POPULARITY
Pénzeső zúdulhat az OpenAI-ra ICT Global 2025-04-06 05:03:47 Infotech Mesterséges intelligencia Japán Befektető OpenAI Japán befektető jelentkezett be az OpenAI-nál: első körben 10 milliárd dollárral szállnának be a világ egyik vezető MI-vállalatába. Ha pedig bizonyos feltételek teljesülnek, az év végéig további 30 milliárd dollárral fejelnék meg ezt az összeget. Miso pasztát készítettek az űrállomáson, és jobb lett, mint a földi Telex 2025-04-06 13:42:33 Tudomány Világűr Űrállomás Az űrbeli fermentálás sikere jó hír az asztronautáknak, változatosabb és jobb ízű lehet tőle a menüjük. Az 5G lesz a domináns mobil szabvány 2026-tól mmonline.hu 2025-04-06 07:14:39 Mobiltech Felmérés 5G PwC A globális telekommunikációs szektor bevétele 4,3%-kal nőtt 2023-ban, elérve az 1,1 billió USD-t, de továbbra sincs könnyű helyzetben annak ellenére, hogy az 5G-előfizetések várhatóan megnégyszereződnek 2028-ra – derül ki a PwC Global Telecom Outlook felméréséből. Ahogy a világ egyre inkább digitális platformokra támaszkodik, a mesterséges intellig Tetszhalottá váló növényeket kell termesztenünk? 24.hu 2025-04-06 13:53:47 Tudomány Jól hangzik, hogy szárazságtűrő haszonnövényekkel védekezzünk az aszályok ellen, ám a természet törvényeit nem lehet egyetlen tollvonással felülírni, és minden stratégiának végül termésben megfizetett ára van. Portalanító erőteret tesztelt a NASA a Holdon First Class 2025-04-06 13:33:11 Tudomány Világűr NASA A Holdon található por eddig is sok gondot okozott, ezért a NASA gőzerővel dolgozik egy sci-fi-filmekbe illő megoldáson, a portalanító elektromos erőtéren. Üzent a még mindig Windows 10-et használóknak a Microsoft PC Fórum 2025-04-06 11:30:00 Infotech Microsoft Windows A Microsoft a napokban egy olyan új útmutatóval jelentkezett weboldalán, amivel kifejezetten a még mindig a Windows 10-et futtató felhasználókat célozza meg. Az "Az Ön Windows 10 támogatásvégi ellenőrzőlistája" címet viselő dokumentumban a cég elmagyarázza, hogy mi vár a szóban forgó ügyfeleire, illetve, hogy azoknak milyen lépéseket kell megtenniü A Sonynak teljesen elmentek otthonról TechWorld 2025-04-06 07:17:08 Infotech Olcsó Sony A legolcsóbb, legkisebb tudású idei tv, a Sony Bravia 3 is kegyeletlenül drága lesz. A Sony egy hivatalos esményen mutatta be, hogy milyen televíziókat küld csatába idén. Az eseményen elhangzott információk értelmében a legolcsóbb modell a Sony Bravia 3 lesz, amely egy full hagyományos, mindenféle trükkök nélküli 4K felbontású, LCD televízió. Ahhoz Milliárdok a semmibe? – zsákutca felé tart a mesterségesintelligencia-ipar Index 2025-04-06 10:23:00 Tudomány A szakmai vélemények szerint a fejlődés jelenlegi iránya nem vezet gondolkodó géphez. Mikor tűnnek el a játékok lemezes kiadásai? SG.hu 2025-04-06 07:34:57 Gaming Tavaly feleannyi fizikai kópiát adtak el, mint 2021-ben, és a piac 2008 óta hanyatlik. Nagyon részleges napfogyatkozás Csillagászat 2025-04-06 09:00:00 Tudomány Csongrád-Csanád Szeged Napfogyatkozás Március 29-én dél tájban kismértékű részleges napfogyatkozás lett volna látható hazánkból, de nagyon sok helyen volt reménytelen borult az idő. Szegeden, a napfény városában azonban rövid időre megmutatta magát a csorbult napkorong. Hődör Gábor, Szeged Március 29-én dél körül részleges napfogyatkozásnak lehettünk tanui hazánkból. Az időjárás nem ig Ez már nem áprilisi tréfa – tényleg strandfürdő lesz a Fővárosi Nagycirkusz helyén! Mandiner 2025-04-06 09:17:42 Kultúra Mesterséges intelligencia Cirkusz Fővárosi Nagycirkusz Fekete Péter A hamarosan bekövetkező változásokról és a magyar cirkusz világban elfoglalt helyéről Fekete Péter főigazgatót kérdeztük. Aki arról is beszélt, nem véletlenül van a műfajnak globális reneszánsza: a mesterséges intelligenciával átszőtt virtualitás ellenében szinte önkéntelenül keressük a valódit, a kézzelfoghatót. Mesterséges intelligenciával generált intim képekkel terrorizált nőket egy brit férfi, online fórumokon is megosztotta a hamis képeket hirado.hu 2025-04-06 13:07:08 Külföld Mesterséges intelligencia Az áldozatok engedélye nélkül közzétett képek súlyos pszichés és társadalmi következményekkel jártak az érintettekre nézve. Hacker vagyok nem turista – versenyre hívják a számítógép bajnokait hirado.hu 2025-04-06 08:13:53 Infotech Hacker Nemzetbiztonság Április 20-án éjfélig lehet jelentkezni a Nemzetbiztonsági Szakszolgálat Nemzeti Kibervédelmi Intézetének hackerversenyére. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Pénzeső zúdulhat az OpenAI-ra ICT Global 2025-04-06 05:03:47 Infotech Mesterséges intelligencia Japán Befektető OpenAI Japán befektető jelentkezett be az OpenAI-nál: első körben 10 milliárd dollárral szállnának be a világ egyik vezető MI-vállalatába. Ha pedig bizonyos feltételek teljesülnek, az év végéig további 30 milliárd dollárral fejelnék meg ezt az összeget. Miso pasztát készítettek az űrállomáson, és jobb lett, mint a földi Telex 2025-04-06 13:42:33 Tudomány Világűr Űrállomás Az űrbeli fermentálás sikere jó hír az asztronautáknak, változatosabb és jobb ízű lehet tőle a menüjük. Az 5G lesz a domináns mobil szabvány 2026-tól mmonline.hu 2025-04-06 07:14:39 Mobiltech Felmérés 5G PwC A globális telekommunikációs szektor bevétele 4,3%-kal nőtt 2023-ban, elérve az 1,1 billió USD-t, de továbbra sincs könnyű helyzetben annak ellenére, hogy az 5G-előfizetések várhatóan megnégyszereződnek 2028-ra – derül ki a PwC Global Telecom Outlook felméréséből. Ahogy a világ egyre inkább digitális platformokra támaszkodik, a mesterséges intellig Tetszhalottá váló növényeket kell termesztenünk? 24.hu 2025-04-06 13:53:47 Tudomány Jól hangzik, hogy szárazságtűrő haszonnövényekkel védekezzünk az aszályok ellen, ám a természet törvényeit nem lehet egyetlen tollvonással felülírni, és minden stratégiának végül termésben megfizetett ára van. Portalanító erőteret tesztelt a NASA a Holdon First Class 2025-04-06 13:33:11 Tudomány Világűr NASA A Holdon található por eddig is sok gondot okozott, ezért a NASA gőzerővel dolgozik egy sci-fi-filmekbe illő megoldáson, a portalanító elektromos erőtéren. Üzent a még mindig Windows 10-et használóknak a Microsoft PC Fórum 2025-04-06 11:30:00 Infotech Microsoft Windows A Microsoft a napokban egy olyan új útmutatóval jelentkezett weboldalán, amivel kifejezetten a még mindig a Windows 10-et futtató felhasználókat célozza meg. Az "Az Ön Windows 10 támogatásvégi ellenőrzőlistája" címet viselő dokumentumban a cég elmagyarázza, hogy mi vár a szóban forgó ügyfeleire, illetve, hogy azoknak milyen lépéseket kell megtenniü A Sonynak teljesen elmentek otthonról TechWorld 2025-04-06 07:17:08 Infotech Olcsó Sony A legolcsóbb, legkisebb tudású idei tv, a Sony Bravia 3 is kegyeletlenül drága lesz. A Sony egy hivatalos esményen mutatta be, hogy milyen televíziókat küld csatába idén. Az eseményen elhangzott információk értelmében a legolcsóbb modell a Sony Bravia 3 lesz, amely egy full hagyományos, mindenféle trükkök nélküli 4K felbontású, LCD televízió. Ahhoz Milliárdok a semmibe? – zsákutca felé tart a mesterségesintelligencia-ipar Index 2025-04-06 10:23:00 Tudomány A szakmai vélemények szerint a fejlődés jelenlegi iránya nem vezet gondolkodó géphez. Mikor tűnnek el a játékok lemezes kiadásai? SG.hu 2025-04-06 07:34:57 Gaming Tavaly feleannyi fizikai kópiát adtak el, mint 2021-ben, és a piac 2008 óta hanyatlik. Nagyon részleges napfogyatkozás Csillagászat 2025-04-06 09:00:00 Tudomány Csongrád-Csanád Szeged Napfogyatkozás Március 29-én dél tájban kismértékű részleges napfogyatkozás lett volna látható hazánkból, de nagyon sok helyen volt reménytelen borult az idő. Szegeden, a napfény városában azonban rövid időre megmutatta magát a csorbult napkorong. Hődör Gábor, Szeged Március 29-én dél körül részleges napfogyatkozásnak lehettünk tanui hazánkból. Az időjárás nem ig Ez már nem áprilisi tréfa – tényleg strandfürdő lesz a Fővárosi Nagycirkusz helyén! Mandiner 2025-04-06 09:17:42 Kultúra Mesterséges intelligencia Cirkusz Fővárosi Nagycirkusz Fekete Péter A hamarosan bekövetkező változásokról és a magyar cirkusz világban elfoglalt helyéről Fekete Péter főigazgatót kérdeztük. Aki arról is beszélt, nem véletlenül van a műfajnak globális reneszánsza: a mesterséges intelligenciával átszőtt virtualitás ellenében szinte önkéntelenül keressük a valódit, a kézzelfoghatót. Mesterséges intelligenciával generált intim képekkel terrorizált nőket egy brit férfi, online fórumokon is megosztotta a hamis képeket hirado.hu 2025-04-06 13:07:08 Külföld Mesterséges intelligencia Az áldozatok engedélye nélkül közzétett képek súlyos pszichés és társadalmi következményekkel jártak az érintettekre nézve. Hacker vagyok nem turista – versenyre hívják a számítógép bajnokait hirado.hu 2025-04-06 08:13:53 Infotech Hacker Nemzetbiztonság Április 20-án éjfélig lehet jelentkezni a Nemzetbiztonsági Szakszolgálat Nemzeti Kibervédelmi Intézetének hackerversenyére. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
蛇出來了 新年玩樂 Level Up!準備好你的 PS5 主機,迎接 2025 年豐富的遊戲陣容吧,2 月 17 前購買期間購買 PS5,在活動期間首次開機並完成登記報名,就有機會贏得包括價值高達 NTD$ 99,900 元 Sony BRAVIA 電視等豪華獎品,此外 2 月 2 日前入手 PS5 Slim 光碟版 / 數位版主機還能享 1,600 元折扣,包含控制器等其它週邊也同步優惠中。 活動網站:https://pse.is/7283ayG 股癌傳送門:https://linktr.ee/gooaye -- Hosting provided by SoundOn
Is het een hoofdtelefoon? Is het een soundbar? Of toch gewoon een nekkussen? Nee, het is een nekspeaker van Sony! Met de Bravia Theater U belooft Sony een persoonlijke Dolby Atmos-ervaring, zonder soundbar of koptelefoon. Maar hoe klinkt dat? Techredacteur Stijn Goossens vertelt over zijn ervaringen tijdens de Schaal van Hebben. Het geluid dat de nekspeaker produceert is zeker niet slecht. Interessant voor iemand die graag op mobiele apparaten films of serie kijkt. Of voor iemand die een goede geluidservaring voor in de auto zoekt. Maar een probleem: je omgeving hoort het ook, maar die beleven het niet zo goed als jij. Het is dus echt een product voor individuele mediaconsumptie, op een plek waar je niemand anders tot last bent. En met een prijs van 245 euro is een koptelefoon of oortje misschien toch een betere deal? Voor wie dat anders ziet, is deze Sony Bravia Theatre U een prima product om te kopen. Luister naar de podcast voor de hele review. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Con Galaxy Ring puedes: Seguir y analizar la calidad de tus horas de sueño. Registrar automáticamente los entrenamientos. Monitorizar tu frecuencia cardíaca y mucho más... además estuvimos en el lanzamiento de los televisores SONY Bravia Con alcances cinematográficos y la incorporación de la IA.
