Author: Janko Roettgers

  • Samsung acquires second-screen startup MOVL

    Samsung has acquired the Atlanta-based second-screen startup MOVL. The acquisition happened last month but hasn’t been reported until now. Terms of the deal haven’t been disclosed, but it looks like a typical acqui-hire.

    A MOVL spokesperson confirmed the acquisition when contacted by GigaOM, sending over the following statement:

    “In April 2013, two years after inception, MOVL has officially joined forces with Samsung. We are now a part of Samsung Electronics, and we are excited to combine our multi-screen capabilities with Samsung’s scale and innovation in its device ecosystem.”

    MOVL has developed a number of second-screen games for connected TVs. Some of the better-known titles include PokerFun, which lets users play poker on the TV while displaying the cards they are holding on their smart phones, and WeDraw, a social drawing game for Samsung smart TVs and Google TV devices.

    However, MOVL didn’t just develop games. The company also built a second-screen development platform dubbed MOVL Connect that simplified the process of developing these kinds of multi-screen applications. MOVL’s games are based on and meant to demonstrate the capabilities of that platform, as CTO Alan Queen told me in 2011. 

    One of the main capabilities of that platform has been to allow users to join a game, or interact with an app running on their TV even if their phone doesn’t reside on the same Wi-Fi network — something that’s especially important for social apps, but that also lowers the bar for less technically inclined users. The platform is also capable of displaying synchronized ads on both screens.

    It’s likely that MOVL will phase out the operation of its platform in the coming months. The company has a staff of nine, all of which have joined Samsung, with plans to relocate all Atlanta-based employees to the Bay Area. MOVL had raised a modest $1 million from Bert Ellis, Kris Pinto and Mark Cuban.

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  • Big Bird, Caillou and Sonic could be part of YouTube’s subscription slate

    YouTube is getting close to launching a first set of channel subscriptions, and kids programming could play a prominent role: The Financial Times reported this weekend that a first slate of paid channels could launch as early as this week. The Times didn’t mention any publishers taking part in this push, but signs point to a number of kids publishers joining the party.

    This Sesame Workshop channel offers full episodes of Sesame Street for a price - but ordinary YouTube visitors don't have access to it.

    This Sesame Workshop channel offers full episodes of Sesame Street for a price – but ordinary YouTube visitors don’t have access to it.

    Some YouTube and Google employees have been quietly testing a number of channels associated with the Sesame Workshop, Cookie Jar TV and the kids cable channel Baby First TV over the last couple of months. None of these channels are available to ordinary YouTube visitors.

    YouTube accounts meant to test paid programming and other features on the site have had access to channels like the “Sesame Workshop Package,” which is offering full-length episodes of current and classic Sesame Street episodes, for a few months.

    Also part of the tests: Spanish-language programming from Baby First TV.

    Also part of the tests: Spanish-language programming from Baby First TV.

    A test channel for Cookie Jar TV, which has an on-air distribution agreement with CBS, lists shows like Caillou, Inspector Gadget and Sonic Underground. Baby First TV has also tested the distribution of full episodes through YouTube, including Spanish-language programming.

    Granted, publishers often experiment with all kinds of distribution and pricing schemes on YouTube. In fact, Sesame Workshop previously tried selling episodes of Sesame Street for $2 a pop for a few months.

    However, the listings of episodes associated with the kids programming channels don’t actually feature a per-episode price tag. Instead, they’re just listed with a $ sign. That’s something YouTube only does in one other instance: Videos from Willow.tv, which has been offering subscription-based cricket streams for some time, are listed the same way. Take a look yourself at the screenshots below:

    This is how full episodes of one of Sesame Workshop's test channels were listed on the site, including the price tag indicating a subscription package.

    This is how full episodes of one of Sesame Workshop’s test channels were listed on the site, including the paid content price tag indicating a subscription package.

    This is how YouTube lists pay-per-epsiode TV content, complete with a price tag.

    This is how YouTube lists pay-per-epsiode TV content, complete with a specific price tag.

    This is how content from Willow.tv, which is only available as part of a subscription package, is listed on the site.

    This is how content from Willow.tv, which is only available as part of a subscription package, is listed on the site.

