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Within minutes of the tragic London bombings
last week, news sites showed location video footage mainly from camera
phones sent by members of the public. According to director of news
Helen Boaden, the BBC quickly received 30 video clips, which aired on
broadcasts and online within 20 minutes of the attack. Boaden called it
"a new world" of digital media distribution. Vamsi Sistla, ABI
Research's director of residential entertainment research, agrees:
"Now, anybody who has a voice has a means to express it." Many of those
video clips were carried on Web sites such as Yahoo, Google and MSN,
highlighting what Sistla calls the latest trend in digital home
"entertainment": the move by large Internet operators into a realm
previously dominated by cable companies and telcos offering broadband
services.?‚
{mosgoogle}The signs are everywhere. Microsoft is
collaborating with France Telecom to produce cutting-edge digital media
products. Google, with a new video service, has just announced an
investment in a company providing broadband through powerline, and is
rumored to be buying dark fiber bandwidth. China's Shanda Interactive
has released a set-top box, and Intel is investing in movie
distribution.
This attempt by some Internet giants to take advantage of the digital
home media revolution is discussed in the latest update of ABI
Research's "Residential Entertainment Technologies Research Service."
Until recently, insufficient bandwidth to homes, combined with the
entertainment industry's grip on content licensing, made home
entertainment unattractive to the big Internet players. Now, both those
conditions are changing. "They know it's time for them to take
advantage of their brands and their marketing relationships to pursue
the next generation digital home and digital media services," Sistla
explains. "They are creating the 'Wal-Marts of the World Wide Web', and
aim to offer everything and anything to the widest audience. We will
soon see true 'video blogs' on their sites."
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