
Carol Golfing - Originally uploaded on flickr by stevegarfield.
"Eventstreaming is the missing link in Web 2.0’s challenge to network television."

"This is just an indication of the future of news reporting"Whether or not you cared about the iPhone launch itself, the live streamers made it feel like you were there. In addition to that, if the live streamers were paying attention to their chat rooms, you could participate in the event remotely.
"Streaming video live is history repeating. radio/tv <-> web audio/web video. People are experimenting now. Give it time..."
"iJustine is calling her mom on an iPhone and I'm watching it LIVE http://www.justin.tv/ijustine "The iPhone is awesome""
" Mogulus joins USTREAM.TV reporting about iPhone from the street today. 336 viewers right now. http://iphone.mogulus.com/ "


Fred Thompson, the actor slated to be appointed vice president after Cheney resigns because of health issues later this summer.Now that would make things even more interesting.
“New TV Changes the Game vs. Video Changes The Game” cause video is “here today, gone today”, and with “TV”, shows change but “networks” last forever. Sent love to Om Malick’s blog “New Tee Vee”, a fave of mine, and inspiration for language I liked and that term was more in spirit with what we want to accomplish at Next New: borrow the good practices of TV—it’s dependable unlike video that just happens, it’s branded so you know what you’re getting, and it’s consistent and reliable but not predictable—and marry it to what people expect from the internet and take advantage of its’ functionality. That’s our “New TV”. On the latter point about the internet, our new TV follows 3 rules that we live by:Great points.1) be real and authentic vs. slick and over authoritative. That is the aesthetic of the web and new TV vs. “Old TV” and what Josh Marshall does on Veracifier is an example citing his visit to Colbert as being evidence of this.
2) community and conversation are integral to our new TV—it’s a sublety but we don’t so much make TV for audiences as we make shows WITH audiences citing how VOD Cars, Channel Frederator and Threadbanger and others and invite audiences to contribute and that serves as catalyst for many of our shows.
3) Finally, audiences want their new TV where they are—on their blogs, profiles, community sites so we embrace it and encourage it and invite marketers to join us.


TiVo announced yesterday that its software for Motorola cable boxes was accepted by Comcast, after two years of development. Starting this August, the software will be available to Comcast subscribers in the New England area as a seamless upgrade for their Comcast DVR's.I can not wait for this upgrade. Thanks Shelly for reporting the news. let's see how long it takes Comcast to let me know about it. ;-)
David Pogue of The New York Times looks at the features of the new iPhone, as furtively as possible.




"The growth of Youtube and its subsequent $1.65 billion buyout left behind a bevy of competing video sites. Since then competitors have been seeking to differentiate themselves by focusing on longer videos, higher (bitrate) quality videos, professional content, and paying their users. However, one of the more unique approaches to differentiation has been streaming live video over the internet."I commented:




Within hours of the "Sopranos" finale, fans logged into YouTube to swap theories about its hidden meanings. Many argued that Tony had died. Others proposed that, like the ending of the "Newhart," the final episode had all been one of Tony's dream sequences.How many times to I have to blog about this?
But most agreed on one point: Despite its ambiguity, the finale had become instantly iconic. In one YouTube video, a "Sopranos" fan presented clips from famous films as though they had been directed by David Chase. In the "Gone With the Wind" segment, Rhett turns to Scarlett and says, "Frankly my dear. . ." And then the screen goes black.


It's 9am here in France and I just saw Jerry accept the Emmy on the live webcast. Though he didn't thank you in the speech, I wanted to do it personally. As you know, we couldn't have done it without you.Congratulations.



For the latest episode of her new video blog, cookbook author Nina Simonds is bouncing around her kitchen throwing together what she calls the "best dumplings ever." She's funny and charmingly scatterbrained, with red ballet slippers on her feet, eye glasses perched on her head, and a voice hoarse from talking and talking and talking.Yay!
Also in the kitchen is Julie Lutts, her tall blonde recipe tester; Ingrid Schwamb, her personal assistant; Maureen Yasi, a shorter blondish recipe tester; and Steve Garfield, the quirky Jamaica Plain-based video blog pioneer who tapes the show. Everyone is laughing, cooking, getting bossed around, and mugging for the camera. It's like they're not really doing anything serious here, which is why Simonds's vlog, spicesoflife.com , is becoming a hit.

Cooks use technology to liven up their recipes.I added links.
In a world where you can find anything on the Internet, the newest way to learn cooking is from a genre called vlogs (that's video blog). Chinese authority Nina Simonds is hamming it up in front of a Nokia cell phone in her videos. Former home ec teacher Kathy Maister adds animation to her kitchen basics."




I Watched, I Laughed, I VloggedYay!
Sunday at 2pm — Curated by Steve Garfield
Since 2005, Steve Garfield has been finding great videos on the web and sharing them on his videoblog, Vlog Soup. This is a collection of comedic videos he discovered while producing it.