    A YouTube spokesperson wasn’t available to comment specifically on these videos, but sent me the following statement via email:

    “We have nothing to announce at this time, but we’re looking into creating a subscription platform that could bring even more great content to YouTube for our users to enjoy and provide our partners with another vehicle to generate revenue from their content, beyond the rental and ad-supported models we offer.”

    A Sesame Workshop spokesperson declined to comment, and both Cookie Jar TV and Baby First TV didn’t reply to a request for comment.

    Of course, it’s still possible that these tests were just that – tests that don’t result in actual commercial offerings. But eegardless of whether these channels are part of YouTube’s first subscription slate, it’s clear that kids programming makes a lot of sense as a premium offering for the service.

    Netflix has had overwhelming success with kids content, and went as far as to revamp its entire UI for a dedicated kids experience. Hulu also launched a dedicated kids section last year to cater to young viewers. Offering dedicated channels with full episodes of kids shows could give parents, who at times feel uneasy about their little ones scouring across the entire YouTube catalog, more piece of mind about adding YouTube to their kids’ viewing destinations as well.

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  • Vimeo on demand will exclusively distribute new Kristen Bell movie

    Kristen Bell, online movie pioneer? Hot on the heels of the crowdfunded Veronica Mars movie comes the news that Some Girl(s), an indie film starring Bell, will exclusively be distributed via Vimeo (hat tip to Deadline Hollywood). Some Girl(s) will debut on Vimeo’s VOD platform, which was unveiled at SXSW, on June 28 — the same day it will be released in theaters.

    Neil LaBute’s Some Girl(s) is following a writer, played by Adam Brody, who visits his ex-girlfriends on the eve of his wedding, with one of them being Bell. The movie debuted at SXSW as well, and its production company Leeden Media made a point of emphasizing that it had turned down traditional distribution offers in a press release announcing the move to Vimeo on demand.

    Vimeo’s on-demand platform is one of a growing number of ways for filmmakers to directly sell their wares to consumers, with others including VHX and Chill. The video site’s big advantage is that it already has a built-in audience, as well as apps on a variety of platforms to deliver the movie to mobile and TV screens. And for filmmakers, there’s another interesting incentive: Vimeo only keeps 10% of a movie’s revenue.

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    • Take that, Apple TV: Smart TVs twice as popular as dedicated streaming boxes

      14 percent of all broadband households owned an Apple TV, a Roku box or another kind of dedicated streaming device in 2012, but 25 percent owned a smart TV with an embedded app platform, according to the Diffusion Group’s latest Defining the In-Home CE and Network Ecosystem 2013 report.

      The ownership of Smart TVs has roughly doubled over the last year, with 25 percent of broadband households owning at least one Smart TV, compared to 12 percent in 2011. Dedicated streaming devices on the other hand grew slower, inching up from 12 percent in 2011 to 14 percent in 2012.

      Of course, one should note that owning a device isn’t the same as using it. Only 69 percent of Smart TVs are connected to the internet, according to the report, whereas one should assume that most streaming boxes are connected (safe for the ones used as paperweights).

      The most popular device for internet video remains the game console, with 62 percent of broadband households now owning a next-generation game console such as the Sony PS3 or the Microsoft Xbox 360. Almost a fourth of the time spent with these consoles is spent on online video viewing.

      Altogether, 56 percent of broadband households now have at least one TV connected to the Internet.

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    • YouTube users now watch 6 billion hours of videos a month

      People are now watching more than 6 billion hours of video a month on YouTube, the Google-owned video service announced on its blog Wednesday afternoon. That’s  twice as much as just a year ago: In May 2012, YouTube announced that its viewers were watching three billion hours of videos a month. In August, that number had grown to four billion hours.

      From the announcement blog post:

      “We recently announced that YouTube hit an incredible milestone of 1 billion unique monthly visitors, connecting 15 percent of the planet to the videos they love. And those global fan communities are watching more than 6 billion hours of video each month on YouTube; almost an hour a month for every person on Earth and 50 percent more this year than last.”

      Less than two months ago, YouTube announced that its site now gets frequented by more than one billion unique visitors a month.

      YouTube announced the new milestone in conjunction with the Newfronts in New York, where various online video services are showing new shows to advertisers.

