Reports: Time Warner Cable Among Pay-TV Operators Mulling A Piece Of Hulu

The country’s No. 2 cable service is considering taking a piece of the ad-supported streaming-video service, Bloomberg reports. Slower growth in the pay-TV sector has the NY-based Time Warner Cable paying more attention to its broadband operations lately. Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal says “at least two” cablers are eyeing Hulu. Disney, News Corp and Comcast own about a third each of the 6-year-old service, which recently topped the 4 million-subscriber mark.

via Deadline.com http://www.deadline.com/2013/05/time-warner-cable-hulu-stake/

Watching the New Arrested Development Episodes in Whatever Order Won’t Work After All

In the many months we’ve been hearing about this grand Arrested Development experiment, one thing that’s popped up is the notion that these single-character-centric episodes (fifteen in all! Fifteen!) would be great to experience either sequentially or, in a big delivery twist, all out of order. Meaning yes, you could treat yourself and watch G.O.B.’s episodes first thing at 12:01 a.m. on May 26. Now creator Mitch Hurwitz has a couple quick updates. The good news: “Done! Just finished the final mix last night. In two weeks Arrested Development will be yours to do with as you please.” The other, not-exactly-bad-and-definitely-useful-as-a-PSA news: “Except for 1 thing! You gotta watch them in order. Turns out I was not successful in creating a form where the setup follows the punch line.” YOU’VE MADE A HUGE MISTAKE, HURWITZ. Just kidding, brother — it’s a new season of Arrested Development! It’s fine! Good to know, though.

Read more posts by Zach Dionne

Filed Under:
arrested development
,i just blue myself
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,mitch hurwitz

via Vulture http://www.vulture.com/2013/05/arrested-development-viewed-in-order.html

Does Google Glass Have A Branding Problem? Marketing Experts Map Steps To Mainstream Success

Still in its test phase, Google Glass may be dorked to death before it gets the opportunity to take off. Here, marketing players from a range of agencies provide their assessment of Glass’s chances and some suggestions for paving the way to mainstream success.

Google’s much-hyped wearable computer, Google Glass, has been touted by the tech elite as one of the leaps forward of recent times, but those same elites may hobble mainstream adoption of the device.

While privacy concerns have blossomed (the device may be on its way to being banned at a number of locations), it may comfort those worried that we are all about to become spies for Google that the early adopters of Google Glass are helping to give it an image problem it might not recover from.

Read Full Story

    

via Fast Company http://www.fastcocreate.com/1682956/does-google-glass-have-a-branding-problem-marketing-experts-map-steps-to-mainstream-success?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fastcompany%2Fheadlines+%28Fast+Company%29

First they laugh at you, then they send in the Feds

The Department of Homeland Security has apparently seized Mt.Gox’s Dwolla account, a key US mobile payments account associated with the largest Bitcoin exchange. Mt.Gox has confirmed that their Dwolla account is disabled, but have not been party to the court order themselves.

Dwolla is an unregulated banking service, akin to Paypal. However, as they transfer funds directly from US bank accounts, rather than through Visa, they charge substantially lower fees. Mt.Gox are the largest bitcoin-to-dollar exchange, so Dwolla <>Mt.Gox was a very popular method of converting US dollars to and from the infamous digital currency, bitcoin. It was recently calculated that the equivalent of over 1 exaFLOPS (1000 petaFLOPS) of processing power are being used to ‘mine’ bitcoins i.e. performing the increasingly complex integer operations to find the bitcoin hashes. That’s more than 8 times the power of the top 500 supercomputers combined.

via MetaFilter http://www.metafilter.com/128089/First-they-laugh-at-you-then-they-send-in-the-Feds

Netflix makes changes to public API after “Streamageddon” backlash

Netflix made some changes to its public API Monday night that make it harder to figure out which movies are going to be taken off the service. The company will no longer provide the expiration date of movies through its API, which will mean that third-party tools like Instantwatcher.com’s Expiring Soon on Instant list will stop working.

“With the frequent, often last minute, changes in content flow the title expiration data available through our API has been inaccurate, so we have decided to no longer publish this information,” a Netflix spokesperson said via email. The company’s Director of Engineering – API Daniel Jacobson reiterated this point in a post on the company’s developer blog, adding that members will still be able to find the expiration date for each movie or TV show episode on the title’s web page.

