jpfinley + media   22

Fair Use in Education and Research — Columbia Copyright Advisory Office
"Fair use offers an extraordinarily important opportunity for educators, researchers, and others to make reasonable and limited uses of copyrighted materials. Clipping, cutting, pasting, uploading, posting, and many other activities that are common at the university may be copyright infringements or may be within fair use."

The Fair Use Checklist is quite nice.
copyright  fairuse  education  art  media  film  video  documentation  law 
january 2012 by jpfinley
Netflix going up against cable with original series deal
Netflix may be known for offering some of our favorite TV and movie streams, but the company is about to step up its game and begin offering original content. Netflix has allegedly outbid a number of major cable networks for a new drama series produced by and starring Kevin Spacey called House of Cards, and may be about to close a deal at more than $100 million, according to a report on Deadline.com.

The deal has yet to be finalized, but Deadline's unnamed source claims that Netflix has made a commitment to two seasons of House of Cards, which the media site described as "staggering" and "pretty unheard of these days." A source for the New York Times later confirmed that Netflix was indeed involved in the bidding, but said there was "considerable uncertainty" about the terms of the deal. Yet another source for the Wall Street Journal said that Netflix was likely to pay much less than Deadline's speculated $100 million.






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News  News  News  Media  Web  houseofcards  netflix  streaming  tv  video  from google
march 2011 by jpfinley
Amazon takes on Netflix with movie streaming service for Prime
As expected, Amazon has announced its new and improved Amazon Prime service that now offers more than 5,000 streaming TV shows and movies to customers. Those who already pay the $79 per year for Prime won't have to pay any extra to get access to the streams. Video will be available on Macs and PCs in the US, as well as a number of set-top boxes.

Amazon has been rumored to be working on such a service for some time now, but the stakes were raised earlier this month when Amazon accidentally let a few movie pages show up on Prime subscribers' Amazon accounts. That was a hint that the service was on the verge of launch, and we speculated that Amazon was looking to leverage its massive built-in audience to try to take on movie streaming giant Netflix.






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News  News  News  Media  Web  amazon  amazoninstantstreaming  movies  netflix  prime  roku  stream  tv  video  from google
february 2011 by jpfinley
How to convert video for the iPhone 4's high-res display
The iPhone 4 just begs for some good video content to be played on its high-resolution display—which, contrary to popular belief, isn't made of retinas. The easiest way to get video is through Apple's iTunes Store, but there are many reasons why you might want to watch videos that you already have lying around instead. If you're lucky, your video is already in a format that the iPhone supports. In that case, just add the file to iTunes and sync. But what if it's not in the right format?
The iPhone 4, the iPad, and the latest versions of the iPod touch all support H.264 main profile level 3.1. What that means is that you can play HD video with a resolution of up to 1280x720 and a framerate of 30 frames per second. That's a significant step up from the baseline profile level 3.0 (720x480x30 or 720x576x25) that the older iPhones and iPod touches support, and even an improvement over the older Apple TV, which could only play 1280x720 video at 24 frames per second or less. The main profile rather than baseline profile means that it's possible to use more effective compression.

So how to go about creating those H.264 files?







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Guides  Guides  Guides  Apple  Media  h264  howto  iphone  iphone4  retinadisplay  video  from google
october 2010 by jpfinley
The Accidental News Explorer [iPhone]
Created and designed by Brendan Dawes and published by CreativeApplications.Net, The Accidental News Explorer is a new type of news app that celebrates serendipity and chance encounters. Start by searching for a subject. Once you’ve browsed the suggested articles taken from hundreds of news sources, tap the “related topics” button to discover connected topics, which in turn lead to more articles. Each article leads to new things; the more curious you are, the longer your journey will be. What will you discover?

You may start with Art, discover Jasper Johns and see news related to similar artists or read about the Museum of modern art. Alternatively you may search for Obama, discover Larry Elder’s article, find related Afghanistan issues and read about Efron (see video).

The Accidental News Explorer is powered by Daylife.

• Optimised for iPhone 4 Retina display
• Instapaper integration – save articles for reading later
• Easily email article links
• Copy links so you can share articles

Ever since his first experiences with the humble ZX81 back in the early eighties, Brendan Dawes has continued to explore the interplay of people, code, design and art both in his role leading the team at mN and on brendandawes.com, a personal space where he publishes random thoughts, toys and projects created from an eclectic mix of digital and analog objects. Find out more….

The Accidental News Explorer is available for $1.99 and has already reached top 20 apps in the news section of the AppStore.

The Accidental News Explorer [iPhone] is a post from: CreativeApplications.Net | Follow us on Twitter - Facebook - Flickr - Vimeo
Related Posts:

Neography [iPhone, iPad]What the iPad Means to Developers [News, iPhone]Buamai [iPhone]Dropular [iPhone, WebApp]Face It [iPhone] – PreviewBlogs We Read + Love [News]
CANApps  iPhone  AppStore  explore  media  News  serendipity  from google
august 2010 by jpfinley
The Technium: Better Than Free
If reproductions of our best efforts are free, how can we keep going? To put it simply, how does one make money selling free copies?
strategy  media  free  content  thesis 
july 2010 by jpfinley
Distribution pact brings better streams to Netflix users
Netflix continues to inch its way up the movie distribution hierarchy and will soon be able to stream some new releases during the so-called "pay TV window." The company struck a deal with Relativity Media, a distribution house responsible for some major Hollywood films, that will give Netflix users access to streamed movies years faster in some cases.

As many Netflix users are painfully aware, the Watch Instantly pool is typically made up of a random selection of old 'n' busted films (and usually not even the good ones), with the occasional surprise movie that was released sometime after the year 2000. The reason for this is because most distribution houses give priority to their DVD release window, at which time, no one can play the movie until the studios feel they have milked every last drop of DVD revenue.





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News  News  News  Media  Web  dvd  movies  netflix  relativitymedia  streaming  video  watchinstantly  from google
july 2010 by jpfinley
Jeremy Hight Interview | Serial Consign
Jeremy Hight is a Los Angeles-based scholar, artist and educator. He is the author of numerous essays on locative media, narrative and augmented reality. I responded at length to his recent essay Writing Within the Map and as evidenced by the transcript below, Jeremy and I have been chatting back and forth for the last few weeks. The following conversation touches on space, media and some of Jeremy's earlier projects.
maps  location  thesis  gps  place  writing  media 
april 2010 by jpfinley
Bloggers of social media analysis (The Net-Savvy Executive)
Links to blogs associated with social media analysis companies. Some are more work-oriented than others, but there are some good sources in here.
blog  social  media 
june 2007 by jpfinley
digitalFAQ.com | Blank DVD Media Quality Guide
A helpful list of blank media quality. CD-RW, DVD-R, etc.
audio  video  cd  disc  dvd  media  reference  burning 
march 2006 by jpfinley
Linux.com | Building a Linux home media center
My LHMC would have to interface with my existing home configuration via a wireless network with WPA security enabled and output to my television's S-Video or composite inputs, and it would have to connect to my media server via NFS.
dvr  hardware  linux  howto  media  pvr  ubuntu  software 
january 2006 by jpfinley

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