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Posts Tagged ‘ youtube ’

By Chris Byers
April 2, 2010

flash1LONDON – QUESTION I was interested to read recently about someone who upgraded to Windows 7 64bit and could no longer view YouTube content. I am about to take delivery of a new Windows 7 64bit PC. I too want to watch YouTube. Does your advice mean I need to opt for the 32bit version of the operating system instead? Carole Ellis

HELPROOM ANSWER Don’t panic, Carole, you’ll be able to watch YouTube video on your new PC just fine.

The chances are your computer will arrive without Flash installed, but should you visit a Flash-based website such as YouTube, you’ll be invited to install it.

If you’re using Internet Explorer, go to adobe.com and click the ‘Get Adobe Flash Player’ link. The wizard will then talk you though the very simple steps of downloading and installing Flash.

You’ll need to repeat this process in Mozilla Firefox if you also intend to use that web browser, since Firefox and Internet Explorer use different versions of the plug-in.

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By Matt Peckham
March 26, 2010

11SAN FRANCISCO – Nintendo may be hip to sell 3D handhelds, but Sony’s having none of it.

Responding to Nintendo’s surprise announcement yesterday that the company plans to release a 3D version of its popular DS handheld by March 2011, Sony’s marketing director John Koller told IGN he believes works best in the console space.

“The amount of interest in 3D from the retail side and game publishers is off the charts,” said Koller. “We know we have a hit with 3D on PS3 and we’re going to concentrate our efforts there.”

Well sure, you’re probably saying, what else is Sony going to say? The company’s lining up to sell ultra-expensive 3D TVs, after all, and wants you to believe 3D’s the next big thing–even if it isn’t.

Even then, Sony’s probably right to be skeptical about 3D in the portable space. We’re talking about screens–or possibly a single screen–less than 4-inches diagonally. It may look cool for a couple of seconds in a YouTube video, but could be distracting (in a bad way) or strain your eyes over extended play sessions.

Koller calls Nintendo’s unexpected 3D gamble “an interesting move,” but wonders if they’ve really got their demographics straight.

“8 and 9 year-olds playing 3D is a little bit of a stretch given where some of our research is right now,” he said.

Count me with Koller until Nintendo proves me wrong (and hey, prove me wrong Nintendo–I’ll be first in line to buy one if you do).

Also, lest Sony forget, remember that you’ll pay upwards of $4,000 for a 3D TV set, where Nintendo’s 3D handheld should come in somewhere under $200.

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By Dan Nystedt
March 9, 2010

oscarTAIPEI – Apple chose the Oscars on the ABC television network to air its first iPad commercial on Sunday night in the U.S.

The Cupertino, California, company kept the ad simple, showing the device set on someone’s lap and being used for a range of activities, from viewing pictures to surfing the Internet and reading e-books. The commercial has already been posted on YouTube.

Apple often chooses high profile TV events to place ads for its products. The company unveiled the Macintosh personal computer during Super Bowl XVIII in its popular 1984 commercial, for example, and has also aired iPhone commercials during past Oscars.

The iPad, a 9.7-inch touchscreen computer with no physical keyboard attached, is due out in the U.S. on April 3, though people can pre-order the device starting Mar. 12, according to Apple. A version of the iPad with Wi-Fi only will be available initially in the U.S., with 3G-enabled iPads coming out later in April.

The device will be out in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Switzerland and the U.K. in late April, the company said last week.

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By Jeff Bertolucci
March 8, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – YouTube is opening up its auto-caption feature to everybody, a move that benefits not only deaf users, but also people who watch videos in really noisy places, like airport terminals. And since the tool will be able to translate captions into your choice of 50 languages, it should be handy for viewing YouTube clips from around the world. (For now, however, auto-captioning works only with videos in English.)
Auto-captioning borrows some text-to-speech algorithms from Google Voice Search to automatically create captions upon viewer request. As you’d expect from machine-generated captioning, the results aren’t perfect, but they’re fairly accurate for formal presentations and keynote-type speeches with minimal background noise. In other words, auto-captioning gives you a pretty good idea of what’s being said, although some of the finer points may be misleading or just plain wrong. On the plus side, a video owner can download the auto-captions, clean them up, and upload a corrected transcript.