In this episode of Excitement Talks, host Gordon is joined by Laurence Green, a legendary figure in advertising. Lawrence, co-founder and chairman of Fallon London, reflects on iconic campaigns like Sony Bravia's "Balls," which inspired Gordon's career. They discuss the power of creativity in advertising, the importance of making lasting impressions, and the evolving challenges in the industry. Laurence shares insights from his current role as Director of Effectiveness at the IPA, while they both celebrate the enduring impact of great campaigns. The conversation is a blend of nostalgia and optimism about the future of advertising.
Home Theater News 8.19.24 links and notes: Join our home theater community at AVNirvana.com. Build relationships with other Home Theater Enthusiasts, talk shop about speakers, processors, projectors, TVs and more. We look forward to having you join our community! On this week's HTNR Podcast, we head back to 1982 to check out a landmark release, then shift to news with a giveaway promotion that will land you at the biggest home theater event of the year... FOR FREE. We'll also dig into Trinnov's big news and one of the most significant pieces of home theater tech news this year and talk about Ascendo's new Director speaker. Pro-Ject has launched two new turntables and we've got the details. Apple Studios appears to be abandoning theatrical releases, and Blue OLED phosphorescent technology is getting put on hold. Finally, we'll take a quick look at the recently announced EISA awards. *Win a FREE Trip to CEDIA with FAQNatics* https://youtu.be/N3pK62tp4YI?feature=shared *EISA Award Winners* https://eisa.eu/awards/ *DISC DEALS on AMAZON* - The Duel 4K: https://amzn.to/3AHxqOM - Get Out 4K: https://amzn.to/4dsJZfn - Patriot Games 4K: https://amzn.to/4cwZZfa *Gear Deal of the Week* -Buy the Sony Bravia 8 OLED TV at Amazon: https://amzn.to/4dRQdoT -Buy the Sony Bravia 8 OLED TV at Best Buy : https://fave.co/4fSk16F *FORUM LINKS* -For the latest disc reviews, go to: https://www.avnirvana.com/forums/blu-ray-media-reviews.12/ -For the latest news, including stories covered in this episode: https://www.avnirvana.com/forums/av-industry-news.6/ -To see the Top 20 Disc Releases of 2023, go to: https://www.avnirvana.com/threads/holiday-gift-guide-top-20-movie-discs-of-the-year.12847/ *PODCAST LINKS* -Subscribe to the podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2XZc1WVL7gGazxGLiURw0E Subscribe to the podcast on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/av-nirvanas-home-theater-news-review-htnr/id1715862636 Please Note: AV Nirvana may make a small commission from affiliate links... thanks for your support!
On this week's show we take a look at the summer's best TVs according to RTINGS.COM. We also read your emails and take a look at the week's news. News: This ‘Google TV Streamer' set-top box is what comes after Chromecast Spotify HiFi likely to cost $17 or $18 a month Verizon Can Get Free NFL Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV or YouTube DirecTV Warns FCC: Without Early Termination Fees, Our Equipment and Installation Costs Are Going To Be Paid For by Our Customers Upfront The Best TVs - Summer 2024 - RTINGS.COM RTINGS.COM has published an article “The 8 Best TVs - Summer 2024” and we take a look at four of them. The article has the entire list. Best Budget TV - Hisense U6/U6K (Street Price $780 for 75” if you can find it) If you want to spend less, the best budget TV we've tested is the Hisense U6/U6K. It delivers a surprisingly great performance for the price. The Hisense has excellent contrast, so dark scenes look amazing in a dark room, with little blooming around bright areas of the screen. It also has good peak brightness in SDR and decent reflection handling, so glare isn't an issue in a brighter room. It has an excellent color volume, making this TV very colorful overall. It's bright enough in HDR for a pleasant viewing experience, and just like the Hisense U7N, it supports both HDR10+ and Dolby Vision HDR, although it doesn't support advanced DTS audio formats. Full Review… Mixed Usage 7.4, TV Shows 6.9, Sports 7.0, Video Games 7.8, HDR Movies 7.5, HDR Gaming 8.0, PC Monitor 7.7 Best Mid-Range TV - LG B3 OLED (Street Price $1800 for 77”) The LG B3 OLED is the best mid-range TV we've tested if you want something cheaper and still want high-end features. It's a great mid-range TV and can be an excellent entry point into the OLED market. The TV has all the features of the more expensive LG C3 OLED, but the B3 is dimmer and has only two HDMI 2.1 ports. It still delivers outstanding picture quality, especially in a dark room, with its near-infinite contrast ratio delivering deep, inky blacks with no distracting blooming. Its built-in webOS platform is just as fast on this lower-tier model, and it still has very good image processing, so it has no issues upscaling lower-resolution content if you watch DVDs, cable boxes, or Blu-rays. It also has Dolby Vision HDR and supports DTS advanced audio formats, which is great for physical media as it tends to use DTS for their audio tracks. Full Review… Mixed Usage 8.7, TV Shows 8.3, Sports 8.5, Video Games 9.3, HDR Movies 8.8, HDR Gaming 9.0, PC Monitor 9.2 Best Bright Room TV - Sony BRAVIA 9 QLED (Street Price $3500 for 75”) If you need a TV for a room with a lot of lights on, the Sony BRAVIA 9 QLED is an amazing option. Its superb reflection handling and SDR brightness mean it easily overcomes glare in the brightest rooms, so you aren't distracted by reflections on your TV screen. As impressive as this TV is in a bright room, it's also spectacular for use in a dark room. It has exceptional contrast that delivers incredibly deep blacks that are close to what you get from an OLED, with almost no blooming, thanks to its highly effective local dimming control. It's also a great option for 4k Blu-ray collectors or those looking to get the most out of high-quality streaming services due to its support for Dolby Vision and DTS audio formats. Full Review… Mixed Usage 8.8, TV Shows 8.4, Sports 8.3, Video Games 9.1, HDR Movies 9.0, HDR Gaming 9.0, PC Monitor 8.7 Best Home Theater TV - Sony A95L OLED (Street Price $5000 for 77”) If you're looking for the absolute best TV for a home theater setup and don't care as much about the price, check out the Sony A95L OLED. Although it's a very similar TV to the Samsung S90C OLED, it's better for home theaters thanks to its advanced video format support. Compared to Samsung's HDR10+ format, the Sony TV supports the more popular Dolby Vision HDR, so you'll enjoy the most advanced HDR experience possible from almost any source. Sony's processing does a better job following the content creator's intent, so the brightness and colors of HDR content look the way they're supposed to. It also offers better audio format support than the Samsung, including DTS:X passthrough over eARC, so you can simplify your connection to your audio-video receiver by running everything through your TV without sacrificing audio quality. Full Review… Mixed Usage 9.2, TV Shows 8.9, Sports 9.1, Video Games 9.3, HDR Movies 9.3, HDR Gaming 9.1, PC Monitor 9.4
On this week's show Ara gets a new TV! It came down to a UST Projector and a Mini LED. We also read your emails and take a look at the week's news. News: Amazon Debuts New Streaming Ads on Prime Disney and Warner Set to Bundle Disney Plus, Max and Hulu Starting This Summer Fox Says Tubi Now Has 80 Million Average Monthly Users; FAST Platform's Engagement Also Up 36% Sunday Leadoff' Is Coming to The Roku Channel Apple, Netflix Amazon Want to Change How They Pay Hollywood Stars Comcast Plans Peacock, Netflix, Apple TV+ Streaming Bundle Other: SportsNet Pittsburgh launches direct-to-consumer streaming service My ideal TV has no tuner, no speakers and no smart platform I've had my current TV for about a year now, and do you know how many times I've used its built-in tuner? None. I've not even plugged in the aerial. I've not used any of the built-in apps, either, and the built-in speakers have emitted a sound only a handful of times, and only because the connected sound system didn't automatically switch on as it should have. Full article here… New TV for Ara Ara's original Vizio P-Series UHD TV finally gave out. After posting this information on X, he received a few suggestions on how it could possibly be revived. Unfortunately nothing worked. Vizio customer service even offered to help resolve the issue. But after ten years of trusty service, it was time to move on. Ara posted to X that it was between a Sony Mini LED and an AWOL UST projector. The response was mixed. So where did he land? The field was quickly narrowed down to: The AWOL LTV-2500 4K 3D Triple Laser Projector $3000 + $1000 for a 100” screen. Bring The Cinematic Experience to Your Home: AWOL VISION LTV-2500 powered with a cutting edge Triple Laser without Color Wheel Technology, Dolby Vision & Dolby Atmos 4K UHD Resolution, HDR10+, 3D available, brings you a stunning 150", 4K Movie Theater experience. Coupled with exceptional audio immersion technology with Dolby Atmos, LTV-2500 is the most colorful with details' ultra short throw 4K laser projector for controlled light environment. and The BRAVIA XR 75” Class X93L Mini LED 4K HDR Google TV (2023) $2500 The Cognitive Processor XR™ delivers a picture with wide dynamic contrast and natural colors, replicating how we see the real world. See ultimate contrast from thousands of Mini LEDs and billions of accurate colors, all precision-controlled by the XR Backlight Master™ Drive and XR Triluminos Pro™. The winner is…. The Sony Bravia. The Process: Cost was a factor but not as big a factor as Lina not wanting to rearrange the artwork above the current TV. Some on X said that the UST was only an option if I had good control of the light in the room. Even my first gen UST looks decent in full daylight and it does not have the lumens of this projector. So that was not and issue that disqualified the UST While I would have liked a 100” screen. The 75” Sony is a small step up from the 70” Vizio. Tip! Regardless of choice I was going to have to get rid of my old Vizio. I'm thinking I'd have to call my trash company and pay to have it hauled away. So I thought let me try to see if someone wanted a free broken UHD TV. And to my surprise, four people reached out to me. The person who ended up with it worked at a youth center and had a friend who fixed TVs. So he came and picked it up and just like that, problem solved. Once the Bravia was delivered I simply plugged the cables in exactly as the Vizio. The output of the Yamaha RX-850 to the eARC port, power, and Ethernet. It's actually pretty heavy (97 lbs or 42Kgs). I powered it up and went through the setup. By the way, I did not accept anything that I interpreted as them spying on me. The TV is also a GoogleTV. I did not log into my account. For calibration I selected cinema mode and turned off motion flow and automated adjustments. I did enable calibrated mode for any programming that sends that info in the stream. First issue… My Yamaha for some reason would not pass HDR data even though it says it will. Solution… Connect Oppo and AppleTV to the Sony and use eARC for audio, Second issue…I could not send ATMOS data through to the receiver because it does not support eARC. Not a big deal because this is the family room and there is no ATMOS. But I also can't get Dolby digital. Solution… Set AppleTV to force DD 5.1 and set Sony to pass signal untouched to Yamaha. Not the best solution but hey! I don't have to explain to my wife why we now need a new receiver. There is a high probability that there will be a new receiver purchased on Black Friday! The picture looks phenomenal! A few times I caught myself saying it's like looking out a window. The colors are so saturated and beautiful! And while the black levels are not like OLED. They are quite good! No regrets. Not even a letter ;-) Review to come after I have had a chance to use the TV and dial it in.
