January 06, 2013

Extra Time: World Cup coverage expands greatly on the Web and mobile phones

Extra Time: World Cup coverage expands greatly on the Web and mobile phones

By Jake Coyle, AP
Wednesday, June 9, 2010

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World Cup coverage expands on the Web, cell phones

NEW YORK — With games airing live on cell phones and computers, the World Cup will get more online coverage than any major sporting event yet. Watching highlights the next day on TV or YouTube will suddenly seem a downright ancient way to keep up with the action.

When the soccer tournament begins Friday, footy fans can follow the action from an array of mobile and Web applications and share in triumph and heartbreak across social media.

Walt Disney Co. networks ESPN and ABC, which are broadcasting the games in the U.S., will stream 54 games live on the newly launched ESPN3.com, formerly ESPN360. The games are free to those in the U.S. who get their Internet from a service provider affiliated with ESPN, including AT&T, Verizon, Comcast and many others. The 10 games that will air live on ABC won’t be available on ESPN3.com, but all 64 matches in the Cup will be available live on mobile devices to customers whose plans include TV on their phones.

Univision Communications has the Spanish-language broadcasting rights in the U.S., and it, too, will have games available on Univision.com and Univision Movil.

The digital coverage will be an especially important component for the World Cup because U.S. audiences will be watching many of the games - all being played in South Africa - during the day, possibly on their computers at work.

Comparing the digital experiences of the 2010 World Cup to the 2006 World Cup, Josh Kosner, senior vice president and general manager of ESPN Digital Media, said, “Things have changed utterly.”

“This is going to be the biggest and most powerful demonstration of this, and it’s just the start,” Kosner said. “It’s the play book, it’s the blueprint for what’s coming.”

NBC’s online coverage of the last Winter Olympics - also an international, daytime event - was extensive, drawing 45 million video streams. Traffic to NBCOlympics.com more than tripled from the 2006 Winter Games, with 45.7 million total visits compared to 13.3 million in 2006. That happened even though NBC held a lot of the footage for its prime-time broadcasts. ESPN expects worldwide online traffic for the World Cup to double or triple that of 2006.

The World Cup, a mixture of global and niche audiences - where some games mean much more to citizens of Honduras, for example - is particularly suited to the Internet. ESPN3.com, for example, will have the option to watch some games in either Portuguese, Arabic, German, Japanese or Korean.

The actual games are only part of the experience. Many media outlets have launched mobile applications, most of which feature live scores, news updates and some integration with Facebook or Twitter. Among them are apps from Fox Soccer Channel, The Associated Press, Goal.com, Mundial and many others.

ESPN has several, including an ESPN Radio app that gives live play-by-play audio. Turner Sports’ SportsNow app promises direct linking to Facebook and Twitter to facilitate “trash-talk directly from the app.”

Online interest in the World Cup has been building. The elaborate Nike World Cup commercial directed by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu has been watched by more than 13 million on YouTube since debuting on May 17.

For the past year, Akamai Technologies Inc., which delivers about 20 percent of the world’s Internet traffic, has been building its capability in anticipation of the World Cup. It expects traffic to be two or three times as heavy as what was measured during President Barack Obama’s inauguration - thus far, the high point for traffic volume at about 1 terabit, or 1 trillion bits of data, per second. (Higher-quality video is also a major factor in boosting volume.)

“It could well be another watershed event in terms of people understanding what is now possible to do with video online,” Akamai Chief Scientist Tom Leighton said. “This will draw a lot of people at once and that will cause people to be aware en masse that, hey, you can do some very cool things with video online that you can’t even do with broadcast right now.”

The World Cup is also shaping up to be a benchmark in the evolution of mobile TV, which is common in South Korea, growing in the rest of Asia, Africa and South America, but nascent in the U.S. and Europe. ESPN has partnered with AT&T, Sprint, Verizon, FLO TV and MobiTV to bring games to cell phones.

Any surge in bandwidth for live video could test those networks, which are already clogged. Just last week, AT&T announced that to ease congestion on its network, it would no longer offer unlimited Internet data plans for new smart-phone customers.

ESPN’s Kosner acknowledged that those with live TV on their mobile phones are still a “relatively small audience,” but predicted that the World Cup will be “a galvanizing event” for the capability.

Of course, technology is also being used for more quirky ends.

If you hurry, you can catch the final ticks to the World Cup Countdown app, which has simply been counting down to kickoff in South Africa since last year.

The Drinksin Footy Pubs 2010 app lets U.K. fans know the nearest pubs carrying the games. LiveSoccerTV.com, similarly, offers “soccer friendly” bars in the U.S.

Technology truly meets soccer enthusiasm in South Korea, where a World Cup iPhone app from KT Corp. includes a “glow stick mode” that lights up the screen with fluorescent colors when the phone is shaken - perfect for exuberant waving in South Africa or anywhere near a screen playing the games.

That still leaves one, essential question: Where’s Becks?

Fear not. David Beckham, the dashing British wingman, has signed on with Yahoo Inc. as its “global football ambassador.” Along with its extensive Cup coverage (which includes a toolbar just for updates and scores), Yahoo will offer a Beckham channel to share the midfielder’s thoughts on the Cup.

Associated Press Writer Sangwon Yoon in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.





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January 05, 2013

Wallace & Gromit are Coming to the iPad



In an effort to turn the joy of iPad owners everywhere up to 11, Telltale Inc. has announced the release of their latest episodic endeavor for the iPad: Wallace & Gromit The Last Resort. 