The iPad Keynote Test

To test auto-captioning, I went to YouTube to watch Steve Jobs’ iPad presentation from January 2010. The feature is a cinch to activate via the “up arrow” button on the bottom right of the video window.

Within seconds, YouTube begins generating captions, which it displays in real-time.

Auto-captioning was reasonably accurate, albeit with a few glitches:

· Steve: And you can change the background screen, the home screen, to personalize it any way you want.

· YouTube: and you cannot change the background screen the whole screen that personalize it anyway you want

· Steve: You can browse the Web with it

· YouTube: you can browse the went with it

· Steve: A keyboard pops up. It’s almost life-size.

· YouTube: a keyboard pops up it’s almost like flies

YouTube first released auto-captioning to a small group of beta testers in November. The wide availability of this tool will certainly benefit content owners, who can easily and quickly make their videos accessible to a worldwide audience.

Then again, a poorly translated video could lead to some troubling international incidents. What do you think?

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Enjoy online video offline

By on February 25, 2010

By Cliff Joseph
February 25, 2010

LONDON – It’s not all clips of burping babies and snoozing grannies: YouTube offers some real gems, too. There are thousands of music videos and some great live performances, for example, plus plenty of sports clips to browse through. Increasingly, film and TV companies are also making films and TV series available on the site.

YouTube streams video within your web browser, which means clips play automatically. But this also means you lose the clip as soon as you close your browser and have to wait for it to stream again before you can watch it a second time. You’ll need to be online, too.

If only you could download video clips and store them permanently on your PC’s hard disk, letting you watch your favourite clips offline whenever you want. It would be even better if you could convert the resulting file into a format compatible with your iPod, mobile phone or other portable device of choice.

Visit PC Advisor TV for the latest tech videos

Fortunately, a number of programs enable you to download video from the web. You’ll need a second piece of software to convert YouTube clips formatted as Flash video files, however – these aren’t natively supported in Windows Media Player. Alternatively, get a program that can play back Flash video.

Many free and paid-for programs can handle one of these tasks; RealPlayer, our favourite, does all three. The basic version of the program is free for download from real.com/realplayer.

Over the following pages, we’ll demonstrate how to download your favourite YouTube clips to your computer and enjoy them offline using RealPlayer.

We’ll also show you how to convert video to a format compatible with your MP3 player, portable video player, smartphone or PC.

Download web video using RealPlayer

Step 1. Download RealPlayer SP. It’s compatible with Internet Explorer, Firefox and Google’s Chrome browser, and runs on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X, so you should be able to use it without changing your existing computer setup.

Step 2.
Follow the RealPlayer installation wizard and agree to the default settings. Be sure to select the option marked ‘Enable browser download button’ in the ‘Download and Recording’ section of the dialog box. This option will be necessary for directly downloading video from web pages.

Step 3. The free version of RealPlayer is ad-supported. Click No to all offers punted to you, then choose the ‘Basic RealPlayer’ installation. A RealPlayer Message Center will be installed in the Taskbar; you can turn this off by right-clicking the icon in the Taskbar, selecting ‘Preferences’ and deselecting everything.

Step 4. After watching the Australian Open, we found some great clips of Roger Federer on YouTube. When you open a page that has a video you’ll see the RealPlayer download button appear just above the clip. Click this button to download the video, or right-click the clip and choose the relevant option.

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Step 5. The RealPlayer Downloader window appears, showing the clip you’re currently downloading. A number of useful options are available in this window, including Convert to and Copy to. For now, just click the thumbnail preview of the video to open it and play it back using RealPlayer.