This week we interview Gavin McCarron from Sony and cover the entire BRAVIA TV and AV range for 2024. There are three new initial TV lines with the BRAVIA 7, BRAVIA 8 and BRAVIA 9 and new soundbars and Home Cinema Systems.
Uz Digitālo brokastu testēšanas galda televizors "Sony Bravia" XT X90L 2023. Ar ko pārsteidza šis 65 collu milzis un kur tas nav tik spīdošs? No uzstādīšanas līdz attēlam, skaņai un operētājsistēmai - pārbaudījām! Noklausies! * Televizoru neatmaksātam un neatkarīgam testam sagādāja Sony Europe filiāle Latvijā. Plašāk par tehnoloģiju jaunumiem lasi arī LSM portālā.
2007年に購入したSONYの32インチ液晶テレビの電源が入らなくなったしまいました。16年もよく持ったなぁと思いつつ、奥さんはスマホやパソコンでは動画みず、アマプラもNETFLIXもYouTubeも、FireTV Stickをつないだブラビアを使ってるので新しいのを買わねば!! その前に一旦テレビとかがみれる環境をということで、PC用に昔買った23インチのモニタをセットアップ。音がしょぼいのであれこれ工夫して外部スピーカーから音が出るようにしたりしてました。 YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@katsuOfficial note https://note.com/kermit71/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/katsushi-machida/message
I was one of the first in the world to try Apple's Vision Pro – I'll tell you about the experience, we'll go through the other software updates and hardware releases from Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference, Samsung has confirmed the launch location for its next foldable smartphone launch, we take a look at the new range of Sony Bravia XR TVs, Belkin's new power bank that can charge both an Apple Watch and iPhone, STM has released a shatterproof screen protector and we answer all your questions in the Tech Guide Help Desk.
I was one of the first in the world to try Apple's Vision Pro – I'll tell you about the experience, we'll go through the other software updates and hardware releases from Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference, Samsung has confirmed the launch location for its next foldable smartphone launch, we take a look at the new range of Sony Bravia XR TVs, Belkin's new power bank that can charge both an Apple Watch and iPhone, STM has released a shatterproof screen protector and we answer all your questions in the Tech Guide Help Desk. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Repasamos lo último en actualidad audiovisual y recomendamos nuevos contenidos además de hablar de los análisis de la semana:- TV Sony Bravia XR A80L: https://computerhoy.com/analisis/sony-bravia-xr-a80l-55-analisis-review-caracteristicas-precio-1233502- MSI Stealth 14 Studio A13VG: https://computerhoy.com/analisis/msi-stealth-14-studio-a13vg-analisis-opinion-trabajar-jugar-1228070
This week look at the new Sony Bravia line for 2023 and discuss why watching movies at home is better than in the cinema. We also read your emails and take a look at the week's news. News: YouTube TV's CEO Confirms New Features Coming This Fall With NFL Sunday Ticket TiVo: Viewing Time Stagnates But Number of Video Services Used Jumps Cord Cutting Accelerates as Pay TV Loses Nearly 5.9M Subscribers in 2022 Your Ring camera features are about to change, and not in a good way LG Announces Pricing And Availability Of 2023 OLED TVs Other: HT Guys Music Testing Playlist Sony 2023 Bravia TV Sony Electronics Inc. announced its 2023 BRAVIA XR™ TV Lineup, with Cognitive Processor XR™, for the ultimate home entertainment experience. There are five new models in the BRAVIA XR line: X95L and X93L Mini LED, X90L Full Array LED, A95L QD-OLED and A80L OLED. All models are equipped with features to provide consumers with an immersive experience for watching movies, streaming apps, gaming and more. Full Press release… 2023 BRAVIA XR TVs have the updated Cognitive Processor XR, featuring the all new XR Clear Image on select models, which improves noise reduction and clarity with motion, reducing blur and creating scenes bursting with action. The Cognitive Processor XR enables better backlight control for increased local dimming zones, increased brightness and decreased blooming. Additionally, each model offers Acoustic Center Sync, which synchronizes the TV's audio system with the center channel of a compatible Sony soundbar turning it into the center speaker for the ultimate, immersive at-home experience. For consumers looking for an even more immersive sound experience, each model also works with Sony soundbars to offer 360 Spatial Sound Mapping which generates phantom speakers and sound field optimization. New this year, the X95L features Acoustic Multi-Audio+™, using frame tweeters to elevate the sound in a way that matches the image on screen. The A95L and A80L models feature Acoustic Surface Audio+™ with actuators that vibrate to produce sound from the entire screen, perfectly matching with what's playing on screen. The 2023 BRAVIA XR lineup also allows gamers to take their PlayStation® 5 gaming to the next level with exclusive features, including Auto HDR Tone Mapping and Auto Genre Picture Mode, for optimized picture quality while gaming and streaming Key BRAVIA XR lineup features: Cognitive Processor XR with XR Clear Image: The Cognitive Processor XR replicates content the way people see and hear for an incredibly lifelike experience. The latest iteration of the Cognitive Processor XR for 2023 enters a new chapter in its development with advanced XR Clear Image. This technology further reduces noise and reduces blur in motion, creating scenes that burst with life. Elevate the experience with Sony's sound products: Sony's new BRAVIA XR TVs are an excellent match for an array of Sony sound products, such as the HT-A9 Home Theater System or the HT-A7000, HT-A5000 and HT-A3000 soundbars. 360 Spatial Sound Mapping, a new frontier of spatial sound technology, is the latest addition to models HT-A7000 and HT-A5000. By calibrating sound to the chosen viewing room, the technology creates multiple optimally arranged phantom speakers for a wider and more immersive cinematic sound field. Acoustic Center Sync: Pairs perfectly with Sony soundbars – Acoustic Center Sync synchronizes the TV speakers with select Sony soundbars and AV receivers to reinforce the center speaker channel for clearer, fuller dialogue and more immersive sound. When paired with Sony Home Audio products, consumers can expect a truly exceptional at-home movie viewing experience. XR Backlight Master Drive and Mini LED: Powered by Cognitive Processor XR™, the XR Backlight Master Drive uses a Sony-developed local dimming algorithm to control thousands of tiny, ultra-dense Mini LEDs with absolute precision and independence, delivering extraordinary brightness, impressive dynamic range, deep blacks and beautifully natural colors. Perfect for PlayStation® 5 and new Gaming functions: Gamers can take their PlayStation® 5 gaming to the next level with exclusive features Auto HDR Tone Mapping and Auto Genre Picture Mode that optimize picture quality while gaming and streaming. With the newly added Game Menu, it has never been easier to fine-tune gaming settings and assist functions. All the essentials are at the gamer's fingertips for on the fly adjustments. Additionally, the BRAVIA XR A95L features Multi View, making it easier than ever to watch walkthroughs side-by-side while the gamer plays their favorite titles. BRAVIA CORE: The BRAVIA CORE app is a pre-loaded movie service that comes with five, 10 or 15 movie credits to watch the latest releases and popular classics and additional movies up to 24 months of unlimited streaming, with the purchase of a BRAVIA XR TV. With BRAVIA XR technology, Pure Stream™ and IMAX® Enhanced, content is delivered with stunning visuals and expressive sound quality. Featuring BRAVIA CORE Calibrated Mode, movies will automatically adjust to the optimal picture settings including IMAX® Enhanced mode to create a truly exceptional at-home movie viewing experience. Over time, the app experience will be enriched with new features. Crunchyroll® remote button: The Crunchyroll remote button gives BRAVIA users one-touch access to one of the world's largest anime libraries, a collection of more than 18,000 hours of anime, comprising more than 44,000 episodes and feature films, translated in multiple languages. Simulcasting is also accessible, so Japanese titles can be watched from abroad following broadcast in Japan. BRAVIA CAM: BRAVIA CAM can detect the viewer's position to optimize the picture and sound according to room environment and viewing distance. Google TV: See 700,000+ movies and TV episodes, plus live TV, all in one place. Google TV brings everyone's favorite content from across apps and subscriptions and organizes them. Searching is easy- just ask Google. Try saying, "Hey Google, find action movies" to search across apps. Built with sustainability in mind: During manufacturing, Sony is reducing overall plastic usage by approximately 60%, and is cutting emissions by approximately 15% by using smaller and lighter packaging during transportation. All Eco settings in one place: The Eco dashboard keeps all user settings in one place, making it easier to change them individually or in one go. With the Easy Setup option, users can optimize settings for their viewing environment. Pricing and Availability Suggested retail price and retail availability will be announced in spring 2023. For more information on new Sony television models, please watch Sony's BRAVIA XR announcement video here or visit the BRAVIA XR website: https://electronics.sony.com/bravia-xr-TV. To learn more about each US model, please visit the links below: X95L: http://electronics.sony.com/x95l X93L: http://electronics.sony.com/x93l X90L: http://electronics.sony.com/x90l A95L: http://electronics.sony.com/a95l A80L: http://electronics.sony.com/a80l Bad Projection Is Ruining the Movie Theater Experience Michelle Pfeiffer and Jonathan Majors look like crap. Usually, they're two of the most radiant, dermatologically exceptional people in the world. But right now, they're decrepit husks of themselves, their faces so drained of color that they could pass for cadavers. Full Article Here… For quite some time we have been making the case that we prefer to watch movies at home. We have modest home theaters, nothing like the ones we show on our YouTube channel. However, in our modest theaters we have very large screens, Braden has an 86” Sony UHD and Ara has a 100” Optoma UST Projection system. We also have good speakers and sound systems to match. But come on, you seriously aren't saying your audio and video quality are better than the cinema. Getting back to the article, Jack Theakston, a projection specialist who works as a contractor at Dolby Laboratories and the article author visit flagship theaters and critique the experience. Jack immediately diagnoses the washed out issue: This is a 2-D showing of Ant-Man, but some neglectful employee has forgotten to remove the 3-D filter from the projector. You can tell when it's happening because if you look at the port-window glass, instead of a single image, you'll see two, with one stacked on top of the other.” He points up to the booth behind us, and sure enough, there are two stacked beams. So imagine you pay your hard earned money only to find that the movie looks like crap. Are you going to complain and see if someone can diagnose the issue? Would you ask for your money back? The two go into another theater and find trailers that are playing on screen that's creased and sagging. Almost as bad: The picture is trapezoidal instead of rectangular, a phenomenon known as keystoning, which happens when a projector is not set up perpendicular to the screen. It's fixable with software, if one bothers to do it. The two spending the day finding plenty of other issues; A torn masking curtain Out of calibration projectors Noisy dine in service Variable seat pricing However, the Dolby consultant can look the other way on most issues with the exception of bad projection. “If a movie theater can't perform its most basic function and deliver a sharp, well-lit image with the right colors and contrast, then we might as well knock it down and put up a bank.” The pandemic hurt theaters but the problem started well before. Back in 2009 when theaters went digital. Chains and studios loved this because there were no more film that had to be shipped and threaded into projectors. Everything was beamed into the cinema and then to the projector. One projectionist could cover an entire cinema. The new projectionist was more like an IT guy instead of a skilled technician who could maintain and troubleshoot issues like the washed out faces we discussed at the top of this feature. One of the most common issues today are dim images. That's because many of these projectors need new lamps that cost about $1500. Since cinemas are essentially broke they ride the old gear as long as they can, creating a situation where people can actually have a better experience at home. Obviously this is not every theater, but enough to where people decide to stay home and stream. This starts the vicious cycle of cinemas not spending the money they need to in order to put out a quality product. AMC announced that it will install laser projectors made by Barco in 3,500 of its U.S. theaters by 2026. These machines offer better brightness, colors, and contrast than standard digital projectors. They're also bulb free and can run for 20,000 hours before needing a replacement. But by 2026 will it even matter? So why doesn't Hollywood do something about it. Jack argues that when there is a major hollywood premier the theater is gone through with a fine tooth comb to assure every aspect of the presentation is perfect. So our recommendation is, if you want to see a movie the way it was meant to be, go to a theater in Hollywood or New York. Otherwise get yourself a large OLED and have it professionally calibrated.