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    • Watch your data caps: Kaleidescape starts offering Blu-ray-quality movie downloads

      Home entertainment server maker Kaleidescape officially opened up its download store Wednesday, offering what it calls “Blu-ray quality” HD video downloads of movies like Inception, Sherlock Holmes or various titles from the Harry Potter series.

      Kaleidescape is known for its DVD servers, which allow users to rip their disc collections and serve them to TVs and home theaters. The devices earned the company a lawsuit from the DVD Copy Control Association, which is currently pending after Kaleidescape was able to obtain a stay of an injunction. However, the legal proceedings didn’t stop Warner Bros. from licensing its titles for Kaleidescape’s download store.

      Kaleidescape's movie server just got a download store.

      Kaleidescape’s movie server just got a download store.

      Titles purchased through the Kaleidescape store can be played back with a Kaleidescape system, and also accessed on the web and through mobile devices via Ultraviolet, the studios’ locker system for digital movie purchases. However, even moderate users of the service could easily burst through their ISPs’ data caps.

      The HD download of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, for example, comes in at a whopping 54GB. AT&T’s Uverse data cap restricts users to 250 GB of data consumption per month, after which the phone company charges $10 for each additional 50GB. That kind of overage charge would essentially double the price of the movie download.

      Of course, this problem would only get worse if Kaleidescape — or any other movie download store — would start to offer 4K movie downloads. The company’s current HD fare comes with a resolution of 1080p. Back-of-the-envelope math would suggest that a 4K download of the same Harry Potter movie, if it was available to consumers, would consume 200GB of bandwidth.

      This isn’t a hypothetical: Sony is considering adding 4K movie downloads to its next-generation game console, and Sony Electronics President and COO Phil Molyneux recently went on the record saying that those downloads would be “100 gigabytes and plus” per movie.

      ISPs have long insisted that only a small percentage of their customers ever exhaust their monthly data allotment. This may be true today, but next-generation movie services show us that it caps could be a much bigger problem soon.

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    • With Dailymotion out of reach, what’s Yahoo’s next move in online video?

      Au revoir, Dailymotion: Yahoo won’t be buying the French video platform after regulators stepped in with demands to alter the deal, according to the Wall Street Journal.

      Yahoo was in talks to buy as much as 75 percent of Dailymotion, with an option to buy the remaining 25 percent at a later date. The deal would have valued Dailymotion at around $300 million — but it wasn’t meant to be: Regulators resisted the idea that Dailymotion would be owned by an American company, and wanted to restrict Yahoo’s ownership to 50 percent. Yahoo declined.

      This puts an end to what would have been Yahoo’s first major acquisition since Marissa Mayer took over as CEO last July, and it would also have been the company’s first major attempt to compete with YouTube since it shut down its own video hosting service in 2010.

      So where is Yahoo going to look next to boost its online video business? Here are a few ideas:

      Blip: Blip is one of the few remaining independent U.S. video platforms, and the service has undergone an ambitious transition from a catch-all for online video to a platform for premium serialized content — the kind of stuff advertisers like. This could be a good match for Yahoo, which has eyeballs, but needs inventory to place ads against.

      Ustream: The one area in which YouTube is still vulnerable is live video. Granted, the Google-owned video service has been offering live streaming to select partners for some time. But it’s live video section is a mess, and the only bright spots have been large live events. Ustream could help Yahoo to get a headstart in live video, while at the same time providing the company with a site that already offers offers hosting for recorded videos as well.

      PPLive: The Chinese video market is huge, with billions tuning in every month. It’s also not exactly profitable, which has led to consolidation, and could help Yahoo to buy one of the country’s many video providers on the cheap. Standalone video properties like PPLive and Xunlei are the most likely targets, and could help Yahoo to build a video business across Asia and beyond. Of course, there’s that whole China thing, but Mayer has proven that she’s not afraid of unpopular decisions.

      Flickr: The Yahoo-owned image hosting site has enjoyed a bit of a comeback in recent months. And guess what: Flickr has been offering video hosting for five years already. Video has been a bit of an afterthought for Flickr, but Yahoo could certainly change that if it wanted to. The advantage of this approach would be that all the resources are already part of Yahoo — and historically, integrating acquisitions has been one of the things that Yahoo has struggled with a lot.

      Who do you think Yahoo should buy instead of Dailymotion? Leave your thoughts in the comments!

