Chip Tarver's Vlogging News

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Chicago Auto Insurance Required!

Chicago Auto Insurance Required!


A friend suggested I look at this Chicago auto insurance site, and it is a real good site... and another good Chicago auto insurance site is there as well...

Chip

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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Laptop Notebooks Available

Laptop Notebooks Available


Are you interested in finding current info on laptop notebooks?

Look no further. Click the link here...

Chip

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Sunday, March 28, 2010

Laptop Notebooks News Here

Laptop Notebooks News Here

I found some new ways to get laptop notebooks. Here they are if you want to see them...

Chip

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Monday, March 22, 2010

AZ, and FL Refi Deals and Sources Prevalent?

AZ, and FL Refi Deals and Sources Prevalent?

Here is a great new page I just found that gives you a lot of current info, data, and deals on AZ and FL refi [refinance] sources.

Check it out now by clicking that link.

Chip

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Sunday, April 02, 2006

Vlogging News - Vlogging Takes Off

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Vlogging takes off and boosts hope for citizen journalism
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Amanda Congdon, co-writer of "Rocketboom," discusses the surge in interest surrounding "vlogging," or blogging with video content, usually in the form of a video diary or reality show.

For the rest of the story, go to http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com/vlog_news_page_5.htm.

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More soon -
Chip Tarver
http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com
chip at firstcontactsecrets dot com

Monday, March 27, 2006

Vlogging News - Premium Video Content

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Premium Video Content Providers Wanted: Video Podcasting
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A new report from In-Stat indicates “video content services will become the leading-edge portion of all subscription services offered via the Internet.”

It is estimated by the year 2009 it will generate a retail value of 2.6 billion dollars. Business owners can tap into that income stream by providing unique niche video content via an rss feed for free and for subscription based delivery.

For the rest of the story, go to http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com/vlog_news_page_5.htm.

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More soon -
Chip Tarver
http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com
chip at firstcontactsecrets dot com

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Vlogging News - India, not China

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'India most important online market, not China'
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When Leonard Brody talks about business, a lot of people in Canada take notice.

They listen because he is one of Canada's young technology entrepreneurs, someone who also co-wrote "Everything I Needed to Know About Business...I Learned from a Canadian," a book that sold in fairly large quantities.

For the rest of the story, go to http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com/vlog_news_page_5.htm.

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More soon -
Chip Tarver
http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com
chip at firstcontactsecrets dot com

Saturday, March 18, 2006

Vlogging News - Google's Week

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This Week In Google: From Desktop To Demo
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It's only February, but it's becoming apparent that Google is going to dominate the news of 2006 much like another well-known vendor did 10 years ago. (Hint: They're in Redmond, Wash.)

In January, the Google buzz centered on news that the U.S. Justice Department had been seeking search data from the search engine giant and from Yahoo, MSN, and America Online. Google received a good chunk of positive press for resisting the government subpoena.

For the rest of the story, go to http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com/vlog_news_page_4.htm.

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More soon -
Chip Tarver
http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com
chip at firstcontactsecrets dot com

Friday, March 10, 2006

Vlogging News - Your Closeup

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Vlogging News - Your Closeup
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Ready for your close-up? Here come the vlogs

Adding video to blogs is getting easier, but bigger problems lie ahead.

Can’t stand to hear another word about the wonders of blogging? Well, brace yourself, because here comes Version 2.0: vlogging.

Yes, that’s vlogging as in Vladivostok, thus creating a neologism even more awkward than blog. On its surface the vlog is simple: adding video to personal Weblog publishing. For now, vlogging remains an embryonic phenomenon with probably less than a few thousand regular practitioners worldwide. But it already raises a raft of interesting issues ranging from intellectual property protection to the future of text on the Web.

For the rest of the story, go to http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com/vlog_news_page_4.htm.

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More soon -
Chip Tarver
http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com
chip at firstcontactsecrets dot com

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Vlogging News - Book Copies Available Now

Vlogging News - New Book Review Copies Finally Available

This is a short post today.

Edition #1 of the iPods and Online Video eBook is ready. There are a total of only 20 copies available for only $19.95 (first-come, first served.)

The book will retail for somewhere between $49 and $99 once it is released. This offer is good through midnight 3/15/06 - or until the 20 review copies are gone - whichever comes first.

Think about grabbing one fast ... at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com.

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More soon -
Chip Tarver
chip at firstcontactsecrets dot com

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Vlogging News - Festivals Covered

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Story courtesy of http://sltrib.com/entertainment/ci_3426713


Video blogs, podcasts cover fests

By Bob Mims and Vince Horiuchi The Salt Lake Tribune

Thanks to technological advances, there's more than one way to savor the Sundance Film Festival, and to an extent, the alternative Slamdance Film Festival as well.

Two companies are working together to offer a video blog - or vlog - containing Sundance news, celebrity updates and editorial posts in high-definition.

DivX Inc. (http://www.divx.ocm), a provider of video-sharing tools, and Flavorpill (http://www.flavorpill.net), a publisher of e-mail culture magazines online, are partners in Flavorpill Sundance, which can be viewed at http://www.flavorpill.net/sundance.

Contributors to the vlog are equipped with digital camcorders. The raw video is edited and uploaded to Flavorpill, providing the site with almost-live, on-the-run coverage.

