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Keep Bubby Happy With Twitteleh


Do you feel like your tweets are falling on deaf ears? Well, you won't anymore, thanks to a Jew-centric (and hypothetical) alternative. 'Twitteleh' (video after the break) caters to "the one person who actually wants to hear about your day" -- your Jewish mother. It's much easier to use than Twitter, too. Just answer three questions: Where are you? What have you eaten? Are you wearing a sweater? Not only will Twitteleh make you feel like someone cares about every mundane detail of your life, but it'll also free up loads of time you would've spent on the phone with your mom.

If only this service were real, we'd never have to pick up the phone and call Mom again! Just think, we could actually have an uninterrupted evening since Bubby would be instantly up-to-date on our whereabouts. Oh well, one can dream. And in case you're reading, Mom: 1) at home; 2) a bagel; 3) yes, of course. [From: Mashable, via Textually]

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Web

MLB Forbids Fans From Sharing Video of Little Girl Tossing Back Foul Ball

Tuesday night's Philadelphia Phillies game featured fan Steve Monforto making an amazing catch of a foul ball. Even better, his adorable little daughter was along for the game, and it was all caught on video. Being a good dad and all, Monforto handed his daughter what was probably her first foul ball, and she promptly tossed it over the upper-deck railing (typical Philadelphia sports fan). Nonetheless, Monforto hugged her, comforted his well-meaning child, and the crowd cheered.

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Audio/Video, Web

Brain Injury Researchers Watch YouTube Videos for Trauma Research


YouTube's vast repository of videos offers video of just about anything imaginable -- from rare concert footage to gadget reviews. But, according to a report from the University of Kentucky posted on LabSpaces, brain injury researchers are using the site for something more noble: head trauma research. Best of all, they've actually made some concrete findings that could help coaches make safer decisions for their injured players.

The findings revolve around what Jonathon Lifshitz, assistant professor at the University of Kentucky Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center, calls the "fencing response." After watching hundreds of hours of YouTube videos showcasing various head impacts, Lifshitz and his team noticed that, after a player suffered a severe blow to the head, his forearm would involuntary assume an "en garde" fencing position -- sometimes before he even hit the ground. (One of the videos watched is shown above.) Believe it or not, this behavior was noticed in rats as well.

Such a physical response indicates trauma to a part of the brainstem that controls balance. If left untreated, such an injury can lead to permanent brain damage and death. Internal damage is hard to assess by simply looking at a person, so if a player displays the fencing response after an impact, a coach should have her treated immediately instead of sending her back onto the field. Score one for YouTube! [From: U.K./LabSpaces]

TV, Web

Nielsen: More Americans Watching TV While Surfing the Net


As the Internet has become more accessible and essential to our lives, it's natural that we find ourselves online more than ever -- even when we're watching television. According to a new quarterly report (PDF link) by Nielsen, 57-percent of Americans watch television while surfing the Net at least once a month. (We'll admit, we do this on a daily basis.)

The report also contains some other interesting trends and numbers. One of our favorites notes that 28-percent of respondent's Internet time is spent simultaneously watching TV, while only 3-percent of their TV time is spent simultaneously surfing the Web. Did you get that?

What's most interesting is that the time spent watching videos on any platform (Internet, television, mobile devices) has gone up. Rather than killing traditional television, it seems online videos are actually complementing it. [From: Nielsen (PDF link), via Ars Technica]

Audio/Video, Google, Web

YouTube to Stream Rental Movies?


DVD sales plummeted in 2008, as some companies, specifically Warner Bros., watched their numbers drop by as much as 24-percent from the previous year. Many analysts attribute the decline to the economy, believing that people are foregoing hefty price tags for films that are freely available, legally or not, on the Web.

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that in an effort to combat declining DVD revenue, several prominent movie studios have approached Google's YouTube with a plan to rent movies through the currently free video-sharing site. Reportedly, Lions Gate, Warner Bros., Sony, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer are all investigating the feasibility of charging users to stream new movies, with prices similar to those on-demand television or iTunes.

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Audio/Video, TV, Web

Hulu Claims Larger Viewership Than Time Warner Cable


Call it the 'Hulu Effect,' but there's been a sea change in the way people watch television shows. According to Fast Company, a recent survey by Comscore and Silicon Alley Insider found that, during the month of July, more folks watched Hulu than did Time Warner Cable. The numbers stacked up like this: 38 million viewers watched a video at least once on Hulu, a free online video service, while 34 million did the same on Time Warner Cable. In fact, Hulu ranked third in raw viewer statistics, only trailing DirecTV, with 47 million viewers, and Comcast, with 62 million.