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    • One designer’s quest to make a better Netflix iPad app

      How would Netflix’s iPad app look like if you scrapped everything and restarted from scratch? That’s exactly what Joel Grenier, director of UX for the Ottawa-based design agency YOU i Labs did.

      “Now that I use Netflix every day and love the service on many levels, I find myself frustrated with the current state of the application experience and design,” he wrote in a blog post earlier this month. That’s why he came up with a very different approach.

      01_ScreensInDevice_Logins_B

      Grenier’s prototype comes complete with a sign-in option for personalized profiles — which Netflix is set to roll out in the coming months — custom artwork for movies and TV show pages, the ability to drag and drop titles for custom watch lists and more. And everything is tied together with some very smooth animations.

      Grenier even mocked up some second-screen functionality for the Netflix iPad app, allowing users to tweet about titles they’re currently watching and even buy things related to a movie or a show.

      10_ScreensInDevice_SecondScreen

      It’s unlikely that the Netflix iPad app would ever get such a radical overhaul — Netflix famously A/B-tests each and every potential new feature and only implements features that notably lead to higher engagement — and some features don’t actually make all that much sense. For example, one could argue that a pure on-demand service doesn’t really need a live Twitter stream, as the viewing experience is largely asynchronous.

      But Grenier’s app mockup is nonetheless food for thought — and proof that there is still a lot media services can experiment with on mobile devices.

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    • Hulu surpassed 4M paying Hulu Plus subscribers, 1B streams in Q1

      Hulu now has more than four million paying users subscribing to its Hulu Plus service, and the number of subscribers has doubled since last year. The service also streamed more than one billion videos in the first quarter of 2013, which is another record for Hulu.

      HuluPayingSubscribers_1Q_2013

      The numbers were released on Hulu’s blog Tuesday, with Andy Forssell, in his new role as acting CEO, sharing a few other key stats as well:

      • The service now offers around 57,000 hours of content on Hulu and Hulu Plus, including more than 70,000 full TV episodes from nearly 2,500 TV series.
      • Hulu has more than 470 content partners.
      • Hulu has served more than 1000 brand advertisers since launch.
      • Hulu Plus is now available on more than 350 million mobile and connected devices.

      Forssell also used his post as well as his appearance at the Newfronts in New York to announce a number of new exclusive productions for the site, as well as the addition of All My Children and One Life To Live.

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    • Opera’s TV SDK starts powering Samsung Blu-ray players

      Opera is continuing to make inroads in the connected device space: Samsung is going to start shipping Blu-ray players powered by the Opera Devices SDK soon, the company announced Monday night. Opera didn’t go into details about which of Samsung’s 2013 Blu-ray players are going to be powered by its SDK, but the company said that the devices will ship globally.

      One interesting thing about this partnership is that Samsung has its own Smart TV platform, which it has been promoting aggressively to app developers. So why get a third party to power your devices? One likely answer: Samsung’s platform has been evolving from an all-purpose app platform towards a more TV-centric approach for high-end TV sets.

      At CES in January, Samsung unveiled a new UI for its 2013 Smart TVs that comes with voice control, a live TV guide and a remote control with an integrated touch pad. The company is offering owners of select 2012 TVs to upgrade to the new experience for $300 with the help of its Smart TV evolution kit; but that kind of premium pricing doesn’t really work for a $130 Blu-ray player.

      In light of that disparity, Samsung has to make a choice: Either fork its Smart TV platform to work on both high-end and low-end devices, or use a different solution for lower-priced devices. It looks like the company may be ready to go for the latter — and Opera seems to be the company to benefit.

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    • You gotta watch this House of Cards spoof for the White House Correspondents’ dinner

      There’s been a lot of talk about how much people in D.C. love Netflix’s House of Cards. This weekend, Netflix had another chance to play to that audience: For Saturday’s White House Correspondents’ dinner, House of Cards star Kevin Spacey was joined by John McCain, Michael Bloomberg, senoir Obama advisor Valerie Jarrett, CBS White House Correspondent Major Garrett, Buzzfeed editor-in-chief Ben Smith and numerous others in an excellent spoof dubbed House of Nerds. Check it out below:

      The spot poked fun at both politics and media, and Spacey’s Frank Underwood character didn’t hold back: “It must be so hard to write jokes about a town that already is one,” he said, just minutes after questioning whether NBC is a “real network.” Even Netflix was the butt of a joke, with congressman Steny Hoyer throwing an expletive-laden complaint about the service not working for him.