A visit to Flavorpill Sundance found links to film listings, interviews with stars, and items on parking irritation. One entry, "Brokeback Utah," noted how in the wake of the ranch-hand romance "Brokeback Mountain," this year's festival was chock-full of independent, gay-lesbian fare - in all, 19 features. Meanwhile, the Slamdance Film Festival is introducing films and festival atmosphere through MP3 players and Apple's iTunes Music Store.

Slamdance has started Slamdance Podcast, a collection of movie trailers and festival highlights from past years to give video iPodders a flavor of what happens there. It also is expected to post daily video podcasts by film directors on their exploits in Park City. You can get it through Apple's iTunes (http://www.itunes.com).

The podcasts are made for Apple's fifth-generation video iPod, which can download and display video on a 2 1/2 -inch screen.

"Podcasting can be kind of its own mini-art-form," said festival co-founder Dan Mirvish. "As our filmmakers go through the week, we told them, 'Guys, bring your digital cameras and shoot stuff, and we can put it up.' " The project began with festival organizers asking the makers of this year's films to make their own two- to three-minute trailers for the podcast.

"Their goal is if you get enough attention on podcasts and iTunes, then all of a sudden people see there can be an audience for this film," Mirvish said. The festival expects to post new podcasts daily, and they also will include festival highlights throughout the day.

More articles like this are at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com/ipods_and_onlinevideo_master_articles_page_2.htm.

More soon -
Chip Tarver

Monday, February 27, 2006

Vlogging News - Mike Wendland: Podcasts

Story courtesy of http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060131/ENT0505/601310385/1122


Mike Wendland: Podcasts: You can be a star

BY MIKE WENDLAND - January 31, 2006

Thanks to a flood of new Internet technology applications and the rapidly evolving podcasting craze, it's now possible for anyone, in just a few minutes, to put together reasonable online versions of radio and TV broadcasts.

Video podcasting -- also known as vlogging, for video blogging -- is pretty simple to do nowadays.

Step 1: Get a microphone
The first thing you'll want is a microphone. Pick up a USB headset. I like the Plantronics and Logitech brands; you can find them at electronics stores for around $50.

If you want a really professional sound (headsets can make you sound a bit nasal), Griffin Technology (www.griffintechnology.com) makes an iMic USB Audio Interface for $40 and a $15 Lapel Mic lavalier-style stereo microphone. Better yet is the $149 Snowball omnidirectional desk mike from Blue Microphones (www.bluemic.com).

Step 2: Recording device
Then you'll need a way to record what you say. Whether you have a Mac or PC, I suggest the free Audacity cross-platform audio recorder and editor (http://audacity.sourceforge.net/).
Mac users can use the Garageband program that comes with Apple's $79 iLife suite of multimedia applications; it does a great job.

Use skype to record others
Want to have guests on your podcast? Download the free Skype (www.skype.com) Voice over Internet Protocol application. Recording Skype calls can be tricky. I have two applications to recommend, both available at www.Pamela-systems.com. For PC users, get Pamela Pro. It's free for 30 days; after that, it's $21.50.

For Macs, the program I like the best for recording Skype calls is WireTap Pro. It costs $19.

Step 3: Editing
Record your phone interviews and drop them right into Audacity, where they can be edited and tweaked for your podcast.

Vlogging
Then try vlogging -- doing video versions of the podcast. If you have a PC, download a program called Vlog It! (www.seriousmagic.com). It costs $49.

For Macs, the best package I've seen is Videocue. (www.varasoftware.com). It comes in two versions, a $40 basic package or a professional version for $90.

Both of these programs let you drag and drop video and sound and graphics into a column on the right side of the screen. On the left, type in your script. Then plug in a Web cam -- or even your home camcorder --and the text scrolls like a teleprompter.

Camera
Any Web cam will do, but Apple's iSight camera ($149) comes with a built-in microphone that does an excellent job. Add Griffin's SightLight lighting kit ($49) and you get great quality video of your on-camera anchoring.

Getting it online
How do you get your podcast or video report online? If you have your own blog, grab the file and embed it yourself.

The best hosting site I've found is called Audioblog (www.audioblog.com). It costs $49 for a year's service.

Contact MIKE WENDLAND at 313-222-8861 or mwendland@freepress.com

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more soon.

Chip

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Vlogging News - Mind Blogging

Story courtesy of http://www.dailypress.com/features/lifestyle/cyberlife/dp-50344sy0jan30,1,1645484.story?page=1&cset=true&ctrack=1&coll=dp-features-cyberlife


MIND BLOGGING

By Lisa Deaderick - January 30, 2006

First there were Web logs, now there are video versions. Local bloggers tell us which are particularly entertaining.

When it makes its way to your email, there's a high likelihood that most people in the department have seen it. The guy singing, badly, the lyrics to his own song. Or the friends who got together to spoof some pop group. Or the young woman providing technology tips in three minutes or less. It's the vlog - video Web log.Blogs, Web logs minus the video, have been popular for years.

They're online journals in which people post their thoughts or observations on whatever they feel like. It looks like vlogs are the next wave of online interaction and instead of reading about someone's random thoughts or moments of creative inspiration, you can watch a video clip.Just about anything qualifies. Some are funny and involve singing, lip-syncing and loosely scripted random acts. Others are instructional or educational, showing people how they figured out their new electric grill or telling someone about an easy-to-use software package.

