Podcasts about MixBit

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Best podcasts about MixBit

Latest podcast episodes about MixBit

Inside The Newsroom with Daniel Levitt
#72 — Ryan Broderick (BuzzFeed) on YouTube's 15th Anniversary

Inside The Newsroom with Daniel Levitt

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2020 69:25


Hello! And welcome to a very special edition of Inside The Newsroom where we’ll celebrate the 15th anniversary of YouTube, and go through the ups and downs of the world’s largest video sharing platform with today’s guest Ryan Broderick of BuzzFeed News. Ryan has covered technology for the past decade and has been with BuzzFeed since 2011, and has a charming newsletter called Garbage Day which features all the fun stuff on the internet from the past week. It’s hard to find the words to describe YouTube’s impact on society and how much it’s shaped our lives, but Ryan does so in a way far better than anyone, so please please please listen to the podcast up top. I’ve tried to cover everything in detail below, but there’s just so much I couldn’t include it all. Enjoy 🤓Picks of the WeekDeepwater Horizon — The worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history happened 10 years ago this weekEarth Day — Yesterday was Earth Day and Greta Thunberg has called for a new path once the pandemic is overBeach Erosion — A new study forecasts dramatic beach erosion along the U.S. coastlineToday’s EpisodeToday’s episode took more than 12 hours to put together, so please consider liking this post by clicking the little heart at the very top of the page, and also sharing with your friends on social media. I’ll be eternally grateful. Ryan 👇April 23, 2005: YouTube Is Born… At San Diego ZooFifteen years ago today, YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim uploaded the very first video to the platform that would go onto shape the world we live in. But don’t get too excited. The 19-second video taken at San Diego Zoo features Karim describing how long elephant trunks are. Yeah, not much of an improvisor, but to be fair to the bloke, he did start YouTube. If you still want to view the first video after that awesome description, have at it…Karim met fellow co-founders Chad Hurley (no not the guy behind the surfing brand) and Steve Chen at PayPal, where each had significant roles in the design and direction of one of the world’s largest payment platforms. Now more than a billion hours of video content are watched on YouTube every day, and more than 2 billion people use the platform every month. But what most people don’t know is that YouTube was originally a dating site, where users uploaded videos of themselves to try and attract other men and women. Karim, Hurley and Chen even registered the YouTube.com domain on Valentines Day two months before. Like Mark Zuckerberg over at Facebook, or rather Facemash, the three YouTubers realized their new platform had the potential to be so much more.YouTube’s original homepage 👇😷 | Credit: Web ArchiveWhat are the Founders Doing Now?Chad Hurley served as YouTube’s first CEO and went onto launch a smartphone video editing company along with Chen called MixBit, similar to other video sharing apps such as Vine (RIP), Snapchat and TikTok. Hurley’s now a part-owner of the Golden State Warriors and the Los Angeles Football Club. Steve Chen served as YouTube’s CTO and went onto launch MixBit with Hurley, which was eventually sold to BlueJeans in 2018. Chen is currently an entrepreneur in residence at Google Ventures.Despite uploading the first video, Jawed Karim actually had the smallest role of the three. After the launch, Karim enrolled at Stanford University to obtain a master’s in computer science while also serving as an advisor to YouTube. He went onto co-found a venture fund called Youniversity Ventures (clever) that was one of Airbnb’s first investors.What Was Video Like Before YouTube?Good question. The biggest reason YouTube is what is today is because there wasn’t a central hub to seamlessly upload videos in a range of formats in 2005. Of course, videos existed on the internet before YouTube, but it was such a hassle to watch anything. I’m not sure how proud I am to tell you that I had to download the iconic peer-to-peer sharing platforms LimeWire and BitTorrent, whereby users uploaded video files to the internet for the rest of us to download with accute anxiety over whether we were breaking the law or not. From there, I waited two to three minutes for the video to load in Windows Media Player, and voila! I could watch a whole minute of video! I’m sure there were other ways, but this is what I and many others had to do to watch a single video. And I know what you’re thinking, Pornhub came in 2007 (pun intended), so this was the ritual for porn users as well. Oh, you weren’t thinking that… 🐢November 13, 2006: YouTube