The move will likely impact a number of third-party services, and comes two months after Netflix essentially closed its public API to all newcomers. Back in March, Netflix said that it was no longer issuing new API keys because the way the company was changing the API had changed: Initially meant to enable third-party apps, Netflix’s API has been playing a key component for the technology behind the company’s streaming service.

Restrictions to public APIs have been a common pattern for companies like Netflix and Twitter in recent months, but it looks like there may have been another reason for Monday’s changes: Netflix took a number of titles off its catalog in early May, leading some publications to write about “the great Netflix Instant vanishing of 2013” or even a “Streamageddon purge.”

Not all of those stories were completely accurate. Some reported a number of 2000 titles disappearing, but Deadline put the number close to 1000. And reports that Warner was pulling titles off of Netflix to power its own streaming service were quickly denied by the studio.

Netflix clearly wasn’t happy about all that streamageddon talk. Now it looks like it pulled the plug on another part of its API to prevent us from freaking out in the future — like at the end of the month, when a number of Viacom shows are set to disappear from the service.

    

via paidContent http://paidcontent.org/2013/05/14/netflix-makes-changes-to-public-api-after-streamageddon-backlash/

ANNALS OF THE CULTURE WAR, TV PARTY EDITION.

William F. Gavin at National Review on Mad Men:

…the show has degenerated into absurdity, loss of focus, and meandering plot lines. The main character has become eccentric, distant, increasingly mean-spirited, and disoriented. 

Gee, come to think of it, this sounds just like the Obama administration, doesn’t it?

At dinner tonight, Gavin told friends, “This soup is thin and bitter — like Obama!” Leaving the restaurant, he buttoned his jacket and remarked, “The night’s gotten cold, like Obama’s relationship with the press. Or maybe like the corpses of the babies slaughtered by Planned Parenthood.” But no one was left to hear him.

Elsewhere in the same venue, Greg Pollowitz:

Somebody Should Get Fired Over SNL’s Benghazi Skit

It’s gotten to the point where I’m amazed when SNL is actually funny or relevant as political satire, but Saturday’s cold open wasn’t just a dud as a joke, but completely offensive to the four Americans who lost their lives in Benghazi.

I imagine Pollowitz drunk at some bar, yelling “This jukebox is full of lies!” Like I often say: Do they even know any normal people?

via alicublog http://alicublog.blogspot.com/2013/05/annals-of-culture-war-tv-party-edition.html

Guests to dine with Prince Harry at the Four Seasons had hoped for a glimpse of pregnant Kate Middleton

Guests invited to dinner with Prince Harry at the Four Seasons restaurant tomorrow night were hopeful they might get a glimpse of Prince William and…

via NY Post: Page Six http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/one_prince_only_Vwr2SZekyABaYgWah286aL?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=%20%20%20%20%20%20Page%20Six

Facebook/Napster founder Sean Parker’s wedding becomes $9 million plus production

The June 1 wedding of Napster co-founder and first Facebook president Sean Parker is turning into a full-scale Hollywood production. Sources tell us the cost…

via NY Post: Page Six http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/fantasy_wedding_b5OQ5Wn6QXE02lc59bfJUM?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=%20%20%20%20%20%20Page%20Six

Tech guru David Pouge NYT wedding announcement sparks, perhaps unwanted, interest

One particularly interesting New York Times wedding announcement this past weekend was that of its tech columnist David Pogue and Nicole Dugan, a vice president…

via NY Post: Page Six http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/times_techie_ties_knot_zRitC9zFUCe30ArhEcTwmL?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=%20%20%20%20%20%20Page%20Six

Netflix Video Puts Even More Strain on the Internet

Netflix continues to be the biggest hog of Internet bandwidth in North America, with its video traffic jumping more than 35% in March from a year earlier, according to a new study. The video-subscription company accounted for roughly one-third (32.3%) of peak-period downstream traffic on fixed-line broadband networks in the U.S. and Canada, about the… Read more »

via Variety http://variety.com/2013/digital/news/netflix-puts-even-more-strain-on-the-internet-1200480561/