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Newsy and SpotX Pursue Programmatic Video Ads in Apple TV
Newsy, a popular video-based news service for millennials, has partnered with SpotX for programmatic video ads in Newsy’s Apple TV app. The companies believe they are among the first to monetize Apple’s tvOS which was itself first announced by Apple last September in conjunction with the launch of the new Apple TV. SpotX released an SDK for Apple TV last November.
Categories: Advertising, Programmatic
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Register for NABShow Online Video Conference and Save $100
The program for the 2nd annual NABShow Online Video Conference on April 18th and 19th in Las Vegas, which I’m producing, is coming together well, with 35+ speakers now on board from companies such as Adobe, Akamai, AOL, Brightcove, Conde Nast, DataXu, Ellation, Facebook, Google, Gracenote, MLBAM, Operative, Roku, Synacor, Videology, Verizon, Vimeo and Whistle Sports.
We’ll have 14 sessions over the two days, including keynotes, research presentations, fireside chats and panel discussions, covering many of the hottest industry topics. You can save $100 on registration now by using this link. Don’t miss out, register now!Categories: Events
Topics: NABShow
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Five Predictions for Programmatic TV in 2016
Wednesday, February 24, 2016, 10:08 AM ETPosted by:If 2015 was the year the industry started to talk about programmatic TV, we think 2016 will be the year the industry starts to really adopt programmatic TV.
In 2015 we saw leading demand side providers announce multi-screen programmatic solutions that included linear TV. While some of those announcements came as early as first quarter, the first volume of programmatic TV orders started to surface in early fourth quarter. As a result, orders from digital demand side providers accounted for a very small percentage of programmatic orders in 2015 but set the stage for 2016.Categories: Advertising, Programmatic
Topics: placemedia
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Pixability Enables Unified Video Ad Buying Across YouTube, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter
Video ad tech provider Pixability has unveiled v4 of its platform, enabling unified video ad buying across YouTube, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. With v4, agencies and advertisers can plan, execute, measure and optimize video ad campaigns through one dashboard, greatly streamlining the workflow. With v4, Pixability is expanding beyond its traditional focus on YouTube ad buying.
Categories: Advertising, Social Media, Technology
Topics: Facebook, Instagram, Pixability, Twitter, YouTube
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Videology: Use of TV Audience Data to Target Video Ads Up 114%
With audiences shifting seamlessly between screens, evidence that TV advertising and online video advertising are also converging is mounting. The latest is from Videology, which has released its Q4 ’15 U.S. Video Market At-A-Glance report, finding, among other things that online video campaigns using TV audience data for targeting increased by 114% year-over-year.
The top segment used was advertisers’ current TV advertising schedules, followed by sports viewers, political show viewers, competitors’ TV schedule and daytime viewers.Categories: Advertising
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Putting Sling TV’s Growth Into Perspective
Skinny bundle service Sling TV got a lot of press last week as parent company Dish Network reported its Q4 ’15 and full year results. Based on a lot of assumptions, analysts MoffettNathanson estimated that Sling TV ended the year with 523K subscribers. Meanwhile, the WSJ cited unnamed sources estimating Sling TV now has more than 600K subscribers.
Once again, Dish Network provided no detailed breakout on Sling TV’s subscriber growth. As many analysts have observed, that’s a deliberate strategy to obscure the subscriber losses occurring in Dish’s core direct satellite service. On the earnings call, Sling TV’s CEO Roger Lynch only said that the vast majority of Sling TV subscribers are not currently pay-TV subscribers, noting they were either cord-nevers or cord-cutters.Categories: Satellite, Skinny Bundles, Startups
Topics: Dish Network, Sling TV
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Will The FCC Proposal To Unlock Set-Top Boxes Bring Change Or More Of The Same?
Tuesday, February 16, 2016, 12:23 PM ETPosted by:FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler is circulating a proposal that would “tear down anti-competitive barriers and pave the way for software, devices and other innovative solutions to compete with the set-top boxes that a majority of consumers must lease today.” The proposal is up for vote on February 18.
According to the FCC, the set-top box (STB) business costs consumers $20B per year. The intent of the proposal is to open the market to competition, giving consumers the option to buy STBs from third-parties, presumably at a lower price.
But we’ve seen this movie before – a few times, actually. Previous FCC mandates following similar proposals has resulted in the cable industry implementing CableCard, OpenCable (OCAP) and, most recently, Tru2Way. In all of these cases, the so-called solutions fell short in one way or another as the status quo prevailed. This begs the question: can a new FCC-mandated approach be successful or does this movie have the same old ending? Let’s take a deeper look at what the FCC actually wants to accomplish, the proposed solutions and new approaches that could make this time different.Categories: Devices, Regulation
Topics: FCC
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VideoNuze Podcast #310: Recapping Super Bowl Streaming
I'm pleased to present the 310th edition of the VideoNuze podcast with my weekly partner Colin Dixon of nScreenMedia.
This week Colin and I recap our experiences streaming the Super Bowl to the various devices we tried. As I wrote on Monday, overall I thought the streaming quality was quite strong, with latency being the primary issue. Colin’s experience was more mixed, with his good old over-the-air signal the strongest.
No surprise, the size of the audience streaming the game set a new record with nearly 4 million unique viewers, up about 60% vs. last year. But I was a bit surprised it wasn’t even bigger given the breadth of OTT options. Unfortunately CBS didn’t provide any details on streaming by device. We discuss the factors that drove audience one way or another.
With the Super Bowl behind us, all eyes turn to the NFL’s pending OTT deal for its Thursday Night package. There are so many potential bidders in the mix who can leverage the games to their advantage.
Listen now to learn more!
Click here to listen to the podcast (21 minutes, 10 seconds)
Click here for previous podcasts
Click here to add the podcast feed to your RSS reader.
The VideoNuze podcast is also available in iTunes...subscribe today!Categories: Live Streaming, Podcasts, Sports
Topics: CBS, Podcast, Super Bowl