Acquired By Google For $1.65 billionA year and half after Karim uploaded that video at the zoo, YouTube was the world’s fastest growing website and everyone had their eyes on Silicon Valley’s hottest startup. Even with its meteoric rise, nobody could have imagined that Google would buy YouTube for $1.65 billion — $2.1 billion (£1.75 billion) in today’s money. Google’s acquisition is a piece of history in itself and was ridiculed for paying so much. Dallas Mavericks owner and tech entrepreneur Mark Cuban called the move “crazy”, and even Google later acknowledged they probably paid a billion too much. But YouTube now generates $15 billion in annual revenue, and it would take no less than 12 figures for Google to let go of it. Put simply, it might be the greatest tech acquisition of all time.Google is the very reason why YouTube is so popular and profitable. The search engine giant was already gobbling up the majority of the advertising market, and its AdSense model opened YouTube up to content creators which accelerated its popularity and revenue even further. Google also redesigned YouTube’s clunky interface with its trademark clean and sleek design, making the platform perfect for travelling down multiple rabbit holes to consume even more content. Perhaps only Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram for $1 billion (£629 million) in 2012 can rival as the best tech buys in history.YouTubers and Their MillionsYouTube wouldn’t be what it is without its thousands of content creators, many of whom use the platform to make a living. The way it works is users must enable AdSense for their YouTube account, which allows clever algorithms to generate adverts on videos automatically. The more views, the more revenue — around $8 per 1,000 views. YouTube then takes 45 percent of that revenue, leaving most creators with the remaining 55, though there are higher rates for creators with the highest views. The highest-paid Youtuber of 2019 was eight-year-old Ryan Kaji, who started out reviewing toys on camera, and has since matured to conducting science experiments. Last year Kaji earned an estimated $26 million. But don’t be fooled. The entirety of that money didn’t come from YouTube. Kaji has launched a line of more than 100 toys and clothing items, has a show on Nickelodeon, and has deals with Roku and Walmart. He’s part of the growing number of YouTube stars who are becoming less reliant on the platform, with some leaving YouTube altogether. If Google wants to stop the growing trend of its users turning to other platforms to make money, it’ll have no option other than to change its revenue rates.The Dark Side of YouTubeWhile YouTube has been a vehicle for thousands of people to make a living and hundreds to become millionaires, there’s been several missteps that have led to the spread of extremism and fake information. Chen, Hurley and Karim could never have imagined that their innocent video sharing platform would be used to disseminate far-right hate and white supremacism, but that’s the reality of what tech entrepreneurs of today must have at the top of their priority list, above aesthetics, above share-ability, and certainly above profitability. That’s where YouTube has failed the most, to protect society from the vitriol and divisiveness that’s running through our communities’ bloodstreams. YouTube not only has not done enough, it’s among the most pervasive platforms over the past 15 years. Now, you might ask why Google executives have been so inactive in removing fake news and hate speech. You might also catch yourself feeling sympathetic toward them because of the difficulty to find and remove all hateful content. Don’t be. Don’t be fooled by the carefully constructed PR talk telling us that they’re doing everything they can to remove hateful videos that violate their rules. It’s b******t. YouTube, and several other social media platforms including Facebook and Twitter, know full well that if they were to actually adhere to the very rules they set in place that they would lose half of their users overnight. If amazing journalists like Ryan didn’t write on this issue profusely, Google would happily continue to skip along as if nothing was wrong.YouTube’s Hits and MissesSo we know that YouTube has completely revolutionized the way we watch video, and how thousands of people can earn a living. But what other industries has it spawned? And what did it miss out on? Let’s start with eSports, the multi-billion dollar industry that has absolutely exploded over the past decade. Now, YouTube didn’t create eSports, but it’s fair to say that without it, the professional gaming industry would look totally different. The story arguably starts in South Korea in the late 1990s with the game StarCraft, a science fiction strategy game that allowed multiple players to compete at the same time. As YouTube became more