Hacemos un repaso de la actualidad audiovisual y que series y películas vemos, además de hablar de los análisis del Xiaomi 12T Pro y del TV Sony Bravia XR X95K (https://computerhoy.com/analisis/tecnologia/sony-bravia-xr-x95k-65-review-opinion-1142993) con tecnología MiniLED.
Auf eurem Sony-Bravia-TV könnt ihr zahlreiche Apps installieren, die euch Zugang zu zusätzlichen Programme, Funktionen und Spielen bieten. Wie lassen sich die Apps auf dem Sony-Bravia-Fernseher herunterladen und installieren?
This week, Dan leads us to our Season Five finale via a conversation with the tranquil-voiced José González. Born and based in Gothenburg, Sweden to Argentinian parents, González is an indie folk singer-songwriter known for his signature sound of classical guitar picking and soothing vocals. To date he has released four studio albums as a solo artist as well as two further albums with folk-rock band Junip. He has made several TV appearances, performing Late Night with Conan O'Brien twice, Later… with Jools Holland and Jimmy Kimmel Live. His cover of The Knife's “Heartbeats” was featured in an iconic commercial for Sony BRAVIA. On top of all this, he was in a PHD program for biochemistry prior to his music career taking off. Don't miss this chat with this fascinating man. Apple Podcasts: https://t.ly/212Podcast Spotify: https://t.ly/212PodcastSpotify www.212musicgroup.com/the212podcast
We're fast approaching a situation where webcams are built into our everyday lives and no longer require logging into a computer or even using a smartphone app to access them. Facebook Portal is already a feature in some households and now a new Sony Bravia television comes with a camera perched on top of it. The XR A95K recognises where you're sitting when you're watching TV and adjusts the sound and picture to give the best experience. It also lets you start a video call at the touch of a button…or by using your voice as it integrates with Google Voice. And if voice is your thing, Apple is offering a cut price Apple Music subscription at just £4.99 a month…the catch is you can only control the songs it plays by using your voice. Might get a bit irritating if you like listening to music on public transport, then everyone around you will hear what you're asking it to play. And lots of new followers over the weekend for @evemuirhead and her GB women's curling team who took Olympic gold. Eve has shared an incredible picture of her team jumping in celebration right in front of the Olympic Rings.
本集節目由【Sony BRAVIA】贊助播出 這次介紹的是Sony BRAVIA XR X90J, @SonyTaiwan特別提供給台通聽眾Sony獨家優惠
So Microsoft announced a new operating system that will replace what was supposed to be the LAST operating system, hopefully they break the Microsoft curse and release two operating systems in a row that are good!
The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Sony has been around digital signage for pretty much as long as the industry, but in all my time around this sector I haven't had a particularly strong sense that the company was really serious about digital signage. Until the last year or so. First, the company attracted Rich Ventura over from NEC, and Ventura is as well-known, knowledgeable and hyper-connected as they come in this business. A few months later, Jay Leedy left the huge AV integrator Diversified to join Sony, and while he's maybe not quite as connected as Rich, he's still really well known in this sector, and knows his stuff. Locked down for months like most of us, Leedy's spent his first year with Sony building up relationships with the ecosystem and raising awareness that Sony really, truly is in the digital signage business in a serious way. In our chat, we cover a bunch of things - most notably Sony's own approach to so-called smart displays. While Samsung and LG have proprietary operating systems for their smart screens, and their main competitors use Android, Sony uses Android TV. We get into what that means, in terms of benefits like power and features, and a small number of quirks that owe to its being, at its core, a consumer product. Leedy's gig, in part, is making the developer system aware that Sony has a "pro mode" for Android TV, and how digital signage software companies that already support Android can add support for Android TV quickly and easily. We also get into where Leedy is seeing marketplace demand right now, and where the industry is going in terms of emerging technologies. Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS TRANSCRIPT Mr. Leedy, thanks for joining me. You have, in the past year or so, gone from one company to another. What are you doing at Sony? Jay Leedy: Hey, Dave. Good to talk to you as well. So when I left Diversified, I had been doing a lot of work in business development for strategic partners, and also working with a lot of the offices globally, driving digital signage solutions through local relationships. Similar work, as when I moved to Sony. I'm part of an organization that is really part of their factory planning and product roadmap team called HES or Home Entertainment & Sound, which is a funny name for an organization in my focus, which is really exclusively B2B, but it sheds a little light on our strategy and how we're developing our Bravia product, with a lot of efficiencies in manufacturing and kind of common components from our consumer line, we poured it into a discrete line of Bravia products. So I do a lot of partnership development, really taking cues from our professional sales organization that Richard Ventura leads, and based on their feedback and voice of customer insights, leverage that into developing solutions or effecting changes to our hardware components that are made to better serve the B2B market, and in cases where we have gaps in capability, build-out partnership ecosystems to serve that. So my focus immediately, since I came on, which has been about eight months, has really been around digital signage and building out a broad partner ecosystem to serve that market. Yeah, I think it's interesting because I spoke with Richard when he came over to Sony and talked a little bit about his plans and everything else, and I think it's fair to say that Sony in the past decade or so, hasn't been all that present, maybe by design or just circumstance or marketing, I don't know, in the digital signage sector, but I would say in the past year or so, it seems much more a part of it and not might owe to people like you and Rich and others who are known in the ecosystem and have those deep contacts and everything else. Has it been work to get the digital signage ecosystem, understanding that, “Hey, Sony is a player on the B2B side, and we are interested in talking to you and we do have products that are very digital signage appropriate”? Jay Leedy: Yeah, it's been an interesting journey, and I'll be honest when I saw Sony at the very last DSE, the same year that LG had decided not to attend. It was a bit of a head-scratcher for me too, I was still at Diversified at the time and had not worked with Sony at all in my capacity there but certainly, with Rich Ventura joining and my coming on, roughly six months after he joined, there's been a distinct focus and an investment at the headquarters level to go after this market seriously. We've had a Pro Bravia line of products since 2018, but to your earlier point, we have been relatively Invisible to the market so a number of the folks that I reached out to after I joined Sony on the SI and reseller side, comments were, “Where have you guys been? You've got a great brand. You've got great quality. Everybody knows Sony.” But for whatever reason, we had chosen not to really go aggressively after the B2B market and for a number of years, we were really solely focused on consumers. But as you know, there's a huge opportunity in B2B, and coming on and engaging with partners, helping them understand our current strategy, which is really around an Android TV-based system on a chip, that's been surprisingly and enthusiastically met with a lot of optimism and support in the digital signage partnership community. So I think that's largely because it's not proprietary [latform that needs to be developed there, they can use existing development talent that is already familiar with developing for Android and work with us without having to develop a new skill set or onboard new resources. Yeah, I think it's interesting because everybody thinks about Samsung as the company that really introduced the idea of “smart signage” with their system on chip displays, going back to 2013 or something. But I pretty strongly believed that Sony actually had a smart TV and a smart digital signage product before Samsung by a year or so, but it was, as we were just talking about not all that heavily marketed and there wasn't a lot of awareness around it, but Sony has been at this for quite some time. Jay Leedy: We did have a line that I just learned about actually proceeding with our 2018 launch of Pro Bravia that was more of an ODM approach. So because of that, we didn't control the entire solution stack. Now that we do you have that level of control and a strong partnership with Google and the Android team, that combined with inherent components that we've always built into our devices with respect to image processing and high-quality screen components, that's really helped us accelerate, I think. A lot of it, to your point, is really about getting the word out and talking with our reseller and SI community, as well as the consultant community to help them understand that this is a real line, we're committed, and we're not dipping our toes into proverbial water. Like this is something that we have deep investment in and commitment at the highest levels of the organization to go after. You talked about how easy it is to develop for Android since you don't have to have a proprietary operating system, but is there a clear distinction between Android and Android TV, in terms of development? Like I've heard some software companies say, “Yeah, the Sony product is great, but it's Android TV. It's not Android as we know it. So it's different. We have to develop differently. There are limitations on what we can do and everything else.” How accurate is that? Jay Leedy: It's somewhat accurate. I'd say there are some trade-offs. There are some differences between Android TV and Android, specifically that Android TV was designed for watching TV so some of the capabilities like portrait view, for example, are not native in the application. There's ways to work around that. There are currently some cash limitations on a per-app basis that we're working to address with Google as well, and there's also I think the impression that our Pro Bravia line is more of a consumer or prosumer approach, and to some degree, that's, I think informed by a lack of understanding that we have developed and enabled what we call “Pro mode” which turns off certain UI UX functionality, menus and exposes IP control and other capabilities that would be expected in a commercial line of product. So engineers that are unfamiliar with that may rightly or wrongly draw the conclusion that we're not built for commercial use. We are in fact, and because of Android, we can expose IP capabilities that are already native to the solution, the device just has to be configured in a specific way in order to take advantage of that. We've also very quickly, to the credit of our software development team in the San Diego offices at Sony, in partnership with Tokyo have developed a device policy control application that enables deeper system level access and that has been a product of my working directly with that team and them better understanding what the requirements of the market or what the desires of partners are, and what is ultimately going to be really critical in helping us meet the market needs. So if I'm understanding that correctly, you may have developers from different companies going, yeah Android TV is just not going to be good enough, but if you can get them on a demo and get a sales engineer explaining what you can do, that changes their minds. Jay Leedy: It does, and I think what's important to a growing number of end customers and subsequently the managed service providers and SI that serve them is a need to be able to specify devices that can predictably plug into their existing device management and network topology infrastructure because MDM has grown so rapidly with bring your own device strategies and the need to manage disparate device types. The familiarity with Android has increased rapidly especially, where only three four years ago, Android was really looked at as something that posed potential risk to network administrators. Now they only embrace it, because they have the tools and familiarity with those tools as to how to effectively manage devices and also mitigate risk on their networks. And I think with the new Sony Bravia lines that are out, I was reading an email the other day, I think it's like Android 10, right? Jay Leedy: That's right, yep, and with any of the devices that we release with Android TV, we're obligated to support up to three major updates. Ss Google releases new versions of Android, we would be compatible for three major releases so the Android 10 devices that are hitting the market now will be able to support up to Android 13, for example, which I think is really helpful in helping the developer community understand the extent to which we support their efforts as well. I think it was the guys over in the Czech Republic, SignageOS guys, who did a review of different smart displays and they took a look at the Sony and said, it was really good in terms of video handling and everything else, because it was a later version of Android versus some of the other ones. Is that something you're hearing? Jay Leedy: It is. Yeah, in fact, a couple of our partners, who've done initial assessments using benchmarking criteria and content mix and playlists that they use to benchmark all the various players that they evaluate, and in some cases they're even scorecarding and publicly publishing those results, and our performance based on those assessments has been consistent with purpose-built devices like an Intel NUC or a Mac Mini versus some of the others in the market that don't perform nearly as strongly. So I think that's partly because of the processing power that we have, our