The video side of it is getting to be a big enough deal that Vh1 has partnered with IFILM to air an entire series to silly online video, called "Web Junk 20." Even the masters at MySpace.com have added a new feature this year that lets users upload their own videos.We found a few bloggers on the Peninsula who range from focusing on a specific area of interest to letting the people who care know what's new with them. A couple of them have been quoted in the Daily Press before, commenting on matters of music and popular culture.

We've also included a couple of vlogs from outsiders because they're funny and because we had a hard time finding local vloggers. So, if you know of any, tell us.

Best Tool for the Job by Marcus VorwallerWhere on earth: Newport NewsAnd in cyberspace: marcusvorwaller.com/blogAbout: Computer stuff. It's primarily a guide to finding the best software or offering tips for different online issues. Marcus will tell you how to find a domain name for your Web site, alternatives to the latest hyped-up Web framework or how to record a successful podcast. There are the occasional huffs about poor service on an airline or the new joy he's found in a trip to Burger King through the eyes of his toddler son.

Still, the software stuff comes up a lot, and it's helpful.Comments: Since a lot of his posts are lists, people will add to them. His blog is usually about software, so people may add programs they think are useful. Or if he goes on vacation, readers may tell him whether they've been there and what he should check out.Coming to video? He's not sure about video, but he'll definitely do podcasting, though it may not be on marcusvorwaller.com.

To him, video is too much for one person between the filming, editing and posting.Bookmark factor: Medium. He's pretty helpful, especially if you're somewhere in between a technophobe and technophile.A little about MarcusAge: 28First computer: A Gateway with an Intel Pentium II processor in 1998Time to post: Lately, he posts twice a month. When he started, he had more to write about, but that's changed some.Some favorite blogs: http://www.techcrunch.com/, http://www.lifehacker.com/, http://www.enrichr.com/ and www.digg.com

Rock n Roll in the Real World by Matthew CoxWhere on earth: Newport NewsAnd in cyberspace: http://www.keyofe.blogspot.com/About: Lots of music with some television, movies and funny cartoons tossed in.Comments: People tell him how much they like his posts and music choices. He's even beginning to get a lot of e-mails from people in promotions about music and videos online that they think he should check out.Coming to video? He'd love to, though it may not be steady like Rocketboom or The Richard Show. He just doesn't have the Web space to store video yet.Bookmark factor: Medium to High.

What's nice about Matthew is that his blog isn't just an excuse to see how many acerbic one-liners he can come up with. When he really likes something (NBC's "The Office"), he gushes endearingly. When he really doesn't like something ("The Family Stone"), his disdain is quick and to the point.A little about MatthewAge: 28First computer: Tandy 1000Time to post: Not every day, more like three times a week; posted every day when he has something to say; started out planning to post only once a weekSome favorite blogs: stereogum, pink is the new blog and relativediamond.comHill in a Handbag by Hillary FrankWhere on earth: Newport NewsAnd in cyberspace: http://www.hillary.typepad.com/About: Random things.

Lots of music, some politics and current events. The latest posts have been birthday wishes to celebrities and the occasional person she knows. Some are questions of the day, requests for wardrobe help or mourning the loss of a great musician.Comments: She gets a lot of comments from her friends, just for pointing out something they were interested in. The stuff on her blog is mostly about her day-to-day life. So, if she mentions getting her hair colored, someone may tell her to go for it. Or if she posts a link to an article she found online, people will thank her.Coming to video?

She doesn't think so because she's not really familiar with vlogging. Plus, she can't think of anything she'd want to record.Bookmark factor: Low to medium. Some of the questions of the day are fun, and so are the posts about concerts or the guy who discovered the effects of LSD. Still, it's mostly an update for family and friends about Hillary, which isn't a bad thing. It's actually the point.

A little about HillaryAge: 32First computer: Commodore 64Time to post: Try to post every day, for a really long time never missed a day but during the holidays traveled a lotSome favorite blogs: pattyculliton.blogspot.com, taraschultz.blogspot.com, bluenation.blogs.com and http://www.theadambomb.com/ are a few.A FEW VLOGSVia Antarctica by a group of researchers from the College of William and MaryWhere on earth: Antarctica and WilliamsburgAnd in cyberspace: www.wm.edu/news/index.php?id=5503About: The crossing of the Drake Passage to Anvers Island by scientists, student researchers and Cindy Van Dover, associate professor of biology.

It's a five-week research cruise led by Hugh Ducklow, professor of marine biology at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science. They're traveling the peninsula to explore the region's ecological systems.Comments: They don't have that option on the site, but they have recorded more than 600 hits from on and off campus from people visiting the site to watch clips of episodes.Bookmark factor: Medium. It's very educational and the landscape is beautiful, but it'd be nice to see the researchers and scientists, too.King of CamKaraoke, aka Fred MarshallWhere on earth: Indiana, Pa.And in cyberspace: www.camkaraoke.com

About: Singing along with his favorite songs from the 1980s and 1990s in a white T-shirt with a costume accessory here and there, depending on the song. Can he sing? Nah, but that's what makes him hilarious. He really gets into it with the chair dancing and facial expressions. It's almost like catching someone groovin' real hard in their car at a stoplight.Comments: Fred sometimes wonders how many people are actually working while they're in the office because he gets a lot of feedback from people who are at work telling him his videos brightened their day.