      Of course, the whole clip is also a testament to how much Netflix has changed over the past few months, and how important it has become in Hollywood. Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos, who was in the crowd Saturday night as well, recently told me that his phone has been ringing nonstop since the company first announced its plans for House of Cards.

      It looks as if one of those calls may have been about Saturday’s dinner: A Netflix spokesperson confirmed Monday that the company worked together with the House of Cards team to produce the spoof, in a way giving back to the town that made its dark and twisted story lines possible. Or, as Spacey says in the clip:

      “Well, you know my motto, Ed. You scratch my back, I won’t lacerate yours.”

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    • MLB starts to stream games live on YouTube… outside of the US and Canada

      Major League Baseball is now streaming two games per day live on YouTube, for free – but most of our readers likely won’t be able to tune in: MLB’s live streams will be restricted to users outside of the US, Canada, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan.

      However, the league will also add highlight clips from in-season games two days after they air on TV, and those highlights will be available to everyone. Also available on MLB’s revamped YouTube channel: Thousands of archive clips from MLB.com’s “Baseball’s Best Moments.”

      Of course, MLB has been streaming in-season games to U.S. viewers who are willing to pay for some time: MLB TV’s premium package currently costs around $130 per year. However, even that likely won’t get you the games you really want to watch: In-market games of your local team are blacked out and only air on TV.

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    • Player FM goes native on Android with a podcast app worth checking out

      When Player FM debuted its podcast listening and discovery platform on the web last May, I said that it made podcasts look cool again.

      A year later, Player FM is back with a native Android app, it’s definitely worth taking a look as well: The app features a very eye-pleasing, Google-like design, complete with cards that we’ve come to know from apps like Google Now and the latest version of the Play store.

      But Player FM isn’t just about looks: What sets the app apart from other podcasting applications is its emphasis on discovery. Player FM lets you not only subscribe to your favorite podcasts, but also to topics. These topics can be broad, like technology and international news, or very specific, like Pixar or Ruby on Rails. Each of these topics surfaces episodes from a number of relevant podcasts, which is great to discover new favorites and get different perspectives on a certain topic.

      Your own podcast subscriptions are accessible through a separate tab, and also synced with the Player FM website, where others can use them as a starting point for their own podcast listening. Of course, there are also a bunch of features you’d expect from a podcasting app, including the ability to download episodes for offline listening, complete with options to restrict downloads to WiFi or even to times when the device is plugged in for charging.

      There are some features still missing from the app, including playback status sync between different devices as well as the app and the website. You also can’t find podcasts by title through the app yet, but Player FM creator Michael Mahemoff told me that this feature is coming soon. In the meantime, users can go to the web app to fine tune their subscriptions, and then listen to them on the go.

      Check out a few screenshots of the Player.fm Android app below:

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    • Cord Cutters: Our review of Plair, which promises to be AirPlay for the rest of us

      Plair wants to bring AirPlay-like functionality to any TV, and allow you to beam videos from any Mac, PC or mobile device. Check out our review below:

      Show notes for this episode:

      Are you interested in a device like Plair? Or are you using any of the other methods to beam content to your TV? Let us know in the comments below, get in touch with us on Twitter (@cordcutters) or email us at cordcutters @ gigaom.com. Also, please check out our new Google+ Cord Cutters community!

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    • After a radical transformation, Blip gets ready to take on cable

      Online video is ready for its FX moment, according to Blip Networks CEO Kelly Day. Just like Fox turned FX into a successful network for original programming on cable, Day is planning to turn Blip into a network of topical channels with strong brands that are ready to compete head-to-head with traditional cable channels.

      To prepare for this, she’s been spearheading a radical transformation of the video site ever since she joined a year ago. “I came here because I have high aspirations for this company,” Day told me when I stopped by Blip’s offices in New York last week.

      To understand how much Blip has changed, it’s worth looking back at its origins: Blip launched back in 2005 under the name Blip.tv as a kind of YouTube for video bloggers and podcasters, which early on set the tone for a slightly different set of content. “We’ve never had viral videos, we don’t focus on music videos,” remembered Blip Senior Vice President of Content Steve Woolf when I talked to him about Blip’s transformation in March.

