Month: August 2010 (Page 4 of 6)

Netflix looks to buy exclusive online rights to Paramount, Lionsgate and MGM catalogs

Netflix streaming.According to the LA Times, Netflix is looking to add more titles to its streaming options by adding exclusive access to Paramount, Lionsgate, and MGM film catalogs. The deal, which would manifest as a partnership with EPIX, would cost Netflix something like a billion dollars for five years of exclusivity.

Any time Netflix says it will expand its streaming catalog, I’m a happy man. I do most of my movie viewing via streaming on my desktop, often while I’m doing work throughout the day. More options is always a good thing. Unfortunately, this deal would still suffer, as the current streaming system does, from Hollywood mandated “windowing,” pushing streamable titles beyond the rent date. Hopefully studios will start to get more flexible as streaming becomes more and more popular.

Traveling and Tech: Layovers made easy

Plane.When I travel I tend to drive. I prefer the sense of space and there’s something cathartic about putting in 11 hours or so behind the wheel of a car. Over the past three weeks, though, I’ve traveled by both car (as a passenger) and plane, and in both cases my travel was significantly delayed so I had a lot of time on my hands. Thank god for smartphones.

For the road trip, my girlfriend and I made our way up to NYC to visit some friends. It was a great little vacation, but we got caught in traffic outside every major city between North Carolina and the Holland Tunnel. I laid in the back of the car while our friend drove, playing Words With Friends with a couple people, reading forums, updating the blogs I write for, cruising Facebook, and watching ridiculous YouTube videos. It made the stop-and-go that is DC rush hour not only bearable, but almost enjoyable.

After being home for just under a week I left again, up to Ohio to celebrate my grandmother’s 80th birthday. I hopped a plane from Wilmington to Charlotte, wherein I was trapped next to a nervous flier. I don’t think anyone is truly comfortable with the bangs and clicks associated with flying, but nervous fliers stress me out. They’re always shaking, breathing heavily, whimpering any time the plane takes a quick dip. It is as awkward a situation as you can create – two strangers mashed up against each other, one of which will be in desperate need of some consoling. I’m sorry, but I don’t fly to console people. I queued up some Tap Tap Revenge, put on my noise-canceling headphones, and tried to ignore the fact that my seat was shaking from this person twitching.

We landed in Charlotte despite some thunderstorms, but my flight to Ohio was delayed by a solid two hours (I already had an hour layover). I started digging through the App Store for something to do and found Angry Birds (all of the addictive stories are true). I started downloading an episode of This American Life for the next flight, and flipped over to some Angry Birds. In between levels I could flip back and forth between Words With Friends and text messages from family members wondering when they should be at the airport.

None of this is new or thrilling, but when it’s you stuck staring at terminal screens, trapped in tiny coach seats, or staring at the ceiling in the back of a friend’s car, you start to appreciate just how great all of our tech can be.

Bill Gates sees the internet as the future of education

Bill Gates.Bill Gates has had a lot to say at the Techonomy conference in Lake Tahoe this weekend, and this is just one among many interesting things he offered up. Gates thinks the future of higher education will be less place-based, at least for students with a little initiative.

“Five years from now on the web for free you’ll be able to find the best lectures in the world,” Gates said. “It will be better than any single university.” To some extent you can already see this happening. iTunes U already offers up some of the best lectures in the world for free. As education continues to embrace technology we’re sure to see more and more examples of the best educators providing free content for the rest of the world.

I don’t agree, though, that education should be less place-based. There’s a lot to be said for the experience of getting away from home, away from family, away from comfort, and immersing yourself in your education. It doesn’t work for everyone, and certainly a lot of the current college system could use an overhaul, but to eliminate the concept of place from the educational experience seems like a mistake.

iPhone hardware head leaves Apple

iPhone 4 band-aid.There’s no doubt that the iPhone 4 launch was one of Apple’s sloppiest hardware launches to date. The antenna issue was definitely the worst PR we’ve seen from Cupertino and yet, somehow, the iPhone continues to blow through millions of models. After all that, Apple’s finally made an inside move, a sort of quiet omission of guilt despite its protestations over the last several months.

Mark Papermaster, the exec at the helm of iPhone hardware, has left Apple. There’s no word on whether he was given the boot or left of his own accord. His departure is a bit coincidental for me to believe that, whoever initiated his departure, it wasn’t all related to the antenna issue. When consumers are making joke band-aids and “End Call” stickers to fix your missteps, you can bet someone’s head will roll.

As you might imagine, Papermaster declined to comment.

Technology Advances Sportsbook Reviews Place in the Gaming World

As the fall sports seasons kick into high gear in early September, sports lovers across the world are using their computers to track the intricate statistics of their favorite teams. Technology has advanced so far that Fantasy Football lovers keep track of their team’s progress and scoring virtually instantaneously.

Tracking your favorite team’s progress via the computer provides an instant look into a fan’s favorite team. Keeping track of rushing touchdowns in football, inside-the-park home runs in baseball and three-point-shots made in basketball is fairly simple. Using the technology of today’s computer can keep a fan in the loop of just about every plausible dynamic that even the most rigorous fan would want to know.

With the recent explosion in technology, sportsbook reviews have become an even more important to people that use a computer for their online gaming needs.

Using technology to make an informed decision about who to start on your fantasy football team no longer takes a computer expert. By logging onto your computer on Sunday morning, live updates from every team are accessible. Game-time decisions, and news on a player’s injury report are available on your computer hours before the critical decision of who to start and who to sit need to be made.

With the increases sports traffic in the month of September, online gambling is sure to explode. The technology of today’s sports betting person has increased in leaps and bounds in the past decade. Using a home computer to track information that will assist in the betting minefield no longer takes a technology superstar. Accessing critical game and weather information from your computer, allows the avid better to make a more prepared and informed decision than ever before.

So bring on the fall sports campaign, and with a little help from your computer, good luck!

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