Category: Internet

  • CEO Christian Chabot on Tableau Software’s New Consumer App for Making Data Social

    Tableau Software
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    “I make the bold claim that this will be of interest to anyone who posts content online,” says Christian Chabot, the co-founder and chief executive of Seattle-based Tableau Software.

    We were talking recently about his company’s big move into consumer software, which was just announced today. “The target is really bloggers, journalists, writers, critics, researchers, students—anyone who wants to put information online,” Chabot said.

    Tableau is focused on data visualization and business intelligence. The company sells its software to businesses and organizations that need powerful tools to dissect large amounts of data and pull out trends and patterns more efficiently. That’s everyone from Microsoft, Yahoo, and Google, to three-letter government agencies, to Barnes-Jewish Hospital and the Dallas Cowboys.

    And now the tools are being offered to consumers for free, at TableauPublic.com. The move fits with Tableau’s goal of becoming the “Adobe of data.” It also seems like a smart move to get the company’s tools in the hands of a much broader audience. “It’s for the public good, for the public Web, and for public information. If there’s anything mildly private, you’d want to use Tableau’s business product,” Chabot says. “We think it will flow back to us with exposure. It will expose people to our technology.”

    Chabot puts data in perspective with the history of digital media on the Internet. “We’re finally going to make data on the Web as fun and useful as an online video,” he says. “The history of the Web is it started as a bunch of text, marked up, and then images finally became a first-class citizen, and Flickr exploded. Images are a properly respected object on the Web canvas. Now, thanks to Adobe Flash and YouTube and the Flip camera, video is a first-class citizen. We at Tableau, we’d say there’s only one more type of content that humans produce, and that’s data.”

    Granted, the idea of playing with data seems more abstract and doesn’t have as broad immediate appeal as pictures and video. But Chabot says, “It needs its Flickr, it needs its Flip camera. Take any dataset. You can do two things—you can tell stories really well, and you can answer people’s questions.”

    And that’s the key here—Tableau is trying to make data social and easy. “The real breakthrough here isn’t that you couldn’t have gotten to this destination,” Chabot says. “It’s not that we invented interactive visualization. It’s the ability to do it fast without any programming, and do it free and bring it to the whole world.” (That’s as opposed to hiring a team of Flash developers that might take $50,000 and 30 days to produce a high-end interactive visualization for CNN, say.)

    Tableau is one of the fastest growing software companies in the country. It currently has 105 employees and is actively hiring in areas like software development, quality assurance, operations, and sales. Chabot says the company has had record sales the past two quarters, after a bit of a slowdown in early 2009. Tableau has roughly 6,000 business-level customer organizations. “We’re adding thousands every six months,” Chabot says.







  • The WiFi Dowsing Rods Leads the Way to the Internet

    B8CBEAD6-1F11-4BA5-9A39-42D8E1382BE3.jpg

    You know those dowsing rods that locate water underground? Well now someone has come up with the high-tech equivalent – a wifi dowsing rod that tells you where the local Internet signal is the strongest.

    Walk into a Starbucks cafe with this thing and you’ll instantly know where to sit to get the best signal. Sure, the people around you will think you’re crazy, but that’ll just give you more space to make yourself at home.

    Related posts:

    1. Starbucks Adds Booze to Menu
    2. Link Love for April 23rd
    3. What Does The Internet Consider Attractive?

  • Happy 2010: Bay State Startups Ring in the New Year with $355M in January Venture Funding

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Apparently, Massachusetts venture investors aren’t like most American consumers in January, when purse strings tighten and spending comes to a halt following the previous month’s holiday shopping excesses. By contrast, they significantly upped their investments in the state’s tech and life sciences startups, investing $355.2 million across 28 equity deals, according to information provided by private company intelligence platform CB Insights.  That’s at least $130 million more than the $224 million in venture funding that 36 startups wrapped up in December.

    January’s dollar figures make it the best month in venture investing that we’ve tracked so far (we started in June), thanks to huge deals in software, healthcare, and energy. In fact, January’s dollar totals toppled the previous best month to date, September, by more than 50 percent, when startups raised $228 million across 25 deals.

    The largest January equity deal came in at a whopping $120 million for Southborough, Ma-based IkaSytems, providers of process automation and intelligence management software for the healthcare payer market. Essex Woodlands Health Ventures and Providence Equity Partners led the growth equity round. This put it $85 million ahead of the next biggest venture deal of the month, the $35 million Series B round that went to Alnara Pharmaceuticals, a Boston-based company that plans to seek FDA approval for its enzyme-replacement drug for patients with cystic fibrosis. The spread between the top two deals was much bigger than the $4 million difference between the first and second place deals in December, when venture financings were all grouped more closely in value. The Alnara financing was also way ahead of the January third-place deal, $23.8 million for Lowell-based energy company Konarka Technologies. The remaining January venture deals followed more closely at each other’s heels, as you can see in the list at the end of this story.