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Audio/Video, Web

YouTube Rewarding Viral Video Creators With Ad Money

In 2007, YouTube established its Partnership Program, a way for some of the site's "most popular and prolific content creators" to actually earn revenue from their viral videos. YouTube has occasionally rewarded the creators of massively popular individual videos, as well, like the dad who filmed his stoned kid after a visit to the dentist. Today, YouTube announced that it is extending the program to all individual videos, based on number of views, viral reach, and compliance with Terms of Service.

Once YouTube decides whether or not a video meets its viral requirements, the site will extend an invitation to enable revenue sharing, after which it will sell advertising based on the video. The site will then deposit monthly funds into a Google AdSense account. The site is encouraging people to go ahead and apply for entry into the Partnership Program, even though YouTube will take it upon itself to contact users who upload extremely successful videos.

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Computers, Google

YouTube Muting Videos Containing Copyrighted Music

Over the past few years we've covered the various copyright trials and tribulations of Google-owned video superpower YouTube as it struggles to survive in a word full of legislation. We're sad to say the company has seemingly caved to pressure from the recording industry, enacting a rather harsh fix to the problem of users adding copyrighted tunes to the background of their videos: tThe site is simply pressing the mute button.

Videos featuring copyrighted tunes playing in the background have had their sound removed (like the one embedded above), and a disclaimer added stating:
This video contains an audio track that has not been authorized by all copyright holders. The audio has been disabled.
It's unknown just how many of the site's millions of videos are affected. Interestingly, one of the most famous videos using a copyrighted tune, the 'Dancing Baby' submission that spurred a lawsuit back in the 'Ally McBeal'-era of the late '90s, hasn't had its soundtrack yanked -- at least not yet. So, if you're a contributor to the site, and not just a video viewer, you'd better go take a look to see whether your submissions are now on the wrong end of the volume dial. [From: Mashable]

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Computers, Google

Congress and Senate Get Own YouTube Channels

It was just a few months ago that members of Congress were officially allowed to start posting content to YouTube -- something that the citizens of the U.S. have been doing in droves for years. Now our government's support for the site is getting rather more official. Both the Congress and the Senate have launched their own YouTube video channels, giving you two portals for all the online governmental video proceedings you can stomach.

The two channels are called the Senate Hub and the Congress Hub, and both are already full of videos ranging from news to "behind the scenes" views into what's going on in D.C. There's plenty of good stuff, but we were surprised and disheartened to see that most of the videos have had comments disabled. In other words, you'll have to find elsewhere to contact your local government officials -- but that's really nothing new, is it? [From: ReadWriteWeb]

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Audio/Video, Cell Phones, Computers

Cell Phone Soap Operas Promote Safe Sex

Cell Phone Soap Operas Promote Safe SexLet's be frank. No one gets all that excited at the idea of safe sex and the mention of condoms. But if you're out there having unprotected sex you're a moron.

Sorry to be blunt, dear readers, but it's true, and everyone has been trying to tell you this for years and you're still not listening. But while we're resorting to name calling and verbal abuse, others like Rachel Jones, a professor of Nursing at Rutgers University, are creating more innovative campaigns to encourage people to practice safe sex.

Jones, using a grant from Healthcare Foundation of New Jersey and the National Institutes of Health, filmed a series of twelve twenty minute soap operas to be distributed online and via cell phone. The episodes tell tales of infidelity and risky behavior amongst urban women. Jones is conducting a study in which women will watch the stories over a period of time that deliver a message encouraging safe sex in order to find out if the rate of risky behavior, such as having unprotected sex, decreases in the subjects.

You can check out the double length pilot episode here. The rest be released over the coming weeks and months. [From: Fox News]

Computers, Celebrities

Will Ferrell's FunnyOrDie.com Gets $3 Million in Funding


The battle for best overall video site keeps raging, with YouTube, Hulu, and plenty of others scrambling to snag the most licensed content. But while those video hub sites fight for sitcom re-runs and old movies, other video sites are working on providing more fresh content. Such is the case with Will Ferrell's Funny Or Die, which recently received $3 million in funding.