Others aren't quite as kind."What's funny to me is what people say about me," he said, laughing. "Like that their ears are bleeding (from the singing) or that it makes their cat scream."Bookmark factor: High. Fred's antics elicit pure laughter.Back Dormitory Boys (known in most Internet searches as the Two Chinese Boys)Where on earth: China, reportedly at an art school in the Guangzhou provinceAnd in cyberspace: twochineseboys.blogspot.com, but the rumor is that someone other than the Back Dorm Boys started this site.

The duo's official site is http://edu.sina.com/.cn/y/focus/housheboy/index.shtml, but you won't understand it unless you're fluent in Chinese.About: Super fun lip syncing of the Backstreet Boys. It's comedy. Their faces twisted in emotion and the friend in the background who ignores him while he's on the computer. Too funny.Comments: People love them, more than the Backstreet Boys.

Some have gone so far as to say that the Back Dorm Boys' renditions of the songs are better than the originals, and the guys aren't even singing.Bookmark factor: High. They really are entertaining and the videos never stop being funny.

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Lots more articles and reviews like this are at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com.

Chip Tarver

Vlogging News - Newbie Tips

Story courtesy of http://www.pcworld.com/howto/article/0,aid,124053,pg,1,00.asp

Newbie Tips, New Year Predictions

Richard Baguley, special to PC World - December 30, 2005

Here are a few tips for getting the most from your new camcorder. Plus, predictions for 2006.
If you were very, very good this year, Santa might have brought you a digital camcorder for Christmas. He might have even brought you one if you weren't so good: In November, I saw a survey that found that 6 percent of those polled were considering giving a video camera as a gift. If you're one of the lucky recipients, read on: Here are my tips for getting the most out of your shiny new camcorder.

Camcorder Tips and Tricks
Make a short video. You've just gotten a fancy new toy, so make the most of it: Don't just point it at people and yell at them to do something interesting. Instead, sit down and think about what short videos you can make with your new camcorder. Why not, for instance, replace thank-you letters with a thank-you video? Film the kids saying thanks and playing with the gifts, then edit it, post it on an online video hosting service such as Ourmedia or Youtube, and send the link to friends and family. The video you shoot doesn't have to be an epic: Creating a short movie is the best way to get familiar with your camcorder and video editing.

Include the family. You want everyone in your household to share in the fun, so make sure that everyone gets a turn in front of and behind the camcorder. Even young children get a big kick out of making videos, and can use a camcorder with appropriate supervision. Why not get the kids to write a short film or act out a scene from a favorite book and film it? If you then edit the video and preserve it, it could make for great blackmail material when they start bringing home their boyfriends or girlfriends in a few years.

Get familiar with your camcorder. Now is the time to shoot lots of video. Try shooting in different situations so you know which modes work best in different lighting conditions. Experiment with rapidly turning the video camera on, so you can quickly capture the moment if something interesting happens; you'll soon work out how to turn it on and start shooting without having to think about which button to press.

Don't be a Camcorder Bore. However, just because you can make a video of everything doesn't mean that you should. Even though I write about camcorders and video, I hate it when I go to an event and someone points a camcorder at me without asking; it's just rude. I'm all in favor of recording special moments, but make sure that everyone is okay with it. Use discretion in capturing video: Remember that not every moment has to be recorded. Sometimes, a memory is better than a DVD.

The Year Ahead
With the new year just a few days away, it's time to think about what 2006 holds for camcorders and video. Here are my predictions for four big trends that we will see this year.

1. More high-definition camcorders. Sony broke new ground in 2005 with the HC1, the first consumer HD camcorder. It won't be the last; over the next year we'll see rival models from other manufacturers, and prices for HD camcorders will fall. But I don't anticipate that they will replace standard-definition camcorders quite yet: They'll remain high-end consumer models aimed at early adopters throughout 2006.

2. More hard drive-based camcorders. JVC was the first to jump into the category with its GZ-MG line in 2005, but in 2006 we'll see more manufacturers offering camcorders that replace videotape with a hard drive. These models offer some of the advantages of DVD (speedy access, no accidentally overwriting the video) along with the ability to store lots of video in a space not much bigger than a videotape. Although the videotape era is far from over, hard drive-based camcorders will be grabbing a large chunk of the market.

3. More integration with online video. More and more people are putting their videos online, and this trend is going to accelerate. I'll bet that sometime in 2006 we'll see a camcorder that can cut the PC out of this equation: You'll be able to capture a video, then press a button to upload it to an online video hosting service, ready to watch.

4. Video blogging goes mainstream. Video blogging is one of the big success stories of 2005: More and more people are starting to document their lives using online video blogs. This trend is going to continue as online blogging services add video options: Typepad already offers a free video blog service through Videoegg, and more sites will be doing the same soon. I'll bet that we'll see the same mainstream adoption we've seen with podcasts: Before you know it, celebrities will have their own video blogs. And that'll probably also be a sign that this particular bandwagon has been well and truly jumped on, and that the really cool kids have moved onto something different.

Richard Baguley is fond of predicting the future (albeit with limited success when it comes to lottery numbers). He blogs about camcorders and video at CamcorderInfo.com.

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Lots more articles and reviews like this are at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com.