      From 900,000 accounts to 4000 shows

      Still, a lot of people uploaded all kinds of content — and some time last year, Blip made the strategic decision to get rid of most of them. Blip’s staff has been reviewing around 900,000 accounts over the last couple of months with the goal to identify high-quality serialized content. Woolf estimated that in the end, only about 4,000 shows will remain on the site. And Blip is also getting a lot more selective when it comes to new signups: “Blip was an open platform, now there is an application process,” explained Woolf.

      Blip Networks CEO Kelly Day.

      Blip Networks CEO Kelly Day.

      Blip’s new focus on serialized, monetizable content will be on full display at the Newfronts in New York next week, where Day is going to unveil some additional details about her plans to turn the site into a new form of multichannel network. At the core of it is professional, serialized web content that can engage audiences through a variety of channels — be it on Blip or off. The company has taken some first steps in that direction over the last couple of months with the launch of its own studio in Los Angeles, which is headed by Woolf. It also forged a partnership with YouTube, producing some exclusive content for the former rival.

      And now, it is looking to spin out new online channels around some of the topics that have been working well for niche channels on cable. Think cooking, golf, or any other cable properties with a highly specialized audience. “Those are some of the easiest to disrupt,” she said.

      Her plan includes taking that kind of shows off of Blip and building dedicated websites with highly curated content around it, likely with a separate branding. Some of these sites could even have a live component, something that Blip hasn’t done much in the past. Day wants to launch these new sites and brands within the next year, possibly as early as this fall. “I believe in building verticals around interests,” she told me.

      So what about YouTube?

      Of course, Blip isn’t alone in its move towards more professional content. YouTube has famously invested hundreds of millions into advances for content creators, and has been pushing hard to establish channels as destinations on its site. “They’re doing a lot of good for the industry,” acknowledged Day during our interview. At the same time, some creators have found themselves falling short of YouTube’s expectations, with less than 40 percent of the site’s original programming slate getting re-funded.

      Day argued that this is in part because of YouTube’s inability to surface that content to the right audiences. “I don’t think the algorithm works for everything,” she said. Some of these creators could benefit from being on separate, more curated destinations. Or to take the cable analogy: from producing for FX, not Fox.

      That’s why she is considering to partner up with a “select hand full” of these channels, and eventually help them be successful off of YouTube. “It is a good opportunity for us to bring on some new partners,” she said.

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    • The future of TV, according to Netflix CEO Reed Hastings

      Netflix CEO Reed Hastings laid out an ambitious plan for Netflix’s future in a paper published on the company’s investor relations site Wednesday that paints Netflix as one of the driving forces behind a transition from linear television to a world of internet-delivered on-demand content.

      The paper repeated some key points Hastings has been making in the past, but also included a number of noteworthy new insights, including some data points on what Netflix is spending its money on.

      Notably, Hastings said that Netflix is now spending over $2 billion a year on the licensing and creation of content. The company is spending another $350 million a year on improving its service and apps, including improvements to the streaming quality and customer service. And it is spending over $450 million per year on marketing in all of its markets around the world.

      Here are some other key highlights of the paper:

      On the future of TV

      People love TV viewing, but they hate linear TV, including DVRs and cable VOD services, argued Hastings: “The linear TV channel model is ripe for replacement.” Stepping up to replace it are apps from companies like Netflix, HBO and ESPN, which deliver programming to multiple screens.

      Technical advances, including 4k streaming and personalized advertising, will speed up the transition from linear TV to app-based on demand programming, and TV Everywhere will make it easier for cable networks to transition into this new world. And eventually, all of this will fundamentally change how TV is delivered:

      “Eventually, as linear TV is viewed less, the spectrum it now uses on cable and fiber will be reallocated to expanding data transmission. Satellite TV subscribers will be fewer, and mostly be in places where high-speed Internet (cable or fiber) is not available. The importance of highspeed Internet will increase.”

      On Netflix’s focus

      Hastings repeated in the paper that Netflix doesn’t want to compete with cable, but just become one more channel – or app – for consumers to choose from. That also means that the company will focus on a few key areas, and for example not venture into ad-supported programming:

      “We don’t and can’t compete on breadth with Comcast, Sky, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Sony, or Google. For us to be hugely successful we have to be a focused passion brand. Starbucks, not 7-Eleven. Southwest, not United. HBO, not Dish.”