Step 6. The clip has now been downloaded to your hard drive in the Flash video (.flv) format. Flash isn’t compatible with Windows Media Player, so you’ll either need to convert the file or watch it in RealPlayer. RealPlayer can also be used to download Flash video from other websites, such as DailyMotion and Vimeo.

Step 7. Next to the RealPlayer download button that appears in YouTube is a small triangular button that displays a drop-down menu. You can use the ‘Save this video as’ command offered here to change the name of the video file when you save it on to your hard drive.

Step 8. Choose the Preferences option in this drop-down list to visit the Preferences panel in the main program. Under ‘Downloading & Recording’, you can change various settings such as the folder where clips should be saved. You can also alter the behaviour of the download button or switch it off altogether.

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Step 9. Choose Advanced Settings. If you want to play your video clips on a portable device, you’ll need to convert – or ‘transcode’ – the original .flv file into a compatible format. RealPlayer’s default transcoding option is Best Performance. This is fast, but the resulting video quality can be poor. We’ve instead selected Highest Detail.

Step 10. We’re now ready to convert our clip for use on an iPod. The Downloader window offers ‘Convert to’ and ‘Copy to’ options. Copy to is the quickest, converting the file and automatically preparing it for transfer. By default RealPlayer is set to copy to an iPod, but you can select another device from the drop-down menu.

Step 11. RealPlayer also lets you download a batch of clips and convert them simultaneously using the ‘Convert All’ button. Other handy options include the ability to send video directly from the Downloader to your Facebook profile, or send a link to the YouTube page via email or Twitter.

Step 12. We selected the ‘Copy to Apple iPod’ option. RealPlayer downloaded our batch of Roger Federer clips and converted them into the H.264 format. It then added the converted files to our iTunes Library, ready to be transferred to an iPod. Plug in the iPod and tell iTunes to synchronise the files.

Visit PC Advisor TV for the latest tech videos

Step 13. The ‘Convert to’ option is similar to the ‘Copy to’ command, but provides more control over the conversion process. One useful feature is the ‘Enable multi-select’ option, which lets you specify multiple conversion options simultaneously – perhaps creating versions for your iPod, mobile phone and PC.

Step 14. Click ‘details’ next to any option to modify the conversion settings, including resolution and video quality. If you don’t want to use iTunes or RealPlayer for playback, you can also convert video into Windows Media Video (.wmv) files that are compatible with Windows Media Player.

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By JR Raphael
December 18, 2009

Susan Boyle may not have won the top spot in “Britain’s Got Talent,” but the big-voiced Brit has just achieved a far more impressive feat: Her video has taken the title of most watched clip on YouTube in 2009.

YouTube released a list of its most popular videos of the year, taking into account aggregated views from all over the globe. And while Boyle’s inaugural television appearance was the most harmonious of the bunch, the other hot commodities were no less theatrical.

Here’s the full list of YouTube’s most watched videos of 2009.

5. Evian Roller Babies

With more than 27 million views under its belt, this creative commercial for Evian water certainly grabbed the world’s attention. No word yet how many diaper changes were involved.


4. New Moon Movie Trailer

Surprise, surprise: A lot of people watched the trailer for the Twilight saga’s New Moon movie. Thirty-one million, to be exact. Granted, even more people probably gazed at the assets in Christian Serratos’s revealing PETA ad — but that’s another story altogether.


3. JK Wedding Entrance Dance

YouTube helped a small wedding make a big splash this year. Jill and Kevin, a couple from Minnesota, busted a move as they walked down the aisle — in fact, the entire wedding party got pretty jiggy, nuptially speaking. The wacky dancers went viral, attracting thirty-three million eyeballs over the course of ’09.


2. David After Dentist

A drugged-up little dude soared high on the YouTube charts, pulling in 37 million views worldwide. David, a seven-year-old boy, spouted off all sorts of nonsense following a trip to the dentist. Do his amusing antics warrant the massive merchandise and public speaking business that’s sprung up since the video’s success? God no. But at least they kept that Fred guy from being in this year’s top five.


