Archive for October 29th, 2007

A review of Hulu.com

The NBC-News Corp. video joint venture Hulu.com launched in private beta, and just I toured the new site. Out of the gate, the first thing you’ll notice is the clean, theater-like design. Very sharp.

I clicked to play a Heroes episode, and it loaded and played quickly. (I received an “application error” on a couple other clips I attempted to play, but I’ll chalk that up to the beta experience.)

Mouse over the player (shown above) and you get the usual controls, but also some cool additions. The “embed” function allows you to set in and out points, so you can embed just a selected chunk of a video clip on your blog. “Lower lights” dims the whitespace around the player to dark gray. “Feedback” lets you alert Hulu to an inappropriate clip or technical problems. And “Pop out” turns the video player into a pop-up. On the full-screen mode, the video quality was sharp without stuttering (480kbps or 700kbps depending on your bandwidth.) You can leave comments under the player.

No ads served on the clips that I watched, but Hulu will display a variety of ad formats, from video to banners to text to overlays. The idea is to adjust the amount of advertising to the length of the clip. But in the end, of course, the ads will be much less intrusive and not as lengthy as TV.

Hulu divided the video pages into popular episodes, popular clips and browse titles. Each have the ability to sort in a variety of fashions. Again, very clean presentation, and there are a surprising number of TV shows available at launch (Hulu just added Sony Pictures Television and MGM to its list of content partners). In the browse titles mode, Hulu will tell you if a particular show is “on air” — not actually on the air right now, but in season. Also, you can click to add clips to your playlist.

On the profile page, you can upload a photo, track your reviews (comments) and see your most recent clips you’ve viewed, which are also available in a custom RSS feed. There’s also a spot for your own video uploads, but it looks like that feature is not live as of yet.

All in all, Hulu is a very slick video presentation site with a good variety of TV shows to start. I’d rather watch a NBC or Fox show on Hulu than the respective networks’ sites — Hulu’s user experience is better, and everything loads and plays very quickly. Beyond that, Hulu is lacking user uploads, downloads and social networking — which I imagine is on the development board — so in the meantime it’s a great place to watch TV shows, but that’s about that. Any other reviews from beta testers out there?

19 comments October 29th, 2007

NBC wanted cut of iPod revenues

When Apple wouldn’t go for NBC’s proposed $2.99 a download for its shows on iTunes, NBC CEO Jeff Zucker suggested they give up a cut of iPod sales. “Apple sold millions of dollars worth of hardware off the back of our content and made a lot of money,” Zucker said. “They did not want to share in what they were making off the hardware or allow us to adjust pricing.” Hmmm, no wonder the negotiations blew up. “NBC’s Jeff Zucker has got serious stones,” blogs CNET’s Tom Krazit.

5 comments October 29th, 2007

Google preparing its own social network

Code-named MakaMaka, Google’s plan is to build a social layer across all of its applications. And in a unique twist, TechCrunch reports that Google would create two-way APIs that would allow websites to embed Google’s own social networking functionality. That would be very interesting, so keep an eye on this one.

1 comment October 29th, 2007

Gannett teams with Tribune for local city guides

Gannett and Tribune are forming a joint venture around Metromix.com, the city guide destination launched by Tribune years ago. The goal is to expand the guides (in seven Tribune markets right now) to 30 markets in the coming months and 40 markets by the end of 2008. Metromix will explore media partnerships to fill out the gaps. “With this partnership we can grow Metromix into a true national brand, adding value for advertisers who want to reach a highly desirable demographic,” said Tim Landon, Tribune Interactive president. Press release below…

Read the full post 3 comments October 29th, 2007

Briefs: Current TV, PrompterMonkey, broadband SUV

Few links from Lost Remote readers (pitch ‘em here) to share today:

  - Sure it’s cool, but is Current TV attracting an audience? (Thanks, Joe!)
  - PrompterMonkey.com shares bad writing and “outlandish scripts” (Thanks, Barbara!)
  - WTVD now has a SUV that can pipe back live video on the web (Thanks, Chris!)

4 comments October 29th, 2007

MSNBC.com, NBCSports.com partner

MSNBC.com and NBCSports.com today announced they would team up to provide sports content on a single, unified platform - and will also pool ad sales efforts. “The multiyear agreement makes NBCSports.com the official sports channel of MSNBC.com and NBC Sports,” according to the release. Before the launch of NBCSports last year, that URL pointed to MSNBC.com’s sports section. NBCSports.com is already doing some linking to MSNBC.com and vice versa - but MediaWeek says a relaunch of the combined sites will come before the Super Bowl in January. NBC Sports is a unit of NBC Universal, while MSNBC.com is a joint venture of NBCU and Microsoft.

2 comments October 29th, 2007



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