      For Hastings, this isn’t just about doing what Netflix is best at. It’s also about offering consumers a clear idea what they can expect from the service, which is key to get them to tune in in what he described as “moments of truth”:

      “Those decision moments are, say, on Thursday 7:15 pm or Monday 2:40 am when our member wants to relax, enjoy a shared experience with friends and family, or is just bored. They could play a video game, surf the web, read a magazine, channel surf their MVPD/DVR system, buy a pay-per-view movie, put on a DVD, turn on Hulu or Amazon Prime Instant Video, or they could tap on Netflix. We want our members to choose Netflix in these moments of truth.”

      On licensing

      Hastings also shared some details about the company’s approach towards licensing, which has been shifting more and more towards exclusives. Guiding decisions on what to license is data, explained Hastings:

      “We might pay, for example, $200,000 for a 4 year exclusive subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) license for a given title. At the time of renewal, we evaluate how much the title has been viewed as well as member rating feedback to determine how much we are willing to pay. How many similar titles we have is also a consideration.”

      He didn’t mention it by name, but this reliance on data could be one of the reasons why Netflix decided to not renew a big licensing pact with Viacom. The company revealed earlier this week that its partnership with the cable programmer is about to expire in May. Netflix is now in discussions with Viacom to license individual shows instead.

      The paper also points out that Netflix has fundamentally changed the licensing of TV shows in particular:

      “It wasn’t easy for cable and broadcast networks to syndicate serialized storytelling to others, and we’ve pushed the price up considerably.”

      On HBO

      Hastings has long maintained that HBO is its biggest competitor. The company revealed Monday that it now has more domestic subscribers than the cable channel, and Hastings repeated in the paper that he wants to significantly outgrow HBO:

      “We have more content, more viewing, a broader brand proposition, are on-demand, on all devices, and are less expensive, so we estimate that we can be 2 to 3 times larger than current linear-HBO, or 60-90 million domestic members.”

      However, Hastings isn’t ready to count HBO out yet – and in fact argued that the competition from Netflix will actually help make HBO better as well:

      “While we are passing HBO in domestic members in 2013, it will be several years before we are peers with them in terms of Original programming, Emmy awards, and international members. It wouldn’t be surprising to us if HBO does their best work and achieves their highest growth over the next decade, spurred on by the Netflix competition and the Internet TV opportunity.”

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    • Boxee launches its cloud DVR service in the San Francisco Bay Area

      Boxee’s cloud DVR service is now available to San Francisco Bay Area residents, as the company turned on recording capability for its Cloud DVR set-top box for the area Wednesday. This marks the first expansion of the service since its launch in eight markets in November.

      Boxee’s Cloud DVR service uses the company’s set-top box to upload live TV recordings to the cloud, which can then be streamed back to the Boxee device as well as to computers and mobile devices. The company offers its users unlimited storage for recorded shows, and is eventually going to charge $10 a month for that service once the company concludes its beta test later this year. A free limited tier will come with five hours of playback time per month.

      The initial focus of Boxee’s cloud DVR is over-the-air TV, which can be received for free with an antenna — and that was apparently one of the reasons the rollout in the Bay Area took so long. Boxee VP of Marketing Andrew Kippen told me that the company already has a lot of users of its device in the Bay Area, but that it was cautious about rolling out the service because of the area’s unique geography. Via email, he told me:

      “We were worried about San Francisco’s numerous hills to begin with, which is why it wasn’t one of our first 8 markets, but now feel like we have enough users there to know the product works well.”

      Boxee’s expansion to the Bay Area means that the company’s DVR service is now available in a total of nine markets, including New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. Kippen told me that the company wants to be in 26 U.S. markets by the end of the year.

      Boxee first introduced its cloud DVR service and device in November, and at the time still called the set-top box “Boxee TV.” However, the device was rebranded earlier this month to Cloud DVR to put a bigger emphasis on its DVR capabilities. Renaming the device just a few months after launch could be seen as a sign that Boxee is struggling to explain the offering to consumers, many of which aren’t even aware that they can receive HD TV programming over the air.

