Because YouTube Is Not The End
Because YouTube is not the end, we post. Because YouTube is not the end, we watch. Because YouTube is not the end, governments persecute. Because YouTube is not the end, we fight back. Because YouTube is not the end, I must have my own time.
PORQUE HAY COSAS QUE NUNCA SE OLVIDAN (BECAUSE THERE ARE THINGS YOU NEVER FORGET)
Here’s the most awarded short film in history. Watch it on a computer. Enjoy it. – Julian. C from lucas figueroa on Vimeo.
Verizon Challenges FCC’s Net Neutrality Rules
WASHINGTON (AP) – Verizon Communications Inc. on Thursday filed a legal challenge to new federal regulations that prohibit broadband providers from interfering with Internet traffic flowing over their networks. In a filing in federal appeals court in the District of Columbia, Verizon argues that the Federal Communications Commission overstepped its authority in adopting the new … Read more
Comcast Wins Government Approval to Take Over NBC
By Joelle Tessler WASHINGTON (AP) – The government on Tuesday cleared the way for Comcast Corp., the country’s largest cable company, to take over NBC Universal in a deal certain to transform the entertainment industry landscape. Comcast is buying a 51 percent stake in NBC Universal, home of the NBC television network, from General Electric … Read more
Where Do You Get Most of Your News About National and International Issues?
FlowingData According to polls from the Pew Research Center, the Internet gained on Television as the public’s primary news source in 2010. Follow the link to see the graphs.
For Magazines, a Bitter Pill in iPad
The New York Times By JEREMY W. PETERS Published: January 16, 2011 The frustration that the country’s magazine and newspaper publishers feel toward Apple can sound a lot like a variation on the old relationship gripe, “can’t live with ’em, may get left behind without ’em.” Since Apple introduced the iPadlast year, publishers have poured … Read more
Under Pay Model, Little Effect Seen on Papers’ Web Traffic
The New York Times By JEREMY W. PETERS Published: January 17, 2011 While newspapers around the world are anxiously asking themselves what would happen if they started charging readers to view articles online, a few answers have started to emerge. Steven Brill’s Journalism Onlineexperiment, which developed a system that allows newspapers to charge their most … Read more
Israel Tests on Worm Called Crucial in Iran Nuclear Delay
The New York Times This article is by William J. Broad, John Markoff and David E. Sanger. The Dimona complex in the Negev desert is famous as the heavily guarded heart of Israel’s never-acknowledged nuclear arms program, where neat rows of factories make atomic fuel for the arsenal. Over the past two years, according to … Read more
Tech Show Surprises, and the Stale
The New York Times By DAVID POGUE Published: January 12, 2011 The star of this year’s Consumer Electronics Show wasn’t even there. That might sound like an odd remark, but it’s true. Look, summing up the major trends of North America’s biggest trade show is more or less hopeless; there were 2,700 booths and 140,000 … Read more
2010 Online, by the Numbers
The New York Times By NICK BILTON Published: January 13, 2011 Think your e-mail in-box is overflowing because you get dozens of e-mails a day? That’s nothing: Internet users collectively sent 107 trillion (yes, that’s with a “t”) messages in 2010. Granted, a large percentage of those messages were spam, but that’s still a lot … Read more