1. Susan Boyle – Britain’s Got Talent

As promised, the saucy Miss Boyle belted her way into YouTube’s most-watched spot for 2009. The clip of Boyle’s first appearance on “Britain’s Got Talent” garnered a whopping 120 million views across the world. Who’s the master of the house now?






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By Chris Brandrick
October 3, 2009

Google has come a long way in its eleven-year history, from its humble beginning as a Stanford University research project in 1998, to the global, multi-billion dollar online presence Google enjoys today.

Earlier this week, the company celebrated its 11th birthday and choose to mark the occasion with an all new Google Doodle, a fun take on their colorful identity. The unique logo illustrated Google’s eleven years in operation by adding an extra L to the company’s name to form a number eleven.

Google’s actual founding date is subject to debate. There are those who think that Google should bring out the cake on the September 4, the day in 1998 that Google filed its incorporation papers and officially became Google, Inc. Still others think that Google should recognize September 15, 1997 as its founding date, as that is when Google registered the google.com domain. But despite the debate, Google has celebrated its anniversary on September 27 for the past few years now, making the date somewhat official.

Any birthday offers the perfect opportunity to reflect on the past, so just what has Google been up to in the last eleven years?

Early Days: 1998
With 1997 behind them, founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin dropped the original BackRub moniker in favor of Google, a play on the mathematical term “googol.” With the Google.com domain registered and a healthy $100,000 investment from Sun co-founder Andy Bechtolsheim, the two Stanford students rented out a $1,700 a month garage space in California’s Menlo Park.

With a makeshift office in place, Google made it official and filed for incorporation as “Google Technology Inc” on September 4, 1998. As the rest of year played out, Google began to receive positive support in the press, and the company also hired their first employee, Craig Silverstein.

Money And Moving: 1999
Thanks to its growing workforce, the fledgling company moved twice in 1999. Google outgrew its modest garage and relocated briefly to a more suitable location in Palo Alto. In June, the company released its very first press release, detailing how the firm had secured $25 million of funding.

During the second half of the year, as the company reached forty employees, Google moved once again to offices in Mountain View, with an in-house chef included. This year also saw Google drop the exclamation mark from their logo and settling with its now world-famous branding.

Growth & Expansion: 2000
2000 was a year of growth, as along with the search engine reaching a milestone of one billion pages indexed, the website also expanded to support over fifteen languages including Chinese, French, German, Japanese and more.

How things change. This year (2000) also saw Yahoo! reveal that they will be using Google as their default search provider. At the time this was a big deal, as Yahoo! was once one of the darlings of search, which Google had originally set their eyes on to compete with; mission accomplished? Of course today paints a very different picture as now both Yahoo! and Microsoft are collectively attempting to compete with the search giant that Google has become.

Before the year was out Google also found time to launch the immensely successful AdWords program, and their Toolbar browser plug-in. With the year drawing to a close it was pretty clear that the search engine was on a meteoric rise, as Google was now handling nearly 100 million search queries a day.

Going Global: 2001
With the search engine now available in over twenty-five languages, it only seemed right that the company would expand on a global level with the opening of its first international office in Tokyo. 2001 also saw Google hire ex-Novell chief executive Eric Schmidt, who started at Google as the Chairman of the Board, before quickly moving on to become the CEO.

With the Google search index approaching three billion webpages, it seemed the perfect time to tackle a new type of search: Images. Google launched its Image Search service in July, and initially had an index of over 250 million images.

Getting Geeky: 2002
The year 2002 saw Google launch a range of new products, including the shopping tool Froogle, the experimental Google Labs, and the popular Google News service, a product of the company’s so-called “twenty percent time“. Geeky Google also decided to offer a Klingon translation of the site for all those Star Trek fans out there, bringing the total number of supports languages to over seventy. Spiderman, Warcraft 3 and pop star Shakira were amongst the most common search terms of the year.