Chip Tarver

Vlogging News - Google Video

Story courtesy of http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/01/new-year-for-google-video.html


A new year for Google Video

Sanjay Raman, Google Video Team - 1/09/2006

Till now, Google Video has been about watching videos and clips online, which is really convenient for videos like this. But wouldn't it be awesome to watch that episode of CSI that you missed when even your trusty DVR failed you? This is one reason we've launched the Google Video store, where you can rent or buy from such well-known media partners as CBS, the NBA, The Charlie Rose Show, and SONY BMG.We’re not only about mainstream content, though -– we have thousands of titles available (and more coming every day) from every imaginable type of producer, including this 1896 clip of the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II – one of the earliest known moving images. We’re especially pleased to offer such quality indie features as Ben Rekhi’s Waterborne (Drops Entertainment) and Lerone Wilson’s Aardvark’d: 12 Weeks with Geeks (Boondoggle Films).

When we launched our Upload Program earlier this year, people sent in a huge number of free and compelling videos. But since there's a ton of video that can't be offered for free, we built the Google Video store to give content owners the option to charge for downloads if they'd like. This means producers large and small can distribute their great content in an easy, secure way. Some of your favorite prime time and classic TV shows, sports, music videos, and documentaries are at your fingertips.

Want to see how Shaq scored 30 points last night? Download and watch it (and every NBA game for the rest of the season) through Google Video.You can play all the videos you download using the all-new Google Video Player. We're especially pleased about the thumbnail navigation for browsing an entire video so you can play any portion with a single click. And there's another thing: if the content is not copy-protected, you can take your favorite videos with you on your iPod or PSP -- our "to go" option.

Since it's so early in the year, here's a resolution we intend to keep: make sure new features and content continue to roll out, so that you think Google Video is one of the best ways to find video on the web.These video providers are getting us off to a great start:• Aquarius Health Care Media: A leading producer and distributor of healthcare-related videos will pilot with Google Video using a variety of titles covering SIDS, diabetes, and blindness, among other health issues.• Ardustry Home Entertainment: Offers substantial libraries of theatrical motion pictures, television series, documentaries and reality programming, music and sports specials, lifestyle titles, and a wide array of “how-to” products.• BlueHighways TV: Programming service that explores the people, stories, traditions and cultures of America.

Discovering the sights and sounds of communities across the country with an up-close, laid-back programming style, BlueHighways TV presents a collage of remarkable music, folklore and information for audiences interested in all aspects of American life and heritage. Programming includes Reno's Old Time Music Festival, American Journeys, Stan Hitchcock's Heart to Heart, and Gospel Sampler.

CareTALK: A multimedia brand dedicated to consumer-directed health care offering programming and tools to help modern family caregivers; initially offering 10-20 hours of health and caregiving-related content (10-20 minutes in length).

CBS: Includes prime time hits such as CSI, NCIS, Survivor: Guatemala, and The Amazing Race (available spring ’06), as well as classics like I Love Lucy, Twilight Zone, Brady Bunch, Have Gun Will Travel, MacGyver, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, and My Three Sons (coming soon).

The Charlie Rose Show: Includes interviews with Henry Kissinger, Oliver Stone, Quentin Tarantino, Martha Stewart, Martin Scorsese, Harrison Ford, Dan Rather, Charles M. Schulz, Steve Jobs, Jay Leno, Tom Brokaw, and others.

Cine Excel: Independent producer will trial on Google Video with 3 DVD movie titles: Bikini Hotel (1997), Tao of Karate (short-film, 1998) and Karate Wars (1998).

Classic Media: Classic Media owns and manages some of the world's most recognizable family properties across all media including feature film, television, home video and consumer products. The company's extensive library features a diverse collection of popular animated and live-action characters. For launch we will have Rocky & Bullwinkle, Casper, Wendy, Richie Rich, Herman & Katnip, Baby Huey, Little Audrey, Mighty Hercules, Little Lulu, and Felix the Cat.

CLEARVUE & SVE: A leading provider of educational K-12 educational video content. They sell DVDs and run a subscription media-on-demand website with video, audio, and images. CLEARVUE & SVE primarily serves large clients such as schools, school districts or entire states. Leveraging Google Video, they have embarked on a new and bold strategy to target individual customers directly. Among the hundreds of videos you will find on Google, topics vary from classic children's literature to detailed explanations about the workings of the human body.• Echelon Home Entertainment 2: Focuses on independently produced films made by filmmakers from around the world which offer a unique perspective to the traditional genres: drama, action, thriller, comedy, family, animation, classic, B&W, foreign.• Egami Media: A subsidiary of Image Entertainment and a leading independent licensee, producer and distributor of home entertainment programming with over 3,000 titles released in North America. Highlighted content in Google Video includes live concert programs include Kiss: Rock the Nation: Live!, Chick Corea: Rendezvous in New York, Roy Orbison: Black & White Night, and dozens more. Other titles include IMAX programs from MacGillivray Freeman, stand-up comedy and independent, foreign and silent film classics.

Fashion TV: The only 24 hours a day, 7 days a week fashion, beauty and style TV station worldwide provides glamorous entertainment with emphasis on the latest trends. Google Video content includes fashion show clips and behind the scenes footage from many fashion shows.

Getty Images' Archive Films Collection: A diverse collection of short clips that capture personalities, moments and eras throughout history -- selected from vintage newsreels and educational film, as well as contemporary news and events from around the world.

GreenCine.com: Feature length independent films, documentaries and classic titles, including works by legendary Polish director Andrzej Wajda (Zemsta) and award-winning actor-director Caveh Zahedi (In the Bathtub of the World).

