by Jason Wilk on May 1, 2009

- The Disney-Hulu content-sharing arrangement announced yesterday is another big shake-up at the pay-as-you-go king, Apple (AAPL) and iTunes. The war over streaming premium content has been heating up publicly in the last 6 months, with YouTube, Sling Media and CBS (Tv.com) all trying to strike deals with studios and networks. Hulu has been crowned the King of that battle and now they have their eyes set on a bigger competitor, the entire iTunes download model (for TV and movies of course). The more popular Hulu becomes and as consumers feel in control of their online streaming experience, the less compelling downloading the same content for a fee becomes. Business Week quotes Gartner (IT) analyst Michael McGuire who says “Over time, perhaps the direct-payment model goes away”.
- Hulu is now the No. 3 video site behind YouTube and News Corp.’s (NWS) Fox Interactive Media, owner of MySpace. With their current minimalist advertising policy (2-3 15 second commercials every 30 minute episode), they are on route to being the content model that dominates the industry as iTunes has dominated the music business. Apple’s download model has only pushed people further to illegally downloading their content. If you interview any college student at the moment, they will tell you they have mostly given up the hassle of illegally donwloading their TV content on Torrents and gone straight to Hulu for the majority of viewing. More importantly, there is no TiVo for Hulu. At the moment, it is the only free viewing environment where users don’t have a choice but to view the ads. It’s surprising to me more advertisers have not tried to flock to this model before Hulu starts displaying more ads, someone figures out a Hulu DVR and advertisers are subject to the fast forwarding audience they have come to hate. Advertisers will figure out how great Hulu is soon, and world domination will follow suit.
by Jason Wilk on February 1, 2009
by Jason Wilk on November 25, 2008

- Sling Media
, the company behind the popular Slingbox TV-streaming hardware devices, has finally launched its widely anticipated streaming video portal much like Hulu on Sling.com
- Sling offers content from most of the major networks and studios including Warner, Sony, and MGM.
- Arrested Development in on board, but unfortunately The Daily Show and Colbert Report aren’t available such as on Hulu.
- Sling’s leg up in the space is due to it’s DVR hardware device that let’s you stream any content saved to the box on any computer or your TV. This isn’t much of a plus for those with HDMI cable’s and right now streaming is only available for Window’s users that have downloaded the plug-in.
- More importantly, Hulu has Sling by the balls, because most of the content on Sling is being licensed from Hulu (better yet, NBC/Universal). This will certainly hold them back from being a head-to-head competitor as most are trying to hype it to be.
- It’s going to be pretty tough to knock Hulu off it’s high horse right now, especially for players like FanCast (what happened there Comcast?)
TC
by John Jorgensen on November 25, 2008

- YouTube has officially announced its switch to a widescreen aspect ratio video player.
- New player is 960 pixels wide. 4:3 aspect ratio videos are displayed in letterbox.
- Widescreen could be enabled previously on YouTube videos by using a manual URL, but now the widescreen player is the default.
- Recently, YouTube announced they will stream select full length MGM films. No doubt they will take advantage of the widescreen view.
- Hulu, are you scared? (probably not)
TechCrunch
by Jason Wilk on November 21, 2008

- I just received an anonymous tip from someone claiming to work for Hulu.
- They said that Hulu is in talks with HBO and Showtime to roll out a Hulu Premium edition with subscription in 09′.
- Now that is what I am talking about. I watch very little television offline these days, and the only time I do sit down in front of the TV is usually to watch Entourage or Dexter. Getting these shows online would take me off the TV completely.
- Please let this be true. More to come…