A report yesterday from Bloomberg says that Yahoo! is planning to revamp its online video offering by year's end in an effort to compete with YouTube and MySpace TV.
Google has released StreetView data for a bunch of new cities: Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Portland and Tucson. Phoenix, Tucson and parts of Chicago are even high-res.
They’ve also added the ability to pan up in many cities. Th
Someone forgot to tell television advertisers that we live in an on-demand, self-selected world. I want ads on my own terms and now I have the tools to enforce that desire.
1.Write and submit articles. It is a classic, but it works. This will be indefinite traffic stuck in the search engines for you. Write quality unique articles, not articles that are rehashed or provide no insight to readers, which is a huge problem
Four years ago, naysayers were saying that Radio was dead. That with the advent of Satellite Radio, Cable TV and the internet, who wanted to listen to what savvy radio programmers were producing?
The Web's emergence is forcing ad executives to succumb to marketers' demands that agencies reinvent how ads are created, and forgo their TV-centric approach. Clients are even calling for changes in the way ad firms are structured. But until now,
I know this idea may seem cool, but then would you really get excited about your newly bought HDTVs because of these features? Announced in the ongoing CES, Panasonic and YouTube are set to have reached an agreement that would bring user-generated v
CES has no shortage of displays. And when MAKE offered us some TV-B-Gone clickers to bring to the show, we pretty much couldn't help ourselves. We shut off a TV. And then another. And then a wall of TVs. And we just couldn't stop.
Jeff Paul used to sell a book called "How You Can Make $4,000 A Day, Sitting At Your Kitchen Table, In Your Underwear!" Since 1996, he used full-page ads in business opportunity magazines and TV spots to sell this book, and over 90,000 copies have
Getting hold of accurate demographic information can be a little tricky online. Unlike magazines, TV and radio stations, who know exactly who their audience is, search engines don’t compile a lot in the way of demographic data – or if they do, I hav