youtube

Montana City Requires Workers’ Internet Accounts

justinlindh writes “Bozeman, Montana is now requiring all applicants for city jobs to furnish Internet account information for ‘background checking.’ A portion of the application reads, “Please list any and all, current personal or business websites, web pages or memberships on any Internet-based chat rooms, social clubs or forums, to include, but not limited to: Facebook, Google, Yahoo, YouTube.com, MySpace, etc.’ The article goes on to mention, ‘There are then three lines where applicants can list the Web sites, their user names and log-in information and their passwords.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Tags: , , , , ,

Thursday, June 18th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Microsoft gives up YouTube chase

In the coming months, M|cr0s0ft plans to significantly scale back Soapbox, the video site it once hoped might take on YouTube in the user-generated content arena. In an interview on Tuesday, M|cr0s0ft Vice President Erik Jorgensen said Soapbox is one of the areas that M|cr0s0ft is pulling back on in the wake of a tough economic environment.

Tags: , ,

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Microsoft gives up YouTube chase

The software maker plans to scale back Soapbox, its little-known site for user generated video content.

Tags: ,

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

YouTube, HTML5, and Comparing H.264 With Theora

David Gerard writes “Google Chrome includes Ogg support for the <video> element. It also includes support for the hideously encumbered H.264 format. Nice as an extra, but … they’re also testing HTML5 YouTube only for H.264 — meaning the largest video provider on the Net will make H.264 the primary codec and relegate the equally good open format Ogg/Theora firmly to the sidelines. Mike Shaver from Mozilla has fairly unambiguously asked Chris DiBona from Google what the heck Google thinks it’s doing.” DiBona responded with concerns that switching to Theora while maintaining quality would take up an incredible amount of bandwidth for a site like YouTube, though he made clear his support for the continued improvement of the project. Greg Maxwell jumped into the debate by comparing the quality of Ogg/Theora+Vorbis with the current YouTube implementations using H.263+MP3 and H.264+AAC. At the lower bitrate, Theora seems to have the clear edge, while the higher bitrate may slightly favor H.264. He concludes that YouTube’s adoption of “an open unencumbered format in addition to or instead of their current offerings would not cause problems on the basis of quality or bitrate.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Tags: , ,

Sunday, June 14th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Iran Moves To End "Facebook Revolution"

We’ve had a few readers send in updates on the chaotic post-election situation in Iran. Twitter is providing better coverage than CNN at the moment. There are both tech and humanitarian angles to the story, as the two samples below illustrate. First, Hugh Pickens writes with a report from The Times (UK) that “the Iranian government is mounting a campaign to disrupt independent media organizations and Web sites that air doubts about the validity of the re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the nation’s president. Reports from Tehran say that social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter were taken down after Mr Ahmadinejad claimed victory. SMS text messaging, a preferred medium of communication for young Iranians, has also been disabled. ‘The blocking of access to foreign news media has been stepped up, according to Reporters Without Borders. ‘The Internet is now very slow, like the mobile phone network. YouTube and Facebook are hard to access and pro-reform sites… are completely inaccessible.’” And reader momen abdullah sends in one of the more disturbing Ask Slashdots you are likely to see. “People, we need your urgent help in Iran. We are under attack by the government. They stole the election. And now are arresting everybody. They also filtered every sensitive Web page. But our problem is that they also block the SMS network and are scrambling satellite TVs. Please, can you help us to set up some sort of network using our home wireless access points? Can anybody show us a link on how to install small TV/radio stations? Any suggestion for setting up a network? Please tell us what to do or we are going to die in the a nuclear war between Iran and US.” Update: 06/14 18:32 GMT by KD : Jim Cowie contributes a blog post from Renesys taking a closer look at the state of Iranian Internet transit, as seen in the aggregated global routing tables, and concluding that the story may not be as clear-cut as has been reported.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Sunday, June 14th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

A Twitter Client For the Commodore 64

An anonymous reader writes “Johan Van den Brande has developed a Twitter client for the Commodore 64, allowing 140-character messages to be posted directly from this TV-connected 1982 home computer. This YouTube video shows how the Twitter client is — slowly! — loaded from a 5.25″ floppy disk, how the latest Twitter messages are downloaded and shown on the TV screen, and how this tweet is posted. All that is needed is a C64, a TV, and a C64 Ethernet card. The Twitter client is implemented with the Contiki operating system, which otherwise is used for connecting tiny embedded systems to the Internet.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Tags: , , ,

Sunday, June 14th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

YouTube Enters The Stream

YouTube has just enabled a new feature that allows users to directly share their recently uploaded videos to Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader. …

Tags: , , , ,

Friday, June 12th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

The real Facebook vanity test–the status-off

As Facebookers prepare to take hold of their vanity URLs, a new film posted to YouTube portrays the real test of Facebook vanity: the status update face-off.

Tags: ,

Friday, June 12th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Clampdown Week: iPhone vs. Pre, China vs. Web, FTC vs. Worst ISP Ever


Google doesn’t want you to use Bing to search the Web, and it would much rather see you using Gmail and Google Docs than Hotmail and MS Word. But if you want to use Google’s Chrome browser, you have to run M|cr0s0ft’s Windows operating system. Does the irony just kill you? Don’t worry — it’s all temporary. Google has released versions of Chrome for the Mac and Linux platforms. Don’t get too excited, though; from a general-user point of view, both versions suck. They crash, they behave unpredictably, and they don’t even support Google’s own YouTube videos.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Friday, June 12th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off

Online Vigilantes, Or "Crowdsourced Justice"

destinyland writes “The Chinese credit the ‘human flesh search engine’ for successfully locating ‘the kitten killer of Hangzhou’ from clues in her online video. But in February, the same force identified a teenage cat-abuser in Oklahoma — within 24 hours of his video’s appearance on YouTube. ‘Netizens are the new Jack Bauer,’ argues one science writer, and with three billion potential detectives, ‘attempts to hide will only add thrill to the chase.’ But China’s vigilantes ultimately turned their attention to China’s Internet Propaganda Office, bypassing censorship of a director’s personal information using social networks, including Twitter. The author suggests there’s a new principle emerging in the online world: ‘The Internet does not forget, does not forgive and cannot be stopped. Ever.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Tags: , , , , ,

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 Uncategorized Comments Off