dedicated video processors as well. And, also having powerful connectivity handling and, some of the other components that really make these strong performing devices. So is there a “but” that comes up still? You know, “These are great, but they don't do this or they don't do that.” Jay Leedy: Yeah. We have a couple of limitations. One is that per app cache is currently at a max threshold of 2GB, which for many of the applications does not present a challenge, but when you get into scenarios where you're trying to cache locally assets that are fairly large, that can create a challenge. There's a limitation with native rotation, that when putting it into portrait mode, as we touched on earlier, it natively doesn't support that, but in most of the applications that we're testing, we have an answer for that with HTML and CSS workflows that don't present any concern and we're actively working to resolve those issues and take that feedback and insight that we get from our partners and our resellers and customers. And that's really my job is to carry those into our planning and roadmap afterwards. Yeah, so much of digital signage now is built up around web-based technologies that in the same way that you can have a responsive webpage that'll go into portrait for a smartphone, I assume the same thing is happening here, right? Jay Leedy: That's right. The trend, in general, is towards progressive web apps versus native applications, and better understanding that and helping our development team understand how we can address and create a kind of a fertile platform to be able to accommodate those strategies. It is part of our focus as well, and that's really why we built this large ecosystem to get as much feedback as we can so that we can remain relevant and proactively drive into the market with the right tools for the community. So when I looked at Sony in recent years, if I would go to their booth at something like ISC and ask them about digital signage, they would look around and try to find somebody who knew about it and they drag somebody over and they may, or maybe not know much, and if they did, they would point me in a couple of directions to something called TEOS, which is what I gather is more of an office management collaboration toolset, and then there was some CMS software partnership with a company who I wasn't terribly familiar with so I would walk away from those little drive-by meetings and think, “okay, they're not really active in this”, but that's changed if you're talking to 40-60 different software companies you're trying to build something up? Jay Leedy: That's right, yeah, and the change is also in helping our professional sales organization and the product management and sales engineers better understand digital signage as a whole, but also the nuances and specialized differentiation between the different partners. You're right, we did have limited expertise internally prior to Rich and myself coming on digital signage. We had made some inroads and I think had a strategy that entailed reselling digital signage software. That is really not our focus now. We really want to, at the end of the day, remove obstacles to specification and be able to plug into existing estates seamlessly with NSOC that has already pre-qualified as compatible or in the event that, we uncover an opportunity that doesn't have that compatibility or inherent that we have a process and a program to move quickly and ensure that performance evaluation can take place, both by putting a display in our partner's hands and putting their product in our software engineers hands and doing parallel testing and having a feedback loop that's ongoing. So what are you hearing from the various companies out there? And God knows there are many of them that have been developing two different system-on-chip displays for several years now, and I say “they” in a global fashion and I understand, some haven't done that, but many have, where are they going and what are they doing? Jay Leedy: You mean in terms of…? The development, do you see a shift to smart displays from PCs, and do you see a different direction in terms of how they're developing? Cause I get a sense that the smart companies are understanding that they've got to stop just being this kind of island of activity where it just like digital science, you've got to be integrated. Jay Leedy: Yeah, you're right about that. I think generally there was a desire by the digital signage software community to consolidate their development resources as much as possible. So not maintaining expertise on a wide range of platforms is desirable. There's also been a shift away from any Chrome OS support and that the logical kind of migration is to support Android, so we're seeing that. We're also seeing, in general, a trend towards, using a SOC where possible versus a purpose-built device, both in terms of reducing the cost of hardware, as well as points of failure. But yet you're always going to have scenarios where there is a dedicated playback device may be required, higher-resolution or video walls, but more and more we're seeing a desire to specify and be able to run multiple applications on a single device that in many cases Bravia is built to be able to handle, and that goes beyond digital signage, it edges into typical AV installations and all the device control and integrated solutions in that market as well. So there's enough processing power on these two to handle to basically multitask or multithread? Jay Leedy: That's right. With the different software companies, are you getting any sense that they're coming or they're looking for an alternative to what they've been doing in the past, because some of the big guys, the Samsungs, and LGs of the world, in particular, have started introducing their own software platforms or CMS software? Jay Leedy: Yeah, I'd say that's correct. There's a desire certainly by the leading software partners to align with manufacturers that are competing with their business, and that's the same with the systems integrators and managed service providers where we don't have a device monitoring network operations kind of service offering. In some cases, there are manufacturers that have built up those practices and that creates a threat to the highest growth rate part of that industry sector, and it would make logical sense to align with the manufacturer that's staying in their lane, so to speak, and let them grow the business that is most attractive for them to realize returns on. But the flip side of that argument is that if you are going with a company that has proprietary smart displays and its own CMS, it's kind of a matched set, so to speak, and therefore it simplifies the lives of the integrators. You just know that their displays and the software are already baked in and validated for it so that makes it simple for me. Jay Leedy: Yeah, I can see that. But I think flexibility is a big part of the need in the market. We're seeing that kind of confirmed with a number of touchpoints through the industry where especially when you're approaching a customer that has a fairly mature strategy and maybe legacy devices that are across a wide global estate that are not all going to be deemed end of life at the same time, they need to be able to have more interoperability and flexibility and also be able to capitalize on trends as they occur, and as relationships evolve and shift over the life of those things Does activity and interest in the signage sector differ from what it did 15-16 months ago? Jay Leedy: That's a great question. I think I just read your Workplaces Reworked white paper yesterday, which was really well done by the way. And you slept well last night, right? (Laughter) Jay Leedy: I did. We are seeing an increased interest in unified communication and hybrid working environments, or I think accelerating the need for physical spaces to be able to have more heads-up displays for situational awareness, all that stuff is driving that. And I think there are also opportunities because of the way that these spaces are being organized differently to place communication tools where they previously didn't exist, as well as in the cases of huddle rooms and conference room spaces, there's a number of clients that are interested in activating both screens and using them as communication tools more passively when that environment is not being used for its primary purpose. That definitely has been a trend that we've seen, and I would expect to continue to grow. Setting workplace aside, are there verticals that seem to be emerging and other ones that are, you would maybe coach a solutions provider or software company to stay away from for now or not bother with? Jay Leedy: I think enterprise, education, healthcare, they all seem to be on a more of a growth trajectory. Obviously, QSR, especially for the drive-throughs, has gone through a major transformation, and there's not any in particular that I think I would steer anybody away from, honestly, we've seen investments that have been pretty significant in transportation as the operators of those hubs, in airports and train stations, have taken advantage of the less traffic. Being able to put labor to drive installation and overhauling those environments at a fraction of the cost, because they don't have to work overnight. They can work during the day. So there's not anyone in particular that I would say, I would steer away from necessarily where, as far as Sonny's line of product currently, we don't have an outdoor display. That's something that we may choose to bring to market in the future. But as far as working with Sony specifically, obviously, outdoor displays is not something that we would chase but there certainly seems to be plenty of momentum there. Yeah, I was walking through ISE a year and a half ago, and one of the things that stuck in my head was, “Dear God, there are a lot of companies selling outdoor kiosks,” and that was in Europe. So imagine North America and Asia and add all that up and holy smokes. So there's nobody sitting around going, “if only somebody would come out with an outdoor ready display for my use.” Jay Leedy: That's right, yeah. There seems to be plenty of options out there, but plenty of opportunities too as a result. Where do you see the digital signage software and technology going in terms of new developments and overarching trends? Jay Leedy: Like I mentioned earlier with progressive web apps and a trend towards consolidating developer resources on really focusing on a single platform versus having to support a range of them is certainly a trend in broader integration as well. We're seeing that with companies like Mersive and Crestron, who are able to support digital signage playback in traditional AV applications, and I think beyond that, there are more comprehensive strategies evolving in corporate communications and using a range of different screen types from mobile phones to desktop to traditional digital signage as channels to communicate and meet the need of where the audience wants to receive that information in any shape or form across the entire chain. So when you're working with the 40-50 companies that you're speaking with, what are they asking and why should they be involved with you? Jay Leedy: Mainly they're asking whether their existing native Android application can run on our device or whether they have to develop something unique and more often than not the answer is that their APK can be sideloaded onto our device and very little modification to their code is required. So a small job versus a six months job? Jay Leedy: Exactly, yeah. So that's really attractive, just to have another arrow in the quiver, so to speak and I think they're also looking for more ways to market. The enthusiasm that we've gotten in general when they learned that Sony is leaning in and getting more serious about the B2B side of the business and digital signage in particular, they're super excited about it because, like many of us, myself included, some of the first electronics that we had relationships with as we were teenagers and young adults were Sony products, and the idea of working with a brand that has so much recognition in the market for quality, as well as so much innovation in various sectors of our business, including our interactive entertainment division and then this PlayStation product that just can't even stay on the shelves that we get a little bit of a Halo effect from that when approaching these various partners there, they're really excited about working with us. Yeah I'd be curious about that. When you come to a Sony display if you're looking at it versus some of the other manufacturers out there, I don't know, I'm thinking maybe you're not going to win a deal based on your price versus some other commodity product but if the buying decision is hanging around, at least in part on visual quality, then you're in the hunt. Jay Leedy: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. That's a great point. In terms of color accuracy and acuity and things that are really important to brand marketers, we're absolutely in the hunt, if not first consideration, and I think that also translates to total cost ownership calculations, and some of the kind of quality benchmarks that we hit that are reflected in our warranties. The industry experts that have worked with us for a long time and as well as are familiar with a number of other manufacturers gravitate towards us because they know they can, more or less, set it and forget it. They're not going to incur costs that they may have to pass on to their customers for field remediation and things that may have been problematic for them previously. So yeah, that seems to really resonate as well. All right, Jay, thank you so much for spending some time with me. Jay Leedy: Absolutely. Dave, great to talk to you again, and I'm glad everything's going well for you.
En este podcast charlamos de los análisis del Mi 11 Lite, de la TV Bravia A90J y de la toma de contacto del Poco F3. Además, también charlamos del móvil Oppo X 2021 cuya pantalla crece al tocar su lateral.
Sony announces a new streaming service. The Nerds breakdown Sony's Bravia Core movie service which promises to allow customers to watch and stream movies at some of the highest quality in the consumer market.
CES21 Updates #2: Sony Bravia XR, LG webOS 6.0, NEC Lavie Mini...