The Written Word: 2003
2003 was one verbose year for the search-engine giant. It began in February when Google acquired Pyra Labs, creators of the Blogger service, which allowed the masses to publish their thoughts online with ease. Soon after the acquisition, Google’s company name was announced as a recognized verb, to “google it” had become synonymous with search, however Google strived to steer clear of dictonaries and protect their strong brand.

In December the controversial Google Print was launched: Now known as Google Book Search, the service allows users to view excerpts from thousands of books in digital form. Classic books and their film adaptations, such as Lord Of The Rings and Harry Potter, were some of the most searched for terms on Google in 2003.

Email, Google Style: 2004
Without a doubt 2004 biggest Google news was the introduction of Gmail. The beta launched on April Fools Day, but Google made sure that Gmails was no joke, offering a then-unheard-of 1GB of storage along with a speedy user experience and the beauty of Google’s search technology built right in to your inbox. The service launched as a strictly invite-only affair, which resulted in an online gold rush of those hoping to land an invitation. After five years, Gmail finally disposed of its beta status early in June of 2009.

2004 also saw Google move to its Mountain View, California “Googleplex” headquarters, where the company still resides today. In addition, Google opened a research and development center in Tokyo and a European headquarters in Dublin, Ireland. With over three thousand employees, a range or products under its belt and over eight billion items in its search index Google’s growth continued to amaze.

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By Chris Brandrick
October 3, 2009

Mapping The World: 2005
In 2005, Google’s ongoing effort to organize the world’s information continued as they released Google Maps. Since then, Google has continually improved the mapping service, adding new features such as satellite views and directions, as well as increasing the number of new searchable locations. Google Earth, a 3D satellite photography-based mapping application, soon followed, further complimenting Google’s range of location services.

2005 also saw the release of the iGoogle customizable home page, Google Reader RSS feed manager and Google Analytics. Optimized mobile versions of Gmail, Blogger, and Search were also released.

Oh, and could you imagine naming your newborn baby “Google”? It happened.

A Message From Chad & Steve: 2006

Ending months of speculation, in late 2006 Google finally revealed that they had bought online video site YouTube in a massive $1.65 billion stock transaction.

The Growth Continues: 2007
The year started with Google expanding into new territories once again, with Google Maps making its way to Australia and the Google Docs suite of tools being made available in several additional languages. Gmail was also made available to all, no longer requiring an invitation.

The biggest innovation from Google in 2007 was the addition of street level photography to Google Maps. Dubbed Street View, the service lets you view and explore a number of US locations at street level. Naturally, Street View’s introduction caused some controversy as it raised quite a few privacy concerns.

Popular search terms in 2007 included the iPhone, Facebook and Second Life. Since Google acquired YouTube in 2006, the popular video site has grown into an outright juggernaut: Even the Queen of England has her own YouTube channel.

Going Full Circle: 2008
Last year Google celebrated their tenth year in operation, and showed no signs of slowing down. The company released its first iPhone application, expanded Street View’s coverage to include a number of additional countries, revealed a new version of its Picasa photo management app, and launched Knol, a Wikipedia-type service.

In its biggest move of the year, Google announced that it would enter the browser wars with its own take on the humble Web browser. The open source Google Chrome appeared in September of last year, and featured a minimalist interface and home page with shortcuts to frequently visited pages–features that have made their way into other browsers since then.

Later in the year, Google’s foray into software continued as the first ever cell phone to use Android, Google’s open-source mobile OS, hit the scene.

Google At Present: 2009

2009 has been a busy year so far for Google, and it isn’t over yet. So far Google has added offline access to Gmail, introduced its Latitude location service, taken you to Mars with a new version of Google Earth, and re-launched the GrandCentral phone service as Google Voice in the US, to name but a few things.

Google also unveiled its Wave service in May of this year. Wave combines a range of communication and social networking activities into a single web application and is expected to be available to the masses later this year.

