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À la carte cable programming comes to Roku for the first time

starBetanews
January 17, 2011 5:14 PM
by Tim Conneally

À la carte cable programming comes to Roku for the first time

By Tim Conneally, Betanews

Roku XDS

Roku’s streaming set-top box has been an unequivocal success for the “over the top” content industry, bringing streaming video on demand to millions of homes. Today, Roku announced it has gotten its first “port” of a cable channel in its channel store: WealthTV.

When I say “port,” I mean users who tune into the WealthTV channel on their Roku set top box will see the same thing that WealthTV is broadcasting to its cable partners.

Now, irrespective of their Internet provider, users will be able to add WealthTV for $2.99 per month.

“Fans that can’t get our network from their local video provider can now enjoy our…programming lineup via Roku,” said Robert Herring, Sr., founder and CEO of WealthTV. “We’ve received a large volume of consumer requests to expand our distribution to connected devices, and this deployment will let us gauge the acceptability and viability of alternative distribution methods for our traditional cable feed.”

Whether or not you are interested in the content, it is a true example of a la carte linear programming, something that has thus far been frowned upon by the National Cable and Telecommunications Association, and one of the great possibilities offered by over-the-top content distribution.

Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010

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DVMUG Main Meeting

Facebook-icon.jpgTuesday, January 18 · 6:30pm – 9:00pm
Location Bancroft Elementary
2200 Parish Drive
Walnut Creek, CA
Created By
Diablo Valley Mac Users Group
More Info Adam Gerston, Agency Account Manager, Online Sales Operations from Facebook will discuss their current and future roadmap and the power of social networking.

DVMUG Main Meeting: “”

Extinct Mammoth, Coming To a Zoo Near You

Oh oh, saw that movie…
starSlashdot
January 15, 2011 4:31 PM
by timothy

Extinct Mammoth, Coming To a Zoo Near You

Techmeology writes “Professor Akira Iritani of Kyoto University plans to use recent developments in cloning technology to give life to the currently extinct woolly mammoth. Although earlier efforts in the 1990s were unsuccessful due to damage caused by extreme cold, Professor Iritani believes he can use a technique pioneered by Dr Wakayama (who successfully cloned a frozen mouse) to overcome this obstacle. This technique will enable Professor Iritani to identify viable cell nuclei, and transfer them to egg cells of an African elephant which will carry the mammoth for a 600 day pregnancy.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

biotech

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Unfollowed: Pentagon Deletes Social Media Office | Danger Room | Wired.com

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Unfollowed: Pentagon Deletes Social Media Office | Danger Room | Wired.com: ”
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Unfollowed: Pentagon Deletes Social Media Office
By Spencer Ackerman January 13, 2011  |  5:53 pm  |  Categories: Info War

At a time when Facebook has 500 million users and Twitter is closing in on 200 million, the Pentagon no longer has a single person guiding its communications shop on how to use social media to get the military’s message out.

Gone are communication pro Price Floyd and technology exec Sumit Agarwal, the two men brought in during the past two years to get the Pentagon comfortable with online interaction in the 21st century. Floyd, a relentless tweeter, decamped in August to join defense giant BAE Systems. Agarwal, a former Google manager, now works on cybersecurity issues in the Pentagon policy directorate. Their old boss, assistant security of defense for public affairs Douglas Wilson, decided not to replace Agarwal, who left in November.

Instead, now that the Facebook pages and Twitter feeds they set up are in place, Wilson says using social media ought to be the responsibility of the approximately 100 people he oversees. ‘I was increasingly concerned our approach to social media was a stovepiped professional area,’ he tells Danger Room. ‘It’s important for people in press operations, community and public outreach and communications and planning to be able to know how to use and access Facebook, Twitter and the other social media tools, rather than just have a single unit or single person do nothing but social media.’

Time will tell if Pentagon Social Media 2.0 is an actual upgrade. For one thing, it’s doesn’t make policy on servicemembers’ access to YouTube or Facebook, — a deeply controversial topic in certain military circles.

The Pentagon’s shockingly open social media guidelines expire on March 1st. Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn is in charge of deciding whether a soldier in Afghanistan should be allowed to tweet freely over military networks. He’s also one of the officials sounding the alarm about the Pentagon’s need to secure its networks. Given the new mindfulness in the post-WikiLeaks Pentagon about the downside of online communications tools, it’s worth wondering how the Pentagon will strike the new balance without an active social-media point person arguing for openness.

Wilson denies that social media will be placed on the back burner. Rather, he says, it’s the new normal inside his communications shop. ‘Our people are being trained in how best to use [social media], apply it to their day-to-day work, beyond sending personal Twitter messages or being on Facebook on their own,’ Wilson says. From there, they advise the military services on how to interact with their followers and Facebook fans. That is, if the services ask the Pentagon for help: they tend to have bigger online presences than the Pentagon.

But some of the ways that Wilson’s people adapt social media to their workaday responsibilities are more reactive than interactive themselves. Harold Hielsnis, who runs the Public Affairs Research and Analysis office, says that he now trolls Twitter, Facebook, and Google’s blog search to figure out what people interested in defense are saying about. But if others working for Wilson are engaging with the defense community, Hielsnis isn’t one of them: He’s not on either Twitter or Facebook himself. It’s up to the press shop to figure out whether and how they want to use his social media-informed research.

(Via .)