Las nuevas Sony BRAVIA presentadas en la CES 2021 con inteligencia cognitiva y su servicio de streaming con calidad 4K. www.danyeltinajero.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hyper-tech/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hyper-tech/support
THE MOVIE PODCAST is a film news and entertainment podcast that covers the week's biggest movie stories and a unique topic of the show. You can catch Daniel, Shahbaz and Anthony in a new episode every Monday! Please be sure to rate the show and subscribe.Got a topic request? Have a movie suggestion? Did we get something wrong? Let us know at ThisTimeWith.com/talk EPISODE #89: We're Going to Sundance and The Top Movies and Moments of 2020 - January 10, 2021 MAILBAGNate says, Hey TMP crew! Okay so I opened up Netflix and was so stoked to see a movie available that I had been told was fantastic but was only available in theatres in the US. I got about thirty minutes into Pieces of a Woman when I realized it wasn't Promising Young Woman! I'm sure I wasn't the only one to make this mistake which brings me to my question. With releases of similar films so close together have you ever started watching a movie only to realize it wasn't the movie you intended on watching? Friends with Benefits and No Strings Attached or The Illusionist and The Prestige come to mind for me! Anyways love all the great content from you lovely gentlemen. Happy New Year! And I can't wait to see all the success you find this year! ANNOUNCEMENTSREVIEWS: Promising Young Woman, Pieces of a Woman, Pixar's Soul, Wonder Woman 1984THE MOVIE PODCAST IS GOING TO THE SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL! Lookout for all of our coverage January 28 - February 3 2021. FOLLOW USFollow Daniel on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdFollow Shahbaz on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdFollow Anthony on Twitter, Instagram, and LetterboxdFollow The Movie Podcast on Twitter, Instagram, Discord, and YouTube NEWSSony debuts Bravia Core: 4K HDR streaming at "UHD Blu-ray equivalent quality” - Rasmus Larsen / FlatPanelsHDAziz Ansari's Master Of None to Return - ChortleRay Fisher Clarifies Cyborg's Removal From The Flash Movie; Geoff Johns Still With WarnerMedia - Adele Ankers / IGN NEW TRAILERSThe Little ThingsLockdownOutside the WireMalcolm & MarieCherry - Clip OUT THIS WEEKWandaVision - Disney+One Night in Miami… - Prime VideoPromising Young Woman - VODNews of the World - VODServant: Season 2 - Apple TV+Outside The Wire - Netflix WHAT WE'RE WATCHINGAnthony: Pieces of a Woman, Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy, The Matrix, The Matrix Reloaded, The Matrix Revolutions, John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum, InterstellarDaniel: The Undoing, Your Honor, Pieces of a Woman, Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy, Marvel Studios LEGENDS, Avengers: EndgameShahbaz: Pieces of a Woman, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, The Guardians of the Galaxy, Avengers: Age of Ultron, Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy, Ant-Man, 10 Cloverfield Lane, Aunty Donnas Big Ol' House of Fun
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to protect your Android phone from being hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to protect your Android phone from being hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to protect your Android phone from being hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to protect your Android phone from being hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Ways to Protect Your Android Phone From Being Hacked. Why you might not be able to add a virtual background to your Zoom calls, good options for a digital tuner converter, how long to wait for the M1 Apple iMacs, why your TV might suddenly start showing your photos as a screensaver, running Windows on the M1 Mac's, phones that update the Android operating system faster, talking to Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Sam Abuelsamid, Chris Marquardt, and Rod Pyle Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsor: twilio.com
Επιστροφή με εξελίξεις στις υπηρεσίες της Apple, περισσότερες λεπτομέρειες για iPhone 12, «μικρομέγαλες» εξελίξεις σε όλα τα μέτωπα και νέα έξοδα για RSS reader apps. Επικοινωνία με την εκπομπή: Email | Facebook Group | TwitterΛεωνίδας Μαστέλλος – Facebook | Twitter | SpotifyΜάνος Βέζος – The Vez | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Apple Music Reeder 5Apple Launches ‘Apple Music TV,' a 24-Hour Music Video LivestreamApple Arcade: The SurvivalistsApple Arcade: The Collage AtlasArcade now comes bundled with the purchase of new Apple TV, iPad etc.Apple Sending Emails Letting Apple TV+ Subscribers Know About Extended Trial AccessBruce Springsteen's Letter to You — Official TrailerFireball: Visitors From Darker Worlds — Official TrailerHelpsters — Let’s Plan A PartySnoopy, Charlie Brown and friends land at Apple TV+ in expanded partnership with WildBrain for new original shows and specialsSony launches the Apple TV app on select smart TVstvOS 14.2 on Apple TV 4K supports wireless game audio with HomePodsApple’s TV Remote App Pulled From App Store Since Functionality is Available in Control CenterBeats FlexAll-new iPad Air with advanced A14 Bionic chip available to order starting todayiPhone 12 Pro Max Has Smaller 3,687 mAh Battery According to Regulatory FilingiPhone 12 Pro Models Have 6GB of RAM, iPhone 12 and 12 Mini Remain at 4GBiPhone 12 Pro Models Around 20-25% Faster Than iPhone 11 Pro Models in Early Benchmark ResultsSony Cameras Can Now Be Used as Webcams for MacsHonda and Hyundai Rolling Out Wireless CarPlay to Select 2021 Vehicles, Including Accord and Santa FeAdobe Releases Updates for Creative Cloud Apps on Mac as Adobe MAX 2020 Kicks OffOffering Your Apps for Pre-OrderDevelopers v. Apple: Outlining Complaints about the App StoreOversteerShowrunnersVertical Slicewhat.ever
Επιστροφή με εξελίξεις στις υπηρεσίες της Apple, περισσότερες λεπτομέρειες για iPhone 12, «μικρομέγαλες» εξελίξεις σε όλα τα μέτωπα και νέα έξοδα για RSS reader apps. Επικοινωνία με την εκπομπή: Email | Facebook Group | Twitter Λεωνίδας Μαστέλλος: Facebook | Twitter | Spotify Μάνος Βέζος: The Vez | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Apple Music Reeder 5 Apple Launches ‘Apple Music TV,' a 24-Hour Music Video Livestream Apple Arcade: The Survivalists Apple Arcade: The Collage Atlas Arcade now comes bundled with the purchase of new Apple TV, iPad etc. Apple Sending Emails Letting Apple TV+ Subscribers Know About Extended Trial Access Bruce Springsteen's Letter to You — Official Trailer Fireball: Visitors From Darker Worlds — Official Trailer Helpsters — Let's Plan A Party Snoopy, Charlie Brown and friends land at Apple TV+ in expanded partnership with WildBrain for new original shows and specials Sony launches the Apple TV app on select smart TVs tvOS 14.2 on Apple TV 4K supports wireless game audio with HomePods Apple's TV Remote App Pulled From App Store Since Functionality is Available in Control Center Beats Flex All-new iPad Air with advanced A14 Bionic chip available to order starting today iPhone 12 Pro Max Has Smaller 3,687 mAh Battery According to Regulatory Filing iPhone 12 Pro Models Have 6GB of RAM, iPhone 12 and 12 Mini Remain at 4GB iPhone 12 Pro Models Around 20-25% Faster Than iPhone 11 Pro Models in Early Benchmark Results Sony Cameras Can Now Be Used as Webcams for Macs Honda and Hyundai Rolling Out Wireless CarPlay to Select 2021 Vehicles, Including Accord and Santa Fe Adobe Releases Updates for Creative Cloud Apps on Mac as Adobe MAX 2020 Kicks Off Offering Your Apps for Pre-Order Developers v. Apple: Outlining Complaints about the App Store Oversteer Showrunners Vertical Slice what.ever
Our longest episode yet, and our final one for now, featuring our interview with Jamie Lapsley, production designer on film and TV projects including Bodyguard, We Hunt Together and the Outpost movies. Our chat with Jamie features musings on her extensive career, a pretty comprehensive discussion of the history of vehicle design in the Star Wars movies, her dream of designing a new Flash Gordon movie, as well as tips on how to prevent on-set catastrophe, MacGyver-style, with nothing but chewing gum. Elsewhere, your hosts discuss Frank Sinatra's ghost, character ages in movies and we reveal the unsettling results of the life-drawing exercise set by Belle and Sebastian's Chris Geddes.Episode recorded: June 28th, 2020.Links: - The amazing Sony Bravia ad Jamie worked on: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IqGlnrbc3Q- Her episode of the Persistent And Nasty pod: https://open.spotify.com/episode/6Xk9wnZZIrjH5AW8lZGoFu?si=M01HYwipSxGdOo816rw4eQ- Find out more about Jamie's work at lapsleydesign.com
Sending group text messages with blind carbon copy. Chrome security, using a Windows 7 machine on a network without access to the internet, Apple TVs, autonomous cars, WiFi 6 being approved, knowing when to get a WiFi 6 router, getting into voiceover work, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guest: Sam Abuelsamid Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 Wasabi.com offer code TWIT
Sending group text messages with blind carbon copy. Chrome security, using a Windows 7 machine on a network without access to the internet, Apple TVs, autonomous cars, WiFi 6 being approved, knowing when to get a WiFi 6 router, getting into voiceover work, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guest: Sam Abuelsamid Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 Wasabi.com offer code TWIT
Sending group text messages with blind carbon copy. Chrome security, using a Windows 7 machine on a network without access to the internet, Apple TVs, autonomous cars, WiFi 6 being approved, knowing when to get a WiFi 6 router, getting into voiceover work, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guest: Sam Abuelsamid Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 Wasabi.com offer code TWIT
Sending group text messages with blind carbon copy. Chrome security, using a Windows 7 machine on a network without access to the internet, Apple TVs, autonomous cars, WiFi 6 being approved, knowing when to get a WiFi 6 router, getting into voiceover work, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guest: Sam Abuelsamid Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 Wasabi.com offer code TWIT
Sending group text messages with blind carbon copy. Chrome security, using a Windows 7 machine on a network without access to the internet, Apple TVs, autonomous cars, WiFi 6 being approved, knowing when to get a WiFi 6 router, getting into voiceover work, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guest: Sam Abuelsamid Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 Wasabi.com offer code TWIT
Sending group text messages with blind carbon copy. Chrome security, using a Windows 7 machine on a network without access to the internet, Apple TVs, autonomous cars, WiFi 6 being approved, knowing when to get a WiFi 6 router, getting into voiceover work, and more of your calls! Host: Leo Laporte Guest: Sam Abuelsamid Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy. For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 Wasabi.com offer code TWIT
Sony bracht eerder dit jaar onder de MASTER-series nieuwe televisies op de markt. De Sony Bravia AG9 OLED 4K HDR TV draait op Android TV, waarmee je eigenlijk alle belangrijke smart tv-apps beschikbaar hebt. Door het OLED-paneel te laten trillen, fungeert het beeldscherm in feite als speaker, naast de ingebouwde woofers voor de lage tonen.
Nous faisons le point sur les news qui nous paraissent remarquables à l’occasion du CES 2019 (le Consumer Electronics Show qui a lieu tous les ans à cette période de l’année à Las Vegas) avec notre enthousiasme peut-être mais avec notre regard critique, certainement ! Soutenez-nous sur patreon.com/techcafe Réagissez à l’émission en commentaires sur techcafe.fr Discutez avec nous sur Telegram CES 2019 Son et lumière Après les téléphones pliables, les TV enroulables. Sony Bravia et Samsung Q900 98ZG9 : la 8K, c’est plus fort que toi. #pragmatisme : Alexa, Google, iTunes et Airplay dans les TV Samsung. Après le OLED, le QLED : le ULED XD. Avec deux écrans dans son écran. L’art n’a pas de prix. Enfin si : cher. Sony pousse l’audio 360. Assistanat Alexa dans des TV, dans des vélos, dans tout, n’importe quoi et des pianos. Même dans le canapé et les chiottes… OK Google mon beau Google, qui est la plus belle ? Android a de grande aspirations dans votre cuisine. NVIDIA : le vert à moitié plein Le “Drive Autopilot” et le partenariat avec Mercedes. RTX 2060 : le raytracing pour toutes les bourses. Alléluia : la compatibilité G-Sync avec Freesync ! Le raytracing sur le genoux, c’est possible. For the (PC) Gamers : Des très fins, les m17 d’Alienware. Des colorés, les Lenovo Legion. Des bizarres : le ROG Mothership, le Triton 900 d’Acer. AMD : la remontada. AMD dans des chromebooks et des PC gamers, Les Radeon VII, les cartes pragmatiques. Il maintient la pression sur Intel. Intel le Chevalier d’or Les Core de 9eme génération et Ice Lake. La puce Nervana en collaboration avec Facebook. Le “Projet Athena”. Les nouveaux casque VR HTC : Vive Pro Eye et Cosmos. Les lunettes NREAL. Et aussi : La montre ECG Withings Go. Et la certification dispositif médical..? Rien que pour vos cheveux : le Volo Go. Le soutien gorge bluetooth de Soma. You’re holding your bra wrong... Et un impossible burger sans viande toujours plus juteux ! IDORU Nouvelle année et premiers cas de harcèlement au deepfake. Scarlett jette l’éponge. Les clones d’Idol chinoises font leurs débuts. Hatsune Miku n’est pas impressionnée. Des Youtubeurs et députés piratés en Allemagne … juste pour le sport ? Les crypto ont bobo : 500 000 $ en Ethereum classic volé par force brute. Facebook prépare une monnaie digitale et donne 1 million à Wikipedia. Combien faut il me payer pour me passer de Facebook ? Le Patreon est ici. En bref Petite forme : Samsung et Apple annoncent des ventes en baisse. Tim Cook essaie d’ailleurs de nous montrer la voie pour un avenir Apple moins iPhoné. Dagoma mène un combat contre les armes à feu imprimables Let’s switch : Firefox se préoccupe de votre réputation ! Petits coquins va ! Enfin des évolutions pour les fauteuils roulants ? Repo du guerrier : les comptes privés aussi pourront être illimité sur github. La VR ? A plus dans le bus… Dark Metal : Chrome sous Windows 10 aura bientôt un mode sombre. Bonus GPP : “Si c’est ouvert n’entrez pas” de l’hivers. Et des soldes ! Guillaume : randospompette.com (suivez POD) Participants : Guillaume Poggiaspalla Présenté par Guillaume Vendé
În acest episod este demonstrat cum cititorul de ecran Talkback sau cel creat de Sony citește subtitrări pe Youtube pe un televizor Sony BRAVIA cu Android TV. Aici va fi un Sony 2015 cu Android 7.0 Nougat.
