrested a man on suspicion of violating copyright laws for placing songs on the Internet from an unreleased album by rock band Guns N' Roses.
Source: Reuters

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Tues, 26 August 2008

Strong radio boosts UTV profits
UTV has reported a revenue rise of 8% in the first half of 2008, with a 4% decline in TV ad income offset by solid growth from radio, led by TalkSport. UTV saw pre-tax profit rise by 12% year on year to £10.4m, with operating profits up 32% year on year to £9.9m.
Source: Media Guardian

More from Belfast Telegraph:
Strong performance by UTV as profits hit £10.4m
UTV Media has posted a 12% increase in pre-tax profits to £10.4m before exceptional items for the six months to the end of June.

TV advertising gloom set to continue

Hopes that TV advertising revenue would bounce back from a dire September are fading, with media buying agency sources predicting that ITV1 could face a second consecutive month of double-digit percentage year-on-year decline in October.
Source: Media Guardian

Facebook cuts off Scrabulous after legal complaint
Already blocked from Facebook users in the United States and Canada, "Scrabulous" — the online imitation of the popular Scrabble board game — has been yanked by Facebook in all other countries except India in response to a copyright tussle over the game.
Source: Mercury News

Monday, August 25, 2008

Mon 25 August 2008

Olympics prove a winner for NBC ratings
The 209m viewers for an unprecedented 3,600 hours of coverage on seven NBCU channels in the first 15 days of the Beijing Games put it on track to surpass the 1996 Atlanta Olympics as the most watched event in US television history, Jeff Zucker told the Financial Times.
NBCU had seen a healthy return on its $894m investment in exclusive rights to the Games ...
Source: FT

Web Audience for Games Soars for NBC and Yahoo
The ratings for NBC’s television coverage of the Games were record-breaking this month. But the extent to which the Internet served as a supplement to television was unprecedented, and there were two clear winners: NBC’s own Web site and Yahoo’s Olympics section.
Source: New York Times

BBC accused of distorting market
Speaking at the Edinburgh television festival, Alex Graham, chief executive of the programme-maker Wall to Wall and former head of Pact, the independent producers’ association, said the BBC was in danger of incurring “its own little cultural version of sub-prime lending” because of the unfettered activities of its commercial arm.
As an example, he pointed to the rapid growth of BBC Worldwide ...
Source: FT

Poor earning virtual gaming gold
Nearly 500,000 people in developing nations earn a wage making virtual goods in online games to sell to players, a study has found.
Research by Manchester University shows that the practice, known as gold-farming, is growing rapidly.
The industry, about 80% based in China, employs about 400,000 people who earn £77 per month on average.
Source: BBC Technology

Digital accounts for quarter of WPP revenues
WPP has reported that 25% of its revenues are now derived from direct and digital practices.
The advertising group’s half-year results showed billings up 11.8% on last year at £16.87bn, with revenue up 14.3% to £3.34m and profit up 18.4% to £453.4m.
Source: New Media Age

Lively, Google’s virtual world, has been a flop
Millions of people log into virtual worlds such as World of Warcraft and Second Life every day, but they require special software and their complexity can be daunting to newcomers. So Google’s launch of Lively, in July, seemed to have great potential. But in the weeks since it opened its virtual doors, Lively has remained surprisingly lifeless, hosting a dwindling number of users and prompting a string of negative reviews.
Source: Economist

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Saturday, August 23, 2008

The Irish FA Podcast

Working the the Irish Football Association (IFA) I've produced our first podcast. It will not be available until next week. There are a few tweeks to be made to the website. But it can be downloaded from here. It's only 5 minutes long, so the download is fairly fast. Or you can listen streamed on Odeo.

The IFA will be having one podcast per month. And from the beginning of September there will be a weekly podcast for the Digital Circle.