and more popular toward the late 2000s, millions of people began to watch other people play the likes of Minecraft, World of Warcraft and any other game ending in -craft. Online gaming on YouTube is still incredibly strong, with half of the top 10 earners making their fortune from gaming. But it hasn’t been all fun and games for YouTube, and it certainly isn’t a company that whatever it touches turns to gold. Perhaps its largest failure to date, both in time and money invested, has been its premium version, YouTube Premium, formerly known as Music Key, also known as YouTube Red. YouTube launched its premium service in 2014 and required users to pay a monthly subscription to listen to music and TV shows. The problem was that Netflix had already cornered the market, switching its own service from Blockbuster-style video rentals to online streaming in 2010. Why would users pay $12 a month on a platform they’d previously got their content for free? Simply put, YouTube was far too late and Google’s executives might never get over the billions of dollars Netflix and its streaming rivals are making today.Like with Netflix, YouTube also missed the boat on the rise and rise of video social media. While YouTube execs were investing the majority of their resources on their ad model, Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Instagram and now TikTok made it seamless for users to upload videos from their mobile phones, where the majority of internet users now consume content. YouTube has also lost its dominance of the ‘influencer market’, an industry Instagram has gladly made inroads into. Which leads us to our final part of our celebration of YouTube: What’s next?The Next 15…So here we are, the end of a remarkable journey over the past 15 years. Instead of being sentimental over the fact we’ll never see such an enthusiastic video about the size of elephant trunks uploaded to the internet ever again, let’s look forward to what YouTube should do in the next 15 years. I asked Ryan this very question, and his answer centered on mobile. If YouTube is to continue growing its audience, it must make it easier for its content creators to create content. How does it do that? By creating an entire equivalent version of Adobe Premiere inside its app for free. It must also create a virtual editing platform with advanced editing tools that allow users to create quality content with the few proverbial clicks of a user’s thumbs, similar to how TikTok has taken over the short form video market. And lastly, it must pivot its strategy and have mobile at the very center of it. If it doesn’t work on mobile, it doesn’t work for the user. Cheers to that 🍻Last week …#70 — Amy Webb (Future Today Institute) on the lack of government preparation for the coronavirus and the latest 2020 technology trendsSouth Korea Election Special44 Reasons Bernie Supporters Should Be Optimistic… Next weekNick Rubando on running for the U.S. House of Representatives from Ohio’s 5th district and his upcoming primary on Tuesday April 28Major Garrett (CBS News) on what it’s like to be in the same room with Donald Trump, and how asking him questions compares to Obama, Bush and ClintonRelated podcasts…#52 — Katie Notopoulos (BuzzFeed) on the ‘techlash’ and why we can’t trust any of the big technology companies with our privacy#43 — Kashmir Hill (New York Times) on what she discovered by cutting out Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google and Microsoft from her life for six weeks#41 — Jessica Lessin (The Information) on starting a technology journalism startup from scratch and how to breakup FacebookJob CornerA couple of weeks ago I launched a journalism jobs and internships board. It now has almost 600 active postings, mostly based in the U.S. and the UK, but also a few dozen from other parts of the world. Sign up for weekly updates. New jobs from yesterday include…Bloomberg — Graphic DesignerIndianapolis Star — Food and Dining ReporterNew York Magazine — Features WriterThe Athletic — Staff EditorThe New York Times (London) — Business ReporterThe Texas Tribune Student FellowshipsThe Toronto Star — Freelance Writers NeededThe Wall Street Journal (London) — EditorUniversity of Stirling — Professor in Digital JournalismVox Media — Audio ProducerYouTube — Media SpecialistThanks for making it all the way to the bottom. Please like and share this edition of Inside The Newsroom by clicking the ❤️ below. That way I’ll appear in clever algorithms and more people will be able to read.If you haven’t already, please consider subscribing to get a newsletter about a cool news topic in your inbox every time I publish (1-2 times a week). You can find me on Twitter at @DanielLevitt32 and email me corrections/feedback or even a guest you’d like me to get on the podcast at daniellevitt32@gmail.com. Get on the email list at insidethenewsroom.substack.com