Scott Milano is Founder and Managing Director of Tanj, a boutique brand language firm specializing in names, taglines, stories, messaging and voice strategies, and copy. Scott has over 15 years of experience in verbal identity and has worked on names like Scott's worked on some big brand names, like Nintendo Wii, Ally Bank, Sony Bravia, and Film Struck, among many others. Scott and I talked about the naming guides Tanj makes available online, the naming process, tools he uses (like stock photography sites and the MRC Psycholinguistic Database from University of Western Australia), and some naming trends. We ended the conversation talking about what Scott likes best about being a namer: “It's essential for any business to go to market. If you don't have a name, you don't have a business. So we're helping people, and businesses, take flight. And being able to do that, right at their inception, or so early on, and having such a big impact, is cool.”
In this Weeks Show we pay tribute to The Digital Answer Man Jim Barry who passed away. We remember Jim's many appearances on TechtalkRadio and guesting on the KOLD/KMSB TV Segments. What was Jim thinking the first time he looked at Slick? Did he want to touch the Hair? In a recent discussion with Jim, he commented on this being one of the best times ever to purchase a television. Recent stats said that 34% of youth under 18 would prefer content viewing on a Smartphone rather than a large screen TV. With the Bright OLED Screens and Headphones with Dynamic Sound, we can understand that. With this shift in viewing habits we have also seen the price of HDTV 4K UHD screens decrease in price rapidly. We feature a replay of our last discussion with Jim Barry from February as we talked the latest from CES Post Wrap Up. The Guys at AntiVirus Authority ask us to take a look at thier site which gives us a great opportunity to discuss Anti Virus Solutions on the show. What is Justin's favorite and why it differs so much from Andy's. In honor of Jim Barry, Andy decides to upgrade the Television and goes with a great deal on a Sony Bravia 4k. With the new purchase it frees up a TV for Internet Content viewing. Deciding which product to get can be confusing, AppleTV- Chromecast - Roku - Amazon?? Which is the best? Justin gives us the breakdown of the Fire TV and Fire Stick, Justin also berates Andy for not having Amazon Prime! Why wouldn't you get it? It's all Justin's Fault, Andy would have Prime however he decided instead to invest in Bitcoin due to that past shows discussion. What happened as soon as Andy "bought" in? Justin recommends the Morgan Spurlock documentary, Living Off the Bitcoin however says you can't live off the Bitcoin. New Trends in Brick and Mortar shopping as Online Shopping continues to grow. Website of the Week is the popular Google Photos, a great way to preserve images from your smartphone and allow Google Photos to sort photos and create Albums. Find it at http://photos.google.com
We cannot sanction your buffoonery. But we can, and will, personally hand-deliver your questions to Lord Hoistmas. Questions like: What is the true secret of the real 90s? How do you cleverly cover up an regrettable tattoo? And would you eat the best pizza you've ever had in your life if it came with bees? Send us email at questions@importantiftrue.com. If you enjoyed this and would like to subscribe to an ad-free feed, please consider supporting Idle Thumbs by backing our Patreon. Discussed: The Real Ghostbusters, good web addresses, Amazon bookstores, Boss Coffee, Tommy Lee Jones, Jim Carrey, trash can robots, Sony Bravia ad, Google Home/Blade Runner 2049 mashup, techno-seniors, tattoos, a history of the Peeing Calvin, crisper, CRISPR, Lord Hoistmas, pizza, bees Chris' Endorsement: Shoe care products: saddle soap for cleaning, Saphir Renovateur for treating and polishing (usage tips) Nick's Endorsement: Garth Marenghi's Darkplace (Amazon, YouTube) Jake's Endorsement: Learning about the interoperability of the multimedia devices in your home Sponsored By: Quip electric toothbrushes, Casper mattresses
Many Sony Bravia televisions are now powered by Android TV. They sport two screen readers, offer access to apps from the Google Play Store, and can even work as a Chromecast device.Jonathan Mosen brings you a comprehensive demonstration of one of the offerings in the Sony Bravia range, the 49-inch version of the Sony X8000D.He looks at a range of apps, browses the accessible TV guide, talks about recording TV onto a USB hard drive and more. The accessibility of this TV, while not perfect, is impressive.He also offers some advice to owners of Sonos soundbar products for choosing a TV that will get the best audio possible from them.
Many Sony Bravia televisions are now powered by Android TV. They sport two screen readers, offer access to apps from the Google Play Store, and can even work as a Chromecast device. Jonathan Mosen brings you a comprehensive demonstration of one of the offerings in the Sony Bravia range, the 49-inch version of the Sony X8000D. He looks at a range of apps, browses the accessible TV guide, talks about recording TV onto a USB hard drive and more. The accessibility of this TV, while not perfect, is impressive. He also offers some advice to owners of Sonos soundbar products for choosing a TV that will get the best audio possible from them.
Televizorul Sony BRAVIA 2015 cu Android TV poate fi utilizat cu un cititorde ecran, fie Talkback, fie cititorul creat de Sony. În acest episod al Podcast-ului nostru este arătat cam cum ar funcționa un televizor cu voce, unele aplicații accesibile, modul în care se poate detecta canalul și emisiunea pe care ne aflăm etc.
Esta semana en Byte Podcast 502, las noticias incluyen el lanzamiento en México del HTC 10, el nuevo teléfono de gama alta de esa compañía, y un descubrimiento de cómo darle más tiempo de vida a las baterías recargables de litio. Tuvimos la visita de la Gerente de mercadotecnia para Home Entertainment de Sony, que nos platica qué tienen de nuevo las TV Bravia de su línea 2016. Les debía la reseña de los audífonos para gamers Razer Kraken 7.1 Chroma y ahora les doy los detalles y especificaciones, además de mi opinión en cuanto a su calidad. En el campo de la tecnología médica, les platico del Philips Lumify, una solulción portátil para ultrasonido que pueden usar con una tableta o smartphone. Cerramos con La Aplicación Móvil de La Semana, para iPhone o iPad, que les ayudará a mantener su agenda bien organizada, combinando diferentes calendarios de manera sencilla. Como seguimos celebrando el aniversario 11 de Byte, este episodio también incluye regalos. Linksys nos mandó para ustedes el ruteador EA6100AC con Doble Banda Simultánea, velocidad 802.11ac, puerto USB, 4 puertos Fast Ethernet y tecnología Smart Wi-Fi. Este ruteador de nueva generación es ideal para reemplazar el suyo si ya tiene un par de años. Sony nos mandó un par de audífonos h.ear in, con soporte a HiRes Audio, para que disfruten la música de alta calidad en cualquier dispositivo. Estos audífonos fueron presentados recientemente en la Mercedes Benz Fashion Week, lo que asegura que se ven bien y tienen buen estilo. Pueden escuchar las instrucciones para participar y ganar ambos regalos a partir de ya.
Audio File: Download MP3Transcript: An Interview with Dina Kaplan Co-founder and Chief Operations Officer, blip.tv Date: December 22, 2008 Dina Kaplan: blip.tv [music] Lucy Sanders: Hi. This is Lucy Sanders. I'm the CEO of the National Center for Women & Information Technology or NCWIT and this interview is part of a series we've been running for a couple of years now in which we interview women who have started IT companies and we learn just fabulous lessons from these women. And we're very excited today to be interviewing Dina Kaplan. With me today is Larry Nelson on w3w3.com. Welcome, Larry. Larry Nelson: Oh, I'm happy to be here. Believe me, I love the topic that we're going to be talking about. Lucy: Well, and with us is Dina Kaplan. Dina has had a very interesting career all the way from being a news reporter and I know is our first interviewee who has won an Emmy Award. Dina Kaplan: Oh, is that right? Oh, my. Thank you. Well, it's an honor to be here. So, thank you for having a good memory to have dug that up. Lucy: Well, Dina is the CEO and co-founder of Blip TV which is a very interesting site and provides a valuable infrastructure for the video blogging community and has some very interesting episodes on there. I had fun watching 'Drinking with Bob.' Dina: Actually, this is high brows weekend I have to say. Lucy: Is this high brows you get? Dina: I'm just teasing. Lucy: Well, it's really a great site. So, welcome. We're really happy that you're here to share with us today about entrepreneurship. Dina: Thank you, Lucy. And thank you, Larry. It's really great to chat with both of you. Lucy: So, we really wanted to ask you first how did you first get into technology? What caused you to make that jump between being a TV news reporter and now you're founder of a technology company. Dina: Right. It's a definite jump from the traditional media to the new media. I had worked at MTV News as an associate producer producing stories about the very early days of the Internet, about music and about politics. Then, as you mentioned, became an on-air TV reporter. And now, I'm definitely firmly in the new media world. So, I would say, first of all, that it's a big jump from the mindset of a traditional media person to a new media person. But, you'll notice that that word 'media' is still in both of those terms and I think that's very important to mention. We definitely at Blip.tv on TV view ourselves as a media company and I believe that for a lot of these new media companies, or digital media, whichever term you prefer, if the technology is good enough which, hopefully, it is, at a certain point, it feeds away and you think more about the media than the technology that enables it. If you go back a few decades, NBC, and CBS and all those broadcast networks that we now think of media companies, back in their early days, they were considered technology companies. So, I think we'll see that same transition happen with the new media companies. But, I will answer your question and I will say that it's incredibly rewarding to be at a new media company that's not betting on hits and banking on hits. And essentially, having the authority to give a green light or a red light to a project. So what Blip.tv is a very democratic network where anyone can upload a show and if it's good, the show will amass hundreds of thousands or, potentially, even millions of viewers and can also have the opportunity to make money as well. You're never going to have that type of democratic platform with a traditional TV network because just by their nature, they need to invest in hits, and bank on that and hope that something is really huge because there's a limited number of bandwidth over those airwaves. So, part of the reason that I jumped over to new media that it met with my values and my beliefs that anyone who's talented should have a chance to succeed and it shouldn't be up to one programming chief to decide what gets a green light and what does not. Lucy: Well, it's a great value proposition for sure. Larry: It certainly is. Dina, would you mind just giving us a quick differentiation between YouTube and Blip.tv. Dina: Sure. Blip.tv is essentially a media company that has 3, 000 active shows on it. They are uploading an average of four new episodes a month, so about one new episode a week. And on that, we get overall for the whole mackerel of all of those shows, we've got 62 million video views a month and I should add that that goes up about 11% a month, month over month and has for the last twelve months straight. So, whereas YouTube has lots of great content, they have viral videos that may be a one off video that's funny or amusing, or it might be a trailer from a new film that's coming out. They might have some broadcast programming. They might some original shows. They have a huge and wonderful variety of clips. Blip.tv is much more like a television network that's on the Internet. So, the only thing that we have on Blip is original, serialized shows that have loyal and persistent audiences that are building up over time. And they have brand names. So, the people that are creating shows on Blip, many of them think of this as a business, not as just a hobby and it's a very different mindset than the mindset of someone that's just going to do one clip and hope it gets a lot of views, but really just do one thing. Lucy: Well, it's an exciting company. You have a lot of passion just like lots of entrepreneurs have which leads me to my next question. Why are you an entrepreneur? What about that makes you tick? Dina: I have to say there is nothing better than calling up a show creator and saying, "Hey, you know what? This show that you have been toiling over and doing one new episode of every week for the past year," or for some people, even a few years, "Hey, we just brought in a sponsor for your show and you're not going to make money doing that." That is an incredibly rewarding feeling and, look, if we succeed at Blip.TV, which really just means that the shows are succeeding. We are hoping to create a new media and, in some ways, a true new media type which is that anyone who has talent, and an idea for a show, and a camcorder, or a digital camera, or a very well shooting cellphone can create a show that could be every bit as good as a show that you might see on broadcast television or on cable. So, I really fundamentally believe in what we're doing. It's exciting to be part of a team, and there are five founders of Blip, so I'm one of five founders. But, the only female founder, relevant in terms of the topic of this show to feel that we've created this and we built this up from nothing to having 62 million video views and we're sending out lots, and lots and lots of checks to content creators every month is an incredibly rewarding feeling. So, I absolutely love it and the other thing that I love, which is going to sound funny to you guys, but I like the idea of being part of the functioning New York economy and part of the functioning American economy. I love that we're hiring people. I look forward to even paying some taxes. It's a great feeling to be contributing value. To content creators, hopefully lots of entertaining content for millions and millions of viewers. And then, just to be part of the whole functioning economy and building value in that sense is something that I'm very proud of. Larry: Dina, whether it be a