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ABC’s Sweeney: Success = free, ad-supported TV episodes via the Web

I’ve written previously about ABC’s success providing current, popular TV shows on the web had been a success, saying that 50 million TV episodes requested by web viewers since September, and that “free, ad-supported shows are attracting a younger audience that’s more comfortable watching shows on a computer screen than their parents might have been.”


Once again, my new, favourite exec in Hollywood (with exception to my friends from ReplayTV, Kim, Rob and Craig amoung others), Anne Sweeney, co-chair of Disney Media Networks, is touting the Web success that advertisers and local affiliates are seeing with free rebroadcasts of popular TV shows.


Reuters reports today that Sweeney “told an investor conference that Disney’s ABC Television Network’s ad-supported broadband player, which allows viewers to watch episodes of prime time shows on the Internet, sold out its advertising space for the fourth quarter of last year and the first quarter of this one.”


CEO Robert Iger said that his company thinks that “it is increasing the pie of media consumption” rather than cutting into TV ratings or DVD sales.


No kidding.


I think the same premise with TV shows via the web will parallel the success of music subscription services, as I noted a year ago:



“I would venture to guess that we will see a significant increase when the analysts run the numbers this March, with significant increases: I’ll go out on a limb and estimate that we’ll see a 25% increase YOY (a significant rise over the previous YOY period) of music stored on computers. And that the next billion tunes will chalk up at a faster pace than the first billion… but iTunes may have to play the game of “follow the leader” and offer subscription services of their own in order to get there.”  


Providing “free” (or in the case of music, monthly subscriptions which allows me a buffet approach to listening) is a great way to expose me to shows I would not normally watch. Making episodes free on the web may also entice viewers to watch on the big (TV) screen and as such see the supporting advertising. Not that I’ll be tuning into Ugly Betty any time soon, but I may tune into past episodes of something else.


Back in my days at ReplayTV oh, so many years ago, one of the primary benefits of the DVR was the opportunity to provide more targeted advertising, given you know a) where a DVR resides (by zip code and area code, as privacy polices allow), b) an idea (if you log) of the shows the viewer records and watches, and c) what ads they skip or watch. Networks and their affiliates are again realizing the potential of a more mass-market vehicle — in this case, the web — to benefit from and incorporate local advertising into the TV programming now available via Web viewing.


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New Consumer Lifestyles portal now online

Tree popped up along 156thAs I mentioned earlier this week, we regained power late Tuesday and we’re back in our home. Seems that most of our friends now have their power restored, too. You can still see examples of the impact around town and Microsoft main campus in Redmond. To gain an appreciation of the impact of the storm, the tree at right is about 18-20′ high and just popped up, root ball and all. I saw three or four just in one block, and a number of fallen trees around campus. In our neighbourhood, one very large tree that fell in the storm missed a friend’s home by just a few feet.



Also of interest (and making a big impact) is the new Microsoft Digital Lifestyle portal for consumers, now live in the UK at http://www.microsoft.com/uk/lifestyle (also in New Zealand at http://www.microsoft.com/nz/lifestyle).



“By bringing together the consumer value proposition and scenarios, integrating with the product groups, leveraging our best practices and keeping in line with technical requirements, we will be able to tell the Microsoft story in a consistent way and one that can be replicated WW and maintained efficiently.”


 

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Try out the new Microsoft.com home page

You can try out the new Microsoft.com home page by going to http://labs.microsoft.com/en/us/. It’s slick, fast, easy-to-use and visually appealing.


Joe Wilcox at Microsoft Watch noticed:  



“The software giant is testing a new home page, and do I detect some AJAX? The new Microsoft.com also introduces visual concepts, like thumbnails, similar to those used in Windows Vista.


“The shared Windows Vista design heritage is one of approach. It’s quite brilliant, if intentional, and lucky, if accidental. One way for Microsoft to take back the Web–rather than Google and Web 2.0 companies taking the desktop–is to unify the user experience across its desktop software, Websites and Web services. Office 2007 and Windows Vista offer an unprecedented number of visual cues, at least compared to their forebears.”  


Kudos to the Microsoft.Com team!



 

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Of interest: Zune podcasts on the NBC Nightly News

Last night, at the end of NBC Nightly News broadcast, anchor Brian Williams announced the launch of the new Nightly News Podcast, which he said is available for iPod and Microsoft’s new Zune… this from the Nightly News web page


 






Nightly News Podcasts


 











Watch when & how you want


Download or subscribe to the Nightly News video or audio podcasts.
Watch or listen to the entire broadcast on your PC or portable media player. After 10pm ET weekdays.



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Web 2.0 is so yesterday: the Internet as your personal advisor (Seattle Times)

The Seattle Times has an article today on the new ways that web companies are devising ways “to mine human intelligence” through te semantic web, or Web 3.0. Here I was, thinking that Web 2.0 was the razor’s edge…  



“Their goal is to add a layer of meaning to the existing Web that would make it less of a catalog and more of a guide — and provide the foundation for systems that can reason in a human fashion. That level of artificial intelligence, with machines doing the thinking instead of simply following commands, has eluded researchers for more than 50 years.


“The effort, referred to as Web 3.0, is in its infancy, and the idea has given rise to skeptics who have called it an unobtainable vision. But the underlying technologies are rapidly gaining adherents, at big companies such as IBM and Google and at small ones. Their projects often center on simple, practical uses, from producing vacation recommendations to predicting the next hit song.”


The article references that we can see some examples of this Web 3.0 potential in new offerings such as UW’s Knowitall, which is financed by Google. Opine is a mining system uses Knowitall abilities to ferret out the information you would want to see from various online resources, like customer feedback and product review websites. And TextRunner “searches 77,652,885 tuples extracted on the topic of nutrition, and sorts the results by probability.”


I believe that a tuple is essentially records housed in a database with at least two components or more. And a good “Word of the day” candidate. 😉