Amplify Today: Stories of the Human Spirit

Hanging with the folks of MixBit we not only talk about what's next, we figured it out. Let's learn something about our own businesses through these blogging, social media, and tech news.

Mobile Engagement Podcast
App product market fit needs brutal focus

Mobile Engagement Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2015 15:02


Tim Bull is CTO of MixBit, the latest startup of Youtube founder Chad Hurley. Mixbit are on the new wave of Apps that are doing collaborative video - a capability is only possible at the nexus of good mobile networks and great capture/display phones (like iPhone 6, Nexus 6 etc). Tim shares some valuable lessons about their journey toward Product Market fit and the need to focus on your best market and form-factor to get the job done! You can get the full transcript and other info at http://www.streethawk.com/blog/2015/05/app-product-market-fit-needs-brutal-focus/

Teahour
#62 - 与江宏聊 AVOS Cloud

Teahour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2014 78:22


本期由 Dingding 主持,邀请到了 AVOS Cloud 的创始人江宏来 Teahour 做客,聊聊 AVOS Cloud 的背后故事和技术架构。 AVOS Cloud 是一个为移动开发者提供后端服务的云解决方案,包括了存储、账号管理、社交分享、消息推送等模块。在节目中,江宏分享了 AVOS Cloud 的由来和目前的架构设计,以及江宏完成博士学位后在 Google Search Infrastructure 组时的工作经历。同时他也是中国 Clojure 社区的早期发起者,AVOS Cloud 的成员多数来自于 Clojure 社区,他分享了自己对 Clojure、Python、C++ 等语言的一些看法。目前,AVOS Cloud 正在招聘 iOS 开发者、Android 开发者和 DevOps,有兴趣的可以听听江宏对于他们团队和开放文化的介绍。 本期附送彩蛋:想找工作,要在众多竞争者中脱颖而出,你应该学什么。 AVOS Cloud BAAS Parse MixBit MySQL MongoDB HBase WebSocket 云上的云:AVOS Cloud在云平台上构建云服务的经验分享 Vesper Vesper Sync Story Docker Clojure AVOS Cloud 开放资源 Hard Thing About Things Building Off Screen insight 视频访谈:Slack 创始人 Stewart Special Guest: 江宏.

AppStore с Александром Леви
"MixBit позволяет создать клип даже без собственного видеоматериала"

AppStore с Александром Леви

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2014 1:40


mixbit
Amplify Today: Stories of the Human Spirit
R2D2 Gets Fired by A Phone App

Amplify Today: Stories of the Human Spirit

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2014 13:45


Ostendo comes out with a hologram app, Tinder reaches 2,000,000,000, YouTube founder creates MixBit and more.

Kid Friday - apps, websites, gadgets, games, fun!
Apps, Websites, Fun! 168 - One Direction 3D Headache

Kid Friday - apps, websites, gadgets, games, fun!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2013 47:37


One Direction Movie Review, iOS 7 Features, iPhone 5S Release, PoochCam, New Instagram Feature, VMA Awards, Vine, MixBit, Samsung Gear Smartwatch, Apple Store Visit, Genius Bar, You’re a Kid In A Digital World ℠Thanks for making us the number on technology show for kids!We talk technology but always end up somewhere else…Kid Friday™ is hosted by 12 year-old Zoe, 15 year-old Hannah, Dave, and Winston from PoochCam.comSubscribe to Kid Friday!iTunes Podcast: http://goo.gl/huabxYouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/KidFridayWrite To Kid Friday: http://kidfriday.com/contactKid Friday Is Brought to you by: StoryCub – Kids Video Books

User Friendly (Audio Version)
UF #83 - Monica's Huge On Twitter

User Friendly (Audio Version)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2013 47:42


This time ‘round the gentlefellows talk Jobs, the movie / Google kills another product / Plus, MixBit, the app from the guys who built Youtube

movies google apple film iphone jobs checkout ashton kutcher throwboy cultcast mixbit roberto hoyos erfon elijah
This Week in Location Based Marketing (Video) | Mobile marketing | context marketing | smartphone marketing | SMS marketing |