The biggest news from Google this year came when the firm announced that it plans to release an operating system. Google Chrome OS is expected to land next year, and will initially be aimed at low end devices such as netbooks. Several hints at what the OS could look like have leaked online, but Google have yet to comment on any supposed screenshots.

A rumored screenshot of Google’s Chrome operating system.

What Does The Future Hold?
With eleven years behind them, Google is still innovating and tweaking. What we can expect next from the search giant is anyone’s guess, but in the immediate future we can look forward to taking Chrome OS for a spin, trying out new versions of Android, and watching countless videos on YouTube.

Just be sure to remember this, Google: Don’t be evil. Please.

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Kaspersky Lab recently saw an explosion of Koobface modifications throughout the month of June, due to summer and vacations across the northern hemisphere. In just one month, the number of variants detected jumped from 324 at the end of May 2009 to almost 1000 by the end of June 2009.

Koobface, the infamous worm, was first detected by Kaspersky Lab as Net-Worm.Win32.Koobface, and it instantly became popular when it appeared almost one year ago targeting Facebook and MySpace accounts. The Koobface worm is spreading through a legitimate user’s account to their friends’ profiles. Comments and messages sent by the worm contain a link to a fake YouTube-style Web site which invites users to download a “new version of Flash Player”. The worm, rather than a media player, is then downloaded to victim machines. Once a user is infected, he or she will start spreading such messages to his or her friends. In the meantime, the functionality of the worm has been extended. Koobface is now targeting more social networking Web sites like Facebook, MySpace, Hi5, Bebo, Tagged, Netlog and, most recently, Twitter.

As social networks such as Facebook or Twitter are becoming increasingly popular, attacks targeting them are also gaining momentum.

“This sign of increased cybercriminal activity involving social networks in the past month proves that the strategies being used by the bad guys to infect users are much more efficient when adding the social context to their attacks,” says Stefan Tanase, Malware researcher of Kaspersky Lab. “June 2009 marks an important milestone in the evolution of social networking malware — the activity we’ve seen this month exceeds by far any other month in the past.

Kaspersky Lab would like to give a few tips for Users:

  • Be cautious when opening links coming through suspicious messages, even if the sender is one of your trusted Facebook friends.
  • Use either Internet Explorer 7 running in protected mode or Firefox with NoScript installed.
  • Divulge as little personal information as possible. Do not give out your home address, phone number or other private details.
  • Keep your antivirus software updated to prevent new versions of malware from attacking your computer.

Kaspersky Lab users running any of the Company’s current anti-malware products are fully protected from all known variants of Net-Worm.Win32.Koobface. Kaspersky Lab’s global team of analysts are keeping a close eye on all threats coming from the social networking space, monitoring the malicious activity and constantly updating the protection customers receive.

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YouTube Invades Your Tube

By on March 5, 2009

By Brennon Slattery
PC World (US)
January 21, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO (01/16/2009) – Couch potatoes, rejoice: now you can watch YouTube right in your living room on your big-screen television. YouTube announced its union with Sony and Nintendo to bring YouTube for Television (that’s http://www.youtube.com/tv — a link only accessible via a game console) through the PlayStation 3 and Wii, respectively.

YouTube for Television offers “a dynamic, lean-back, 10-foot television viewing experience” for Internet connected consoles, according to the promos. YouTube has also simplified the experience by enlarging text and streamlining navigation to function better on the Wii and PlayStation 3′s built-in Web browsers.

An optional auto-play capability also allows users to view related videos sequentially, just like flicking through cable programs.

This move into the gaming world heralds an era wherein YouTube will be available through a bunch of different devices, just like Netflix has done. During the course of CES 2009, YouTube showed up on new televisions, threatening to become as ubiquitous as Netflix’s integration into new tech.

So what’s missing? Microsoft’s Xbox 360, of course. The number two contender in the console wars is mysteriously absent from YouTube’s announcement. Microsoft’s one-up in this battle is its acquisition of Netflix before its rivals, but with streaming television being the next big thing, that may not be enough.

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