HDNet: Co-founded by Mark Cuban, HDNet has agreed to make select original programming from its library available for the launch of Google's first commercial video offering. The programs to be made available come from HDNet's ever growing library of original content including the HDNet World Report, a groundbreaking series featuring news in HD from around the globe; True Music, a popular weekly music series highlighting up-and-coming bands; Higher Definition, a celebrity interview series hosted by Robert Wilonsky; Young, Beautiful and Trying to Make it in Hollywood, following actresses through the hectic process of getting hired in Hollywood; and Deadline, delivering current events and news from around the world from an irreverent point of view.

here!: Gay and lesbian U.S. television network featuring original movies and series and film library (independent and foreign films, documentaries and shorts).• Hollywood Licensing's HilariousDownloads.com: Hollywood Licensing is the entertainment licensing agency which represents the best and most extensive library of hilarious videos in the world. Tapping into a library boasting tens of thousands of clips, they have custom produced 20 packages of funny themes for Google Video. For example, if you think that your recent home improvements was nothing but a miserable experience, wait until you see a bucket of wet plaster land on a man's face, a house collapsing or a door falling of its hinges for no particular reason.

ITN: One of the world's leading news producers, providing news programming for the main commercial broadcasters in the U.K. and its combined news broadcasts reach over two-thirds of the U.K. population. The company has a strong reputation for the creative and innovative use of modern technology, winning the Royal Television Society's 2004 Innovation Award.

iWatchNow.com: Titles include Night of the Living Dead (George Romero), The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, Witch, and the Wardrobe (original animated film BBC from1979), The Man Who Knew Too Much (Hitchcock), the hard-to-find Comedy's Dirtiest Dozen (with Chris Rock and Tim Allen), and The Little Shop of Horrors (1960).

Kantola Productions: Captures unique speaking events given by well-known experts at Stanford University. Topics focus on innovative and practical business advice, such as How Leaders Boost Productivity by John H. (Jack) Zenger and Mastery of Speaking as a Leader by Terry Pearce.

LIME: “Healthy Living with a Twist” offers entertaining and revealing programming focused on a greener, healthier, more balanced lifestyle. Programming features inspiration from leading experts, authors, and pop culture icons and covers topics including the environment and sustainability, personal growth, alternative health, healthy foods, and business ethics.•

MediaZone.com: Programming covers sporting events, TV episodes, movies, how-to programs. Content includes The Rugby Channel presents ‘The Best Tries of 2004’ and The All Blacks of New Zealand Vs. Springboks of South Africa.

Nobel Video Library: A library focused on the achievements of individual Nobel Laureate. The series was developed to introduce students to the work of the laureates as well as to support classroom discussion regarding important issues addressed by Nobel Prize winners in recent decades.

Open Championship: Official programs from the classic golf tournament, the British Open, such as Reflections: Past Open Champions.

Plum TV: Provides highly localized programming to the nation’s most influential consumers, and strives to be an incubator of groundbreaking new television programming. Each Plum TV station shares branding which links each station as a network, but still provides original programming customized to reflect each community. Plum TV’s programming includes regionally-focused feature pieces, tourist information (weather, traffic reports, restaurant reviews, retail and lodging information), a real estate show, local news and specially targeted entertainment for each community’s interests.

PorchLight Entertainment: Porchlight produces family-oriented motion pictures and TV specials. Google Video will offer 36 titles including Enough Already and Role of a Lifetime.

SOFA Entertainment: Represents pop culture at its best. Featuring several titles from the classic The Ed Sullivan Show along with documentaries, feature films and music programming. SOFA Entertainment truly offers something for everyone. Some highlights include The Very Best of The Ed Sullivan Show - Vol. 1 & Vol. 2.

SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT: The lineup of launch videos includes offerings from some of SONY BMG's largest global superstar artists, including Christina Aguilera, Beyonce, Kenny Chesney, Destiny's Child, Kelly Clarkson, Alicia Keys, Lil' Flip, Jessica Simpson, Shakira, System of a Down, Switchfoot, Usher, and many more.

Tai Seng Entertainment: The definitive Asian cinema powerhouse. Known as the best source for Hong Kong films, Tai Seng also releases cinematic masterpieces from all over the Asia region in a variety of languages. Tai Seng brings to your home the best in class from high-octane action to bone-crushing martial arts, from chilling horror to lush swordplay epics. We are proud to showcase with Google some of Asia's biggest hits like Johnnie To's Running On Karma, Korea's sensuously emotional drama Addicted, martial arts Master Yuen Wo Ping's highly acclaimed Tai Chi Master, and Michelle Yeoh's violently elegant Butterfly Sword.

Teen Kids News: A dynamic television news program for teens and pre-teens, by teens. The half-hour weekly program provides 10 eyewitness news segments to students in a way that's educational as well as entertaining. Thirty shows with kids reporting on camera are available on Google Video.

Trinity Broadcasting Network: The world's largest religious network and America's most watched faith channel, TBN offers 24 hours of commercial-free inspirational programming that appeal to people in a wide variety of Protestant, Catholic and Messianic Jewish denominations. The Praise the Lord Program is the only live two-hour Christian program in the world. The program brings the highest caliber of guests from well-known celebrities to laypersons for interview, as well as, singers, musicians, evangelists and the coverage of revivals and crusades from around the world. This award-winning program has been on each week night for over 30 years.