      But the rebranding also suggests that Boxee is looking to work more closely with operators. The company notably toned down its cord cutting rhetoric with the relaunch, and the Boxee Cloud DVR became the first device of its class to support Comcast’s encrypted basic cable feeds. The cable operator started encrypting basic cable in some markets this month, and reached an agreement with Boxee to give the Cloud DVR access to these feeds last year.

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    • I want my Kindle TV: report confirms Amazon’s set-top box plans

      Amazon is building a TV set-top box, which it plans to introduce this fall, according to a BusinessWeek report. The device will heavily focus on Amazon’s Prime Instant video streaming service as well as the company’s pay-per-transaction VOD titles, and directly compete with streaming devices such as Apple TV and Roku.

      The device is being built by Amazon’s secretive R&D unit Lab126. Lab126 has been experimenting with streaming devices for years, according to BusinessWeek, which said it was able to confirm Amazon’s plans with three unnamed sources. Some of the folks involved in the project previously worked for TiVo, Vudu and the DVR pioneer, ReplayTV.

      The revelation of an Amazon set-top box shouldn’t come as a big surprise to GigaOM readers: We reported in September that Lab126 had hired a number of employees with a connected device background, including much of the team behind Logitech’s failed Google TV device, the Logitech Revue.

      BusinessWeek didn’t go into details about the technology at the core of Amazon’s device, but it would make sense for the company to build it on top of Android, essentially re-purposing Google TV’s technology. That’s the same strategy Amazon used successfully for its Kindle Fire tablets, which run on a highly customized version of Android that’s been stripped of all obvious ties to Google.

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    • Skype co-founder Janus Friis is working on a stealthy new product incubator

      Skype co-founder Janus Friis is getting ready to launch a new venture: Block Talent Partners, a recruiting agency that has been working with Friis on some of his other ventures, is currently looking for senior engineering talent for a stealthy new incubator. The objective of the new company is to ”change how products get built and startups get launched,” according to a job offer, which reads in part:

      “More than just an “incubator” or “accelerator”, tbd. is assembling an elite team of engineers to create a one-of-a-kind company. Their goal is to build, launch and commercialize the hottest new products we can dream up, all with an eye towards reusable code and buttressed by a best-in-class infrastructure.”

      It’s unclear whether tbd. was just a placeholder for the job offer, or whether the company will actually use this moniker until it emerges from stealth mode. Friis’ recently-launched video service Vdio operated under the name Project WBS for months until GigaOM broke the story of Vdio’s existence.

      Speaking of Vdio: Tbd. will be headed by Todd Berman, who was employee number one at Rdio, the Friis-backed digital music service that is joined at the hip with Vdio. Berman served as Rdio’s CTO until last month, and his Twitter bio currently just reveals that he is now “working on something new.”

      The idea to re-use code for launching new products may also at least in part be informed by Friis’ experience with Rdio and Vdio. Friis initially hired a separate team of designers and engineers to build Vdio. But those efforts were eventually scrapped, and Vdio was rebuilt from scratch on top of Rdio’s architecture, with most of original team being let go in the process.

      So what will Tbd. build? The job posting offers no details, but it does mention that the eventual goal is to spin out the products it builds into separate companies. It goes on to offer prospective hires “the (highest) compensation in the Valley,” something that Friis can easily afford: In 2001, Friis and his co-founder Niklas Zennstroem made an estimated $1.19 billion by selling Skype to Microsoft.

      Image courtesy of Flickr user  Marcin Wichary.

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    • BitTorrent opens up its Dropbox competitor to the public

      BitTorrent opened up the alpha test of its Sync app Tuesday, which offers PC-to-PC file syncing powered by P2P technology. Sync was first announced in January, and the company said this week that users have synched over 200 TB of data during three months of private beta testing.

      Sync, which is currently available for Windows, OS X and Linux, allows users to sync folders between PCs without any limits to file or folder sizes. Folders are encrypted before any transmission, and the app utilizes local network connectivity when syncing two machines within the same network.

      Sync is only one of many new apps and services BitTorrent has been testing in recent months, with others including SoShare, an app that allows users to exchange files that would be too large to email, the Facebook file sharing app Beam It Over and the live streaming service BitTorrent Live. The company has been highlighting these apps on its BitTorrent Labs site.

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