On the show: Google launches Carousel visual search; Renew London smart recycling bins are sniffing your MAC address; Millennial scoops up JumpTap; Tour Sicily with the San Pellegrino robot; Placed trying to morph into the ComScore of the real world; Riding the payment waves without batteries; Special guest Alex Kottoor of Siamese Systems talks mobile CSI; Chuck Martin and our Mobile Minute on who is benefiting from the mobile retail war; Infosys data on what consumers will share to get a personalized deal from retailers; App pick of the week is MixBit   - Do you have a location based marketing question? Ask us here and we’ll answer it on an upcoming show. Featured Guest: Alex Kottoor of Siamese Systems (27:35) A Mobile Minute with Chuck Martin: Who is benefiting from the mobile retail war? (6:00) Location fascination of the week: MixBit (9:00) Top news of the week 1. Google launches Carousel (15:08) 2. Renew London recycling bins grabbing MAC addresses create public privacy outcry (18:40) 3. Millennial buys JumpTap (24:40) 4. San Pellegrino providing tours of Sicily via robots (36:40) 5. Placed evolving to be ComScore for the real world (40:50) 6. Wireless communication without batteries (44:55) Resource of the week: Infosys – 93% Of Consumers Would Share Personal Data In Exchange For Customized Offers (49:18) This episode is sponsored by PubNub You can sponsor this show by clicking heremailto:rob@untether.tv

AwesomeCast: Tech and Gadget Talk
Episode 162: AwesomeCast 162: Robot Takeover Got A Point Release

AwesomeCast: Tech and Gadget Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2013 64:57


This week on Awesomecast 162, our two man crew is John Chichilla (@chilla) and Mike Sorg (@sorgatron) talking tech. Sorgâ??s awesome thing of the week has him all excited. Doublerobotics.com Chichilla thinks Double Robotics might be good technology for kids in school. Check out why. How long is the battery life for Double Robotics? How does it charge? Sorg looks for the answers! What are some ideas for using Double Robotics? Chichilla and Sorg discuss. Sorg broke his phone. This leads into an honorable mention for awesome thing of the week, it is AppleCare + . Hear why he likes it! The cast further discusses phone insurance packages. Chichillaâ??s awesome thing of the week is Cheapcast,; if you have some old hardware, you can still do some awesome things with it! The cast talks some Quip and Mixbit. If you have IOS, check them out! Is IOS the way to start a new program/app? Sorgatronmedia.com go there and register for the newsletter! You could win a prizeâ?¦ Kindle Fire, is it worth owning if you do not like books? XE8 app for GoogleGlass was just released. What our the changes? Making notes and setting reminders on devices is discussed. Chichilla bought a Samsung Smart PC. Check out his opinion on his new toy. You can now make apps on GoogleGlass using SimpleWing. Chichilla talks about a Widget app that lets you create and sell an app you make! A new Google Map EasterEgg has a Doctor Who theme to it. Check it out. The cast talks about the wonderment Google creates to promote its products. If you have something awesome to share, e-mail us at contact@awesomecast.com. Also, make sure to check us out live at 7 PM on live.sorgatronmedia.com and follow us on Twitter @awesomecast ! And check out the links we used and didnâ??t use in the show notes!

Peter J Black
My weekly chat with Andrew Bartlett

Peter J Black

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2013 18:03


This week on 4ZzZ we discussed, among other things, some technology stories, including Mixbit, Lavabit and VSCO, as well as the first week of the federal election campaign.

Kid Friday - apps, websites, gadgets, games, fun!
Apps, Websites, Fun! 165 - Don't Be A Hater

Kid Friday - apps, websites, gadgets, games, fun!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2013 42:58


Moto X phone, MixBit,Tirerack.com,Republicbike.com, Dog's eye colors, Kid Friday YouTube Channel, PoochCam, and a whole lot more. You’re a Kid In A Digital World ℠ Thanks for making us the number on technology show for kids! We talk technology but always end up somewhere else… Kid Friday™ is hosted by 12 year-old Zoe, 15 year-old Hannah, Dave, and Winston from PoochCam.com

• El siglo 21 es hoy •
Edición de video MixBit en tu smartphone

• El siglo 21 es hoy •

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2013 10:02


Canaltech Podcast
Podcast Canaltech - 01/04/13

Canaltech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2013 5:15


Apple baixa preços de iPhones; Receita libera app do IR para gadgets; Smartphone do Facebook está próximo; Lei Carolina Dieckmann; Lançamento MixBit; PagSeguro lança nova ferramenta para pagamentos móveis.