Union: Offers the best of breed from the world of action sports, including snow, skate, bmx, moto, and surfing. Union is owned by Quiksilver Entertainment, Inc. and Global Media Ventures, LLC.

WFIL: Wilderness Films India Ltd. is a leading producer and library of stock footage captured in India and across Asia. WFIL will offer 100 hours of high quality video, both free and for sale, on Google Video. Topics vary from helicopter skiing in the Himalaya, broadcast coverage of an Everest climb, and rare wildlife such as the takin and the clouded leopard to imagery spanning India's art, culture, technology, peoples, cities, and rural areas.

WGBH: WGBH Boston is America's preeminent public broadcasting producer, the source of fully one-third of PBS's prime-time lineup, along with some of public television's best-known lifestyle shows and children's programs and many public radio favorites. Programming available includes Nova, La Plaza (the longest running Latino program in the country), Thinking Big, and Basic Black. WGBH is the number one producer of Web sites on pbs.org, one of the most trafficked dot-org Web sites in the world. WGBH is a pioneer in educational multimedia and in technologies and services that make media accessible to the 36 million Americans who rely on captioning or video descriptions. WGBH has been recognized with hundreds of honors: Emmys, Peabodys, duPont-Columbia Awards.even two Oscars. In 2002, WGBH was honored with a special institutional Peabody Award for 50 years of excellence.

WheelsTV: Serves both the general audience and the enthusiast with a wide spectrum of vehicle-based entertainment, news and information. WheelsTV Network, WheelsTV On Demand and WheelsTV.net have been developed by the producers of multi-awarding winning automotive programming for Discovery, PBS, Speedvision, Fox and Outdoor Life Networks including Wild About Wheels, Wheels, and Motor Trend Television. WheelsTV Network’s valuable consumer programs include Top 200™ New Vehicle Test Drives. With Top 200 on Google, consumers will be able to download virtual test drives of the best selling and most exciting cars on the road today, saving time and money.

Wimbledon: Official programs from the Wimbledon Tennis Championships such as Legends of Wimbledon: Bjorn Borg.

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Lots more articles and reviews like this are at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com.

Chip Tarver

Vlogging News - Electronic Resources

Story courtesy of http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/13674860.htm


Seeing the sites

Mon, Jan. 23, 2006 - BY JULIO OJEDA-ZAPATA - Pioneer Press

The latest electronic resources make it easier than ever to keep track of what's going on in your neighborhood or across town. We checked out three of them.

SOTANLIFE.COM
What it is: An arts and entertainment guide.

Founded by two University of St. Thomas grads, Minneapolis-based sotanLIFE (http://www.sotanlife.com/) is muscling into a crowded field alongside the likes of the Twin Cities daily newspapers, the City Pages weekly and others who offer extensive arts and entertainment listings. It aims to compete with an online-only approach that harnesses slick Web features. The firm's slang-y moniker is short for "Minnesotan life."

problem it aims to solve: Online arts-and-entertainment guides with little more than text and photos are arguably insufficient to get a good "look, sense and feel" of a restaurant or nightspot. The solution: A feature-rich online A&E guide that turbocharges its ample listings and reviews with all manner of multimedia goodies for more-satisfying virtual visits.

How it works: The sotanLIFE site has more than 3,000 listings in key categories, such as restaurants, bar/clubs, theater, music, cinema and diversions. Click an entry for a savvy-sounding overview with often-clever writing. Staff editorials give the site a personality.

Bells and whistles: Many listings are enhanced with video sequences, panoramic photos, slide shows, Google mapping, restaurant menus in downloadable PDF format, even interactive QuickTimeVR environments that let site visitors essentially rotate in place to scope out a locale in all directions (even upward).

Caveats: Not all listings have all the above features (many have few or none). And to use those features, users may need to download such software as Apple Computer's QuickTime or the Adobe Reader.

East-metro highlight: In a diary-like essay titled "Eat at Joe's? No way!" Jake Kulju gives his take on Mickey's Diner in downtown St. Paul: It's "a place where glim and glam take a back seat to real human nature - sometimes the good, sometimes the bad, and quite often, the ugly."

TWIN CITIES DAILY PLANET
What it is: A news "aggregator" with content from community newspapers and other sources.

The Twin Cities Daily Planet (http://www.tcdailyplanet.net/) is a nonprofit, still-experimental effort that is initially being funded by the J-Lab, the University of Maryland's Institute for Interactive Journalism. Its long-term goal is to foster "citizen journalism" by getting average Twin Cities residents to contribute their own news and views.

For now, it is inking deals with everyone from the Hmong Today, Lazos Hispanos and Minnesota Women's Press newspapers to the Minnesota Stories and Mnspeak.com Web sites in order to beef up its content offerings.

The problem it aims to solve: It's tough to keep track of the Twin Cities' dizzying range of ethnic and community newspapers, as well as hometown-flavored Web logs, audio podcasts and vlogs (or video-specific blogs).

The solution: A single site that collects all of this media goodness and organizes it by topic so it's a breeze to peruse - no more searching for free-newspaper racks around the metro area.

How it works: The site offers a lengthy list of subject areas, ranging from "St. Paul" and "Minneapolis" to "arts," "government," "housing" and "transportation." Click one, and you'll pull up relevant content from one or more of the Daily Planet's partners. Offerings include audio and video from the likes of the "Inside Minnesota Politics" podcast and the "Minnesota Stories" vlog.