mentor or someone who was a great role model for you, who is the person that probably influenced or supported you most in your career path. Dina: The person that I think of first when you ask that question is Jerry Layborn. The first thing she did when I did not even know her, but I graduated from Wesleyan University. I'm not on the national board of Wesleyan. So, I'm involved in the school and a huge supporter of it. She didn't attend there. But, I believe it's her husband attended there and one of her kids attended there. So, I knew she had that connection. So, I emailed her out of the blue and said, "Hey Jerry. My name is Dina Kaplan. I'd love to work at MTV. I know that you're working at Nickelodeon, which is part of that ViaCom family. Would you maybe forward my resume to someone over at MTV News?" And without knowing me, she agreed to take a call, and then she agreed to take a meeting and she ended up getting me a job. Or, helping me, I should say, get a job at ViaCom and I'll never forget that. But then, just as importantly, or perhaps even more importantly, when Blip was starting, we were doing a number of small deals. We were bringing on some content creators, we were doing some distribution deals, we were syndicating content to iTunes, to blogging platforms such as Word Press, Type Pad and a few others. But, we had no revenue deals. So, I remembered this Jerry Layborn connection, she, at the time, was running Oxygen and I happened to be at a cocktail party that she was at. And someone at the party asked me, "Dina, I love to support women entrepreneurs. I know you're starting a young company. Who at this party would you like to meet?" And I said I'd like to meet Jerry Layborn. So, she walked me over. She said, "This is Dina Kaplan. She's starting a company that runs video on the web and you guys should talk." And Jerry said, "Can you come see me tomorrow?" I said, "Yes." She said, "Here's my number. Call me. I'll block off whatever time it is that you can come in." So, sure enough, she did and I came in the next day. And I pitched her on, essentially, enabling content that they needed for Oxygen that would've required some money from them. It was a big meeting for us. It was very important. We walked out of that meeting and she said, "We're going to close this deal. We are going to make sure you get some revenue for the company." And I envisioned my job as being - enabling the next generation of women who were working in media to take leadership roles. So, sure enough the deal closed. Sure enough, that deal enabled us to get a much bigger deal with CNN and eventually the whole Turner brand. And I am not sure that Blip.tv would have taken off if it were not for Jerry Layborn. So, I will always be grateful to her and her mentorship for the rest of my life. Lucy: It really sounds like she gives a lot to entrepreneurs. Dina: She is incredibly supportive of women. She's wonderful person and all that I can hope for is the opportunity to pay that forward to many other women who are coming up behind all of us. Lucy: Well, that gets me to the next question around advice to young people around entrepreneurship. If you were sitting here with a young person and giving them some amount of wisdom about entrepreneurship, what would you say to them? Dina: I think that the most important thing is two key bits of advice. One of which is to just do it. If you have an idea for a company, you should not belabor the thinking about whether you should jump into this or not for years on end and ponder every possible scenario. There's something to be said for just getting started and I am definitely putting my money where my mouth is, or however that expression goes, because once we had the idea for Blip, we literally launched the company three days later which brings me to the second point of advice, which is that it's very important to build your business by getting feedback from your customers. So, we launched Blip. Our product was not great when started and we knew that it wouldn't be. But, what we did do was identify thought leaders in the audience that we were seeking to grow from which was content creators; people producing original web shows of which there were about five to ten when we started. But, we sought out the best ones and we asked for their advice and said, "What should we do, and what do you need and how can we help solve problems for you?" And we just iterated the product. At that point, we were doing new releases every two weeks. So, we learned from them. It was very much of a grassroots, bottom up development rather than saying, "OK. We thought about this for five years. Here's the product. Take it or leave it." So, I'd say start, and then iterate and constantly listen to people and learn from them. Larry: Dina, with all the things that you've been through and everything else, what would you say is probably the toughest thing that you had to do in your career? Dina: I think the toughest thing is figuring out time management and figuring out how to balance your priorities. I should mention that one of the tough things should not be questions about values. I think that, as an entrepreneur, you have opportunities to make very short term moves that would be greatly, say, financially beneficial to your company or greatly drive up your number of users. But if, in any way shape or form, anything you do ever compromises your ethics, that should not even be a consideration. So, we are so proud of the way that we are running this company to try to, just essentially, say, "All we're doing is supporting shows." So, we have no goals for ourselves for Blip other than trying to make life easier for really talented producers on the web. So, that makes a lot of decisions really easy. In terms of the tough scenarios, it's just trying to prioritize your time and trying to stay in very, very close touch with your customers, and just always being really humble and really knowing that you're never going to have all the answers. Whatever it is that you're looking at, there's someone out there, there's a group of people that know that area of expertise incredibly well because they're doing it all the time and you're probably doing 50 different things. So, as much as you can engage the experts in every aspect of your business and continue to learn from them, listen a lot and not talk too much, then I think you'll be in pretty good shape. Lucy: What personal characteristics do you have that you think make you a successful entrepreneur? Dina: I think one of the things is listening and engaging people. As an entrepreneur, you have this tendency to just put your head down and work, and work something like 18 or 19 hours a day. You have all of these things that require your time at the office whether it's setting up your P&L or getting the whole pro formas projected out for the next ten years correct, to getting all your bills paid, making sure the product works. All of these things that require you to be in the office. But I believe it's as important to be out within the community that you're serving so go out, go to cocktail parties that are related to your space, go to tech meetups and video meetups. Those are some social elements that are important to our community. And then in terms of advertisers, go to advertising meetups, take every meeting that you can with advertisers when you're just beginning to bring in revenue from brands and from agencies. Another part of our world is distributors. So we need to spend time with iTunes and find out what's important to them, and the folks at AOL Video and Yahoo Video, and all of the other great video destination sites. So I have a tendency to be pretty social and to enjoy engaging in dinner parties and cocktail parties, and just spending a lot of time listening to people. And I think that that's very valuable to your business. It's going to be valuable when you want to raise money - it's much easier to raise money from people you know than to make cold calls - and it's also going to be valuable when you do business development deals. I will say that almost every startup will be part of an ecosystem. It's very hard for a startup to just exist on its own. So for us the early players in that ecosystem were WordPress, Typepad, Flickr, iTunes, a number of other distribution platforms and then also content creators. And we had to get out there. We had to hang out with them. We had to be in a position where those folks trusted us both personally and also trusted our product. So I think the inclination to engage with people and learn from them is a helpful aspect when you're starting a company up. Lucy: Absolutely, and you know with all the interviews we've done, I think this is the first time someone has answered this question this way. Larry: Yes. Lucy: And it's a very important observation. Larry: Yes, and obviously meeting Jerry Labon at one of these networking events, cocktail parties, I think that was a fine example. Dina: Yeah, I mean that was a huge turning point. And if I think about other very crucially important deals that we made for Blip early on, we did a pretty early partnership with Google AdSense for Video which is their video ad product. And that relationship was forged through someone that I met at a conference, sitting at a big lunch room around an eight person table. And we struck up a conversation, and it took a few months to close that deal but we ended up closing that deal which was lucrative for Google, I'm not going to say hugely lucrative, we're a small blip on their radar screen at this point, but it was a beneficial relationship for them. I think they actually tested that product on Blip before they did on YouTube. And it was incredibly important for us. If I look back to almost ever early business development deal that we did, it was through someone that I or someone else from Blip met at a conference, or at a digital media meetup, or at a digital media party, et cetera. So it is definitely important to be a part of the ecosystem that you're in. And then I'll add, you also clearly need to spend time on the product, and you need to spend some time in the office as well. Larry: And that's a fact. Dina, you've already accomplished a great deal. Here you've got Blip.tv, 62 million viewers per month and that number is growing constantly. What's next for you? Dina: So the next thing for us is to vastly expand our distribution platform. So we have this belief at Blip that every show created for the web has what's called a total potential audience, and you are never going to reach that total potential audience on one site. Why is that? That's because a music lover in Britain may only want to watch their video on Bebo, so we have to get our videos to Bebo.com. And someone that's old school Internet user may only want to go to AOL Video, so it's very important for us to make our content available on AOL. Other people just love their MySpace of Facebook pages, so we need to make our content available there. So what you'll see in 2009 is Blip.tv announcing a number of significant distribution deals to get our content into every nook and cranny of the web, and then some places off the web as well. We've already announced deals with Tivo, with Sony Bravia and with Fios, but we'll have some other deals as well. The second thing that we are going to focus on in 2009 is making things a little bit easier for advertisers to "buy" web video content. Right now it's very difficult for them to make buys because they need to come up with one type of creative for one side, a different type of creative for Blip, a third type of creative for another publisher. So we're going to be working with a number of other video destination sites and a number of the top web show creators such as Michael Eisner's team out in LA called Tornante, DECA Group which does this great show called "Boing Boing," another show called "Project Lore," "Momversation," and others. 60Frames and other key producers such as those to figure out, how we can come up with standards so that it's much easier for advertisers to make buys across multiple shows, on multiple platforms. And then there are some other tools that we are going to be collaborating with other folks in our ecosystem on to essentially streamline the whole system of buying for advertisers. Lucy: That's going to be a busy year. Larry: Boy, I'll say. Lucy: And we really do appreciate your time. This has been really a great company. And I wrote myself a little note here that you are democratizing TV. [laughs] Dina: No, that's exactly right. I mean if you really wanted to have a show on the air in the past - I mean a big show that has say, millions of viewers to it - you'd have to knock on the doors of NBC or Bravo or Sony Studios and just pray that you would get a deal. Now, you can just do the show and you can build up huge viewership for it and you can make money too, and do all of that not having a boss, not having a network chief telling you what to say or how to wear your hair. So I think that's an incredibly exciting thing for us and for talented show creators. But I think it's a little bit of a nervous time for the traditional networks in trying to think, how we compete with the massive content that's on a platform like Blip. Lucy: Well I have an idea for a show: "I Love Lucy." [laughs] Larry: Oh. Lucy: That's just a little joke. I'm sure someone took that one already. Larry: I love it. Well one of the things that I really appreciate is the fact of what you're doing. Pat and I, we have had w3w3.com talk radio for 10 years now, and things sure have changed over that time. Lucy: Yes, they have. Thank you, Dina, so much. Dina: Thank you, thank you for your time. It was wonderful to chat with both of you. Larry: By the way, you listeners out there, make sure you pass this interview along to others that you think would be interested. They can listen to it on... Lucy: NCWIT.org. Larry: And w3w3.com. Lucy: Thank you, and thank you Dina. Dina: Thank you. [music] Series: Entrepreneurial HeroesInterviewee: Dina KaplanInterview Summary: blip.tv wants to provide a great service for great shows. A new class of entertainment is emerging that is being made by the people without the support of billion-dollar multinationals. blip.tv's mission is to support people by taking care of all the problems a budding videoblogger, podcaster or Internet TV producer tends to run into. They take care of the servers, the software, the workflow, the advertising and the distribution, leaving clients free to focus on creativity. Release Date: December 22, 2008Interview Subject: Dina KaplanInterviewer(s): Lucy Sanders, Larry NelsonDuration: 21:46