If you're not already familiar with Wallace & Gromit, all you need to know is that their adventures are shorthand for awesome. For their first foray on to the iPad, dynamic inventor and pooch duo opt to build a resort in the basement of their house after their holiday plans are scrapped due to a whack of miserable weather.

Given that Telltale's other episodic content, such as the Sam & Max series, has always proven to be a reliable good time, there's little doubt that gamers of all ages will want to consider adding a little Wallace & Gromit to their library.

For a little more background on the game or the characters, you'll want to steer your browser on over to , or pay a visit to , the geniuses behind the Wallace & Gromit characters.













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Video game-heavy Army recruiting center at Philadelphia mall closing at end of July

PHILADELPHIA — A high-tech Army recruiting center inside a Philadelphia shopping mall is closing its doors as a two-year pilot program ends.

The Army Experience Center is the only facility of its kind. It opened in August 2008 with interactive video exhibits, nearly 80 video-gaming stations, a replica command-and-control center, conference rooms, and helicopter and Humvee combat simulators.

Since then, it has hosted about 40,000 visitors and enlisted 236 recruits.

The $12 million center in the Franklin Mills mall will cease operations at the end of July.

Army officials said the program was not intended to be permanent. They say it was designed to determine the most effective tools for public outreach.





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January 04, 2013

AT&T security hold exposes iPad users’ e-mails; hackers harvested data by tricking AT&T site

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AT&T security hole exposes iPad users’ e-mails

SAN FRANCISCO — AT&T Inc. on Wednesday acknowledged a security weak spot that exposed the e-mail addresses of apparently more than 100,000 users of Apple Inc.’s iPad, a breach that could make those people vulnerable to precision-targeted hacking attacks.

The vulnerability only affected iPad users who signed up for AT&T’s “3G” wireless Internet service.

It involved an insecure way that AT&T’s website would prompt iPad users when they tried to log into their AT&T accounts through the devices. The site would supply users’ e-mail addresses, to make log-ins easier, based on unique codes contained in the SIM cards inside their iPads. SIM cards are used to tell cell-phone networks which subscriber is trying to use the service.

The hacker group that claims to have discovered the weakness — the group calls itself Goatse Security — said it was able to trick AT&T’s site into coughing up more than 114,000 e-mail addresses, including those apparently of famous media personalities and important government officials.

A representative for the group told The Associated Press late Wednesday that the group contacted AT&T and waited until the vulnerability was fixed before going public with the information. AT&T said the problem was fixed Tuesday but that it was alerted to it by a business customer.

Gawker Media Inc.’s Valleywag website earlier reported on the breach.

AT&T said it will notify all iPad users whose e-mail addresses may have been accessed.

“We take customer privacy very seriously and while we have fixed this problem, we apologize to our customers who were impacted,” the company said in a statement.

AT&T noted that the only information hackers would have been able to steal using this attack were users’ e-mail addresses. But that can be enough to launch a highly effective attack, since the attacker also knows that the person receiving the e-mail is an iPad user and an AT&T customer and would expect to receive e-mail from Apple and AT&T about their accounts. Criminals could use that knowledge to trick them into opening e-mails that plant malicious software on their computers.

An Apple representative deferred requests for comment to AT&T.

Apple has sold more than 2 million iPads since they went on sale two months ago. The iPad comes in two different flavors — one that only connects to the Internet via Wi-Fi, and another that also can connect through AT&T’s “3G” cellular network. The Wi-Fi-only models aren’t affected by the breach. Apple hasn’t specified how many of each model it has sold.





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January 03, 2013

Is Apple Preparing to Ship 3 Million iPhone 4s a Month After Its Debut?

A leak in Apple's supply chain has revealed that the company may be preparing to ship as many as 3 million iPhone 4 devices per month. According to Robert Lai, Asia Optical's chairman, the company is supplying Apple will 3 million front-facing VGA cameras per month. He also states that Apple has booked enough cameras to supply about 9 million iPhone 4's per quarter.

According to a post by , Lai said that Asia Optical has been supply Apple with cameras since manufacturing began in May.

notes that if Apple were to sell 3 million iPhones per month, that would be similar to Google's announced 100,000 activations per day of Android devices.

Needless to say, there should be plenty of iPhones 4's to go around should the demand be high around the world.







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Samsung to invest $3.6 billion to expand Texas chip-making facility, to hire 500 more workers

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Samsung SGH P900 DMB Cell Phone

Samsung invests $3.6 billion in Texas chip plant

AUSTIN, Texas — Samsung Electronics Co. said Wednesday that due to projected heavy demand for its advanced logic chips the South Korean company will invest $3.6 billion to expand capacity at its plant in Austin, Texas, and hire 500 more workers there by 2011.

Samsung will raise its employee count at the facility to 1,500 from 1,000 by next year, boosting annual payroll to about $105 million. The expansion, which builds out the second phase of its 2.3 million-square-foot complex, will bring its total investment in the Austin plant to more than $9 billion.

Most of the new employees with be engineers and technicians. In addition, the company said almost 3,000 construction workers and equipment vendors will move in and set up the machinery. The plant will build advanced logic devices for Samsung’s system large-scale integration business and continue to make NAND flash memory chips, which are used in consumer electronics such as digital cameras, thumb drives and MP3 players.

“Forty-five nanometer and below advanced logic applications are in high demand and respective markets are expected to show substantial growth in the coming years,” said Stephen Woo, executive vice president and general manager of Samsung’s System LSI division.

Samsung expects the facility will be operational by the second quarter of next year.





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January 02, 2013

The Incredible Walking iPad and iPhone

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