Bells and whistles: You don't have to manually visit the Daily Planet again and again if you're hip to the ways of RSS - short for Really Simple Syndication. This is a time-saving system for keeping track of updates on multiple Web sites without needing to actually pull up the sites every day.

To do this, you'll need an RSS "newsreader" for keeping track of RSS "feeds." Try a Web-based reader, such as NewsGator (http://www.newsgator.com/) or Bloglines (http://www.bloglines.com/). Once you've set up a free account, begin adding feeds.

Go back to Daily Planet, click on your favorite topic, and look for an orange "XML" icon near the bottom of the page. Click that, and you'll be taken to another page. Copy that page's address and paste it into your newsreader. Then, pull up your newsreader every so often to see if your Daily Planet feed has been updated with new stuff.

Caveats: The Daily Planet hasn't formally launched, so expect a few rough edges. Links on one RSS-feed page last week led to a barebones site that read, "spiritoftexastours.com. Please visit this site later. It is currently under construction." Huh?

East-metro highlight: A Longfellow/Nokomis Messenger article about St. Paul's Ford Motor Co. plant discussing the impact of a possible closure.

EARTHCOMBER MINNEAPOLIS
What it is: A handheld electronic city guide.

Earthcomber (http://www.earthcomber.com/), a Chicago-area Internet firm, has teamed with the Greater Minneapolis Convention and Visitors Association to adapt that agency's consumer listings (along with other local information) for use on Palm-based handheld devices.

The result, Earthcomber Minneapolis, is a "free city spot guide to neighborhoods, activities, attractions, shopping, history, dining and hotels" in Minneapolis and surrounding cities. The guide taps into Earthcomber's expertise in Web maps (such as those of Hennepin and Ramsey counties), which it offers for free to all comers.

The problem it aims to solve: It can be hard to get hip to all kinds of Twin Cities attractions, such as dining and shopping while on the move.

The solution: A portable city guide, conveniently accessible on your Palm-based organizer or smartphone, with slick digital-mapping capabilities for homing in on what you want with just a few stylus taps.

How it works: Getting the digital guide onto your Palm device is relatively straightforward. First, download and install Earthcomber Updater software - Windows, Macintosh and Linux versions are available. It will prompt you to download local maps and other data you'll need. Finally, connect your Palm to your computer and do a HotSync to transfer the Earthcomber resources to the portable device.

Bells and whistles: You can personalize Earthcomber so it will look for specific things ("architecture," "ATM," "kid-friendly," "mall" and so on) and plot the results on a metro-area map. Alternately, tap a spot on a map (or enter an address) to find out what is nearby. Zoom in and out. Harness Global Positioning Satellite features if you use a GPS-enabled Palm device. See search results in a categorized "hit list" with distances to the various spots.

Caveats: Earthcomber Minneapolis isn't available for Windows-based Pocket PCs (this problem may be remedied within weeks). It requires reasonably up-to-date Palm hardware; when we tried it on an old Palm m125, an on-screen warning said, "Unfortunately, limitations in your device make it highly unlikely that Earthcomber will perform satisfactorily." The Earthcomber features can be tricky to master, and Earthcomber Minneapolis is hardly a definitive local guide.

East-metro highlight: A "kid-friendly" entry about downtown St. Paul's Minnesota Children's Museum says it "is where kids ages six months to 10 years can touch, climb, splash and explore their way through seven galleries packed with extraordinary hands-on adventures."

Julio Ojeda-Zapata can be reached at jojeda@pioneerpress.com or 651-228-5467. For more personal technology on the Web or via RSS, go to TwinCities.com and click "Business," then "Personal Tech."

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Lots more articles and reviews like this are at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com.

Chip Tarver

Vlogging News - iMedia

Story Courtesy of http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/7830.asp


iMedia Podcast: The "New New Thing"

January 17, 2006 -By Dawn Anfuso

Emerging media and technology specialists separate myth from reality in this session recorded at a recent iMedia Summit in La Quinta, California.

Blog, vlog, podcasting, vcasting, gamevertising, advergaming, DVR and TiVo, PSP, VOD, mobile, the "third screen": the array of invented words and the alphabet soup of initials and abbreviations that now pervade current discussions about the media environment and the future state of marketing are so numerous that they inspire the kind of confusion that makes one sleepy with mental fatigue.

Just trying to track down what all of these things mean can be a full-time job. And at some agencies, it is. It has marketers hand-wringing and agency executives rushing to assure them that they have a bead on how to respond and how soon.

Is what author Michael Lewis once called the “new new thing” justified and necessary? Which platforms are actionable today and which should be watched over the coming year? Which will enjoy unprecedented adoption? And what do the advertising models look like?

During this session, emerging media and technology specialists separate the wheat from the chaff and try to get clear on just what is irrational exuberance and what really is the “new new thing."

Get the podcast:[RSS] Add the iMedia Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically (MP3). [MP3] Download the show (MP3).Presenters: Cory Treffiletti, senior vice president/engagement architect, Carat Fusion Michael Bologna, partner/director, Emerging Communications, MEC GlobalModerator: Jim Meskauskas, consultant and media strategies editor, iMedia ConnectionFormat:45:27.4, 31.2 MB, MP3

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Lots more articles and reviews like this are at http://www.ipods-and-onlinevideo-reviews.com.

Chip Tarver