SYN Conflict of Interest
Digital Downloads Worth Half a Billion in Q1
It’s hard to get a read on how the economy is affecting online video. Experimental ad budgets are being slashed. Viewers are flocking to free in a downturn. Advertisers want more accountability. Everybody still watches TV. All these things are true.
So we give props to the people who try to push forward measurement of the online video economy, among them today Digital Entertainment Group, Nielsen and BrightRoll.
The Hollywood and consumer electronics trade association Digital Entertainment Group reported last night a dip in home entertainment spending, including a 14 percent yearly drop in DVD sales. However, it also noted growth for categories like Blu-ray and digital revenue. Digital downloads brought in $487 million in the first quarter, up 19 percent.
Veoh: The Opposite of a Video Portal?
Veoh is mounting its pitch to be a video discovery tool for the web with the release today of its Veoh Video Compass, a plug-in that surfaces relevant videos as users navigate other web sites. What’s interesting is how radically different offering this tool is from Veoh’s original task of being a video portal — the Compass operates completely off of Veoh’s web site, and it brings in videos hosted by competitor sites, not just Veoh.
The Compass is kind of a combo of recent video plug-ins from Cooliris, RealPlayer, StumbleUpon and VodPod, though I totally understand and respect if you’ve never heard of any of those. (Well, except RealPlayer, but this is their new stuff, not the old ubiquitous and yucky software. And the new stuff? You probably haven’t heard of.) When you enter a term on a search page, say Google, the Compass pops up at the top of the page as a scroll bar of videos with that keyword or ones similar to it as determined by related searches on Veoh. And in a soon-to-be-added feature, when you’re on a regular page that has a video, the Compass pops up a tab next to a video offering the option to watch related videos, add the video to a playlist, and then download videos to your desktop. These are some cool ideas, but I haven’t yet played with Compass enough to see if they’re executed in a non-kludgy way.
Popular
Recent
Network
- The Bannen Way Hits 8.4M Streams Since its Crackle Debut [NewTeeVee]
- The Tangled Web: PA Semi, Processors, and Magic [TheAppleBlog]
- OpenOffice.org by the Numbers [OStatic]
- Q&A: Stewart Butterfield on the Launch of Glitch [GigaOM]
- Coworking Stories: Manchester’s MadLab [WebWorkerDaily]
- The Best & Worst Biofuel Startups [Earth2Tech]
© 2010 The GigaOM Network. Marketing consulting by ACS.