The site features comedy videos from Ferrell and numerous other celebrities (like the Jessica Biel and David Koechner vid above), plus user-uploaded submissions and, well, plenty of other random content that will make you laugh. It's perhaps one of the most popular of the niche video sites that focus on a specific type of content and, frankly, it's hilarious. With $3 million in cash to lock in more vids, we can't wait to see what's in store next year. [From: Reuters]

Audio/Video, Computers, TV

YouTube Goes HD, Finally!


Be still our hearts! Just days after a YouTube "hack" was discovered to view what appeared to be 720p content, and even fewer days since seeing the famed online video sharing site adopt a widescreen format, in comes the real deal: HD. Forever we've waited for the site to catch up with smaller entities that already do high-def, and while it's far from bona fide 1080p, the quality is pretty exceptional given the quick load times on a basic cable internet connection. 'Course, the original upload file has to be in an HD quality format in order for users to see the above pictured "watch in HD" option, but feel free to dig around and see what you find.

[Via NewTeeVee]

Computers, TV

'Sesame Street' Coming to iTunes, YouTube, and Hulu

iTunes, YouTube, and Hulu Soon Taking You to Sesame Street
The show 'Sesame Street' is about as iconic as anything that ever hit the small screen, with generations of kids growing up and then sharing the same televised fun and learning with their own kids. Despite bein well over a quarter-century old, the show continues to be one of the most popular educational programs on TV, and finally is branching out online, spreading its content wings onto iTunes, YouTube, and Hulu.

The three services are currently engaged in a battle for online video supremacy, with Hulu and YouTube both competing to offer free and full TV shows episodes and films through a variety of partnerships and deals. In this case, however, full episodes will not be available for free online. Both Hulu and YouTube will offer a series of clips and highlights from the show; if you want more, you'll need to hit iTunes -- and cough up $1.99 per show.

On top of that, only relatively recent episodes will be available for download. The reason isn't because nobody cares about the old episodes, but rather because the show's distributors are working on a DVD collection of the first 10 years. That, kids, is what you call capitalism. [From: Yahoo! News]

Computers, TV, Green Tech

'60 Minutes' Explores America's Massive E-Waste Exports to China


Any self-respecting gadget hound knows that China is responsible for packing millions of shipping containers with the consumer electronics we crave. What you may not know is what we ship in return: our waste for recycling. Of growing concern is e-waste, resulting from the deluge of PCs, cellphones, televisions and crapgadgets we churn through at an accelerating clip each year.

While domestic recycling programs are good-intentioned, often the most toxic of our e-waste is shipped illegally back to China and boiled down for its precious metals under some of the most crude conditions you can imagine. When faced with the choice of familial poverty or the slow accumulation of poison in their bloodstream (for $8 per day), it's not hard to imagine what many rural Chinese people will choose.

So while we give Greenpeace's self-congratulatory promotions and oft-subjective "Guide to Greener Electronics" company ratings the occasional hard time, its attempts to raise e-waste awareness are commendable. Now go ahead, check the video from 60 Minutes's intrepid reporters after the break and let the guilt wash over you (especially after you see how some particularly angry e-waste workers try to jump the CBS news crew).

Update: As noted by reader Jason, a more thorough (and disturbing) exploration of these e-waste dumps can be found in a Current TV video shot last year in the same region. [From: CBS News]

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Audio/Video, Computers, TV

YouTube to Show MGM Films and TV Shows

YouTube Getting Full Films and Episodes from MGM
After pioneering and dominating the online video market for so long, YouTube is currently in danger of being made a has-been by services like Hulu, which offers full episodes and films online without the nagging guilt or worry that comes with watching something illegally. As even DirecTV seems to be pondering getting into the online video realm, Google-owned YouTube is doing its best to keep up -- today it's announced a partnership with Metro Goldwyn Mayer (MGM) to offer some films and television shows for free.

Coming not long after a partnership with CBS, this new agreement will see a (seemingly quite limited) selection of films and television shows, all available in their entirety for free with advertisements shown along the side. Right now, the only titles specifically mentioned are episodes of 'American Gladiators' (the old one, not the new one), plus the films 'Bulletproof Monk' and 'The Magnificent Seven.' We're guessing more content will be coming from this partnership soon -- at least, we hope so, for YouTube's sake. [From: The New York Times]

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