YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...

nowmovlogo YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...Online video streaming is great. But when it comes to zoning out in front of a flashing screen to kill a few hours, TV has it beat by a long shot — building an interesting playlist of YouTube videos simply requires too much effort. Nowmov, a Y Combinator startup that’s launching today, is looking to change that: visit the site, and you’ll find an endless stream of (hopefully) compelling YouTube clips — no brainpower required. The site has already built up an impressive roster of angel investors, including Jeff Clavier, Paul Buchheit, Shervin Pishevar, Ron Conway, Charles River Ventures, and Ashton Kutcher.

Nowmov’s site is very, very simple, at least from the user’s perspective. As soon as you browse to Nowmov.com, the site will begin playing a YouTube video. Move your mouse and you’ll see a basic set of controls that let you pause the video, jump to the next clip, and share the video you’re watching with friends (the site supports keyboard commands, so you can just tap your arrow keys to jump between clips). But for the most part, you shouldn’t really need these controls — the whole point of Nowmov is that you can lay back as if you were watching TV, without having to figure out what you want to watch next. Nowmov uses some trickery on the frontend to reduce loading times, so even when you do decide to skip to the next clip there isn’t a jarring pause.

Nowmov decides which videos to play by analyzing the Twitter public timeline and looking for commonly shared YouTube links (in the future, the site plans to use other sources to gauge popularity, and will also draw video from sites other than YouTube). For now the site isn’t doing any personalized recommendations — it constantly updates its playlist and uses cookies to ensure that you don’t see the same clip twice, but there isn’t an algorithm that learns which videos you like. That will change in a future version, when the site plans to produce personalized channels of content (think of it as a Pandora for videos).

The team has quite a bit of experience with video.  Two of the company’s co-founders  — Thomas Pun and James Black — were longtime Apple engineers working on video encoding and processing; the third, David Kelso, was a technical founder at two startups before this.

There’s definitely a need for this, but Nowmov isn’t the first startup that’s trying to solve it. ffwd has also tried to turn Internet video into a channel-surfing experience, and Magma is focused on video curation, though it isn’t really a  ’lean-back’ site. And YouTube is always trying to bolster its own recommendation algorithms to keep people watching.

Interesting sidenote: Ashton Kutcher is actually directly responsible for this site existing; the Nowmov guys were considering working on another idea until Kutcher told Y Combinator founders Paul Graham and Jessica Livingston that he wanted something like this. Kutcher decided to invest in and advise the startup, and Nowmov became a reality.
nowmoveshot YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...

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 YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...

 YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...
 YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...

 YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...  YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...

 YC Funded Nowmov: Sit Back, Relax, And Watch An Endless Stream Of...

 Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...

blinkxsegments Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...

Behavioral targeting is all the rage with online display advertising right now, and video search engine blinkx is bringing it to video. For the past few years, blinkx has offered contextual video advertising through its Ad Hoc program, which matches ad keywords against a speech-to-text translation of the video, as well as all the tags and titles associated with that video. “We are extending targeting in Ad Hoc from contextual to behavioral,” says CEO Suranga Chandratillake.

He explains the new targeted advertising product in the video below (I caught up with him last week as he was passing through New York City). Overall, blinkx powers 17.5 million video searches a day across its network, which reaches more than 60 million people a month. But for now, the behavioral targeting will work only on blinkx.com, which is a small part of its overall reach. Using cookies, blinkx will assign psychographic profiles to people base don what they watch. It will start with nine profiles, including Yoga Moms, Digital Dads, Gossip Girls, Adventurers, and Infonauts.

Brands will be able to target specific segments by showing their ads only to Yoga Moms or Digital Dads. People are classified in the different buckets depending on what they watch. Binkx trains the system by extracting different concepts from each video and matching them to a profile. For instance, videos about children, crafts, soccer, or terrible twos are the types of things Yoga Moms supposedly watch. Advertisers can see the keywords associated with each psychographic profile to determine who they want to go after.

By blending contextual and behavioral targeting, Chandratillake thinks he can get the best of both worlds. But true behavioral targeting would probably require data inputs from beyond blinkx.com, and even beyond any group’s video viewing habits. True behavioral targeting would take into account what websites you visited recently, and not just what videos you’ve watched. But blinkx is starting with what it can control. Down the line, it might have to incorporate data from broader behavioral targeting ad networks.

Information provided by CrunchBase

 Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...

 Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...
 Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...

 Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...  Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...

 Blinkx Starts Targeting Video Ads At Yoga Moms And Infonauts (Video...

 Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag

sunchips Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable BagI love our planet as next as the next person, but I despise efforts by companies and people to get credit for caring about the earth with empty gestures.

Like Pepsi’s ridiculous Aquafina press stunt. Or all this black screen Earth Day nonsense. Or bringing in goats to eat your lawn. Or banning black cars.

But I can’t find anything wrong with Frito Lay’s creation of a 100% biodegradable bag for SunChips. It will completely compost in 14 weeks under ideal conditions. I can imagine a day when most of our trash goes into our own back yard, simply to melt away into the ground.

Sure, it uses a corn based product, and there are all kinds of environmental issues with our corn production. But when you see the huge amount of trash accumulating around the world, including in our oceans, it’s hard to argue that this is a very, very good thing.

Watch the video of a bag biodegrading here. More detailed information on the process here.

 Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag

 Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag
 Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag

 Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag  Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag

 Finally A Green Story I Can’t Mock: The Sun Chips Biodegradable Bag

aist see through panel AIST shows off see through display prototype on video

Face it, folks -- the days of windows being just windows are behind us. Before long, our panes will double as widget displays or makeshift televisions, and AIST has the prototype to prove it. The demonstration seems to utilize technology that's far different than that seen in Samsung's iceTouch PMP, but it's certainly no less exciting. According to DigInfo, AIST is developing florescent glass suitable for excitation by near-UV LEDs, and by combining this [borosilicate] glass with LEDs, it's possible to obtain transparent, flat light sources." Better still, we're told that the prevailing thought is that this here technology could be used to develop see-through displays as well as "light sources and displays that use solar cells without modification." Anxious to see what a transparent LCD could do for you? Hop on past the break, mash play and let your imagination run absolutely wild.

Continue reading AIST shows off see-through display prototype on video

AIST shows off see-through display prototype on video originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 20:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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