    January Venture Investing

    Software companies took home the biggest share of venture funds at $167.7 million, and knocked the healthcare sector off of its throne, largely thanks to the IkaSystems deal (healthcare had previously led all other sectors in venture dollars every month that we tracked). The five remaining software startup venture financings accounted for $47.7 million. Even without the IkaSystems financing, software companies still pulled in more than they did in December ($30.5 million across five deals), when the sector ranked fourth in dollars raised.

    The previous sector champ, healthcare, came in second in terms of venture dollars amassed at $121.1 million, but still had …Next Page »







  • Google 1Gb/sec experimental fiber network

    From Google “Think big with a gig“,

    “Imagine sitting in a rural health clinic, streaming three-dimensional medical imaging over the web and discussing a unique condition with a specialist in New York. Or downloading a high-definition, full-length feature film in less than five minutes. Or collaborating with classmates around the world while watching live 3-D video of a university lecture. Universal, ultra high-speed Internet access will make all this and more possible. […]

    We’re planning to build and test ultra high-speed broadband networks in a small number of trial locations across the United States. We’ll deliver Internet speeds more than 100 times faster than what most Americans have access to today with 1 gigabit per second, fiber-to-the-home connections. We plan to offer service at a competitive price to at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people.”

    Love this kind of experiment to push the boundary of possibilities and set higher expectations for customers thus forcing the broadband providers to up their services.And pushing city or state governments themselves and via their citizens to act. Neat.

    More news about this from CBC.

    Filed under: Google, Internet, Science & Technology, united states, Video, YouTube

  • A Good Start? WA Companies Raised $57M in January, Up from $22M in Previous Month

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Last month, companies based in Washington state raised a total of about $57 million in venture capital, in eight deals. That’s up from about $22 million in December 2009 (four companies), and $44 million (10 companies) in the month before that.

    The VC stats are courtesy of private company intelligence platform CB Insights. See the table below for a full list of January venture financings.

    In terms of dollars, the trend is going upward, but it’s notable that only one of the deals was a Series A financing—Seattle-based Exponential Entertainment raising $1.45 million for social gaming services.

    The biggest financing was Bellevue’s Visible Technologies raising a $22 million Series C round to expand its global presence in brand monitoring and online reputation management. Next up was DataSphere, also in Bellevue, raising a $10.8 million Series B round as it continues to help media companies make money from hyperlocal websites. Interestingly, Bellevue-based Ignition Partners was involved in both financings.

    The venture deals for the month break down pretty evenly by sector: three in Internet, two in healthcare, and arguably three in cleantech—though you could also call Lagotek home automation software, and Verdiem business software.

    All in all, it’s a decent start to the year for Washington state companies. But the innovation community does need some early-stage funding, and it needs it fast. Here is the recap of January 2010 venture deals in Washington:

    .

    Venture deals for Washington-based companies, January 2010 (ChubbyBrain)







  • Blame Manufacturers For Annoying Hidden Prices Online

    Have you been noticing more and more lately that no matter which online retailer you visit, you have to add the item to your shopping cart to see the price? Blame it on manufacturers, who are taking advantage of a 2007 Supreme Court ruling to be more aggressive about controlling pricing online, writes the New York Times.

    Ever since that decision, retailers say manufacturers have become increasingly aggressive with one tool in particular: forbidding retailers from advertising their products for anything less than a certain price.

    For offline retailers like Wal-Mart Stores and Best Buy, that means not dropping below those prices in the circulars and ads in newspapers. But online retailers have a greater burden. Manufacturers consider the product pages on sites like eBay and Amazon.com to be ads, and they complain whenever e-commerce sites set prices below the minimum price.

    The practice has spread from consumer electronics to things like sporting goods and books, and obviously it ruins the idea of transparency online–such unlisted prices keep those listings out of price comparison searches, for example.

    The article says manufacturers argue if they don’t put a stop to steep online discounting, it will be a race to zero and everyone will lose–brick and mortar stores will be unable to compete and stop carrying goods entirely. Somehow I don’t think the hands-on experience of a brick & mortar store will ever lose a certain appeal, particularly if you can match it with quality customer service and expert help.

    “The Fight Over Who Sets Prices at the Online Mall” [New York Times]

  • Google Wants to Test Gigabit Fiber Internet For Up To 500,000 People [Google]

    Since Google wants to control all forms of communication, the logical next step is being not just what you do on the internet, but how you access the internet as well. To do that, they’ll deploy 1Gbps fiber to you.

    The company is going to test this super high speed internet to “a small number of trial locations across the United States,” and give somewhere between 50k to 500k people an amazingly fast pipe. What’s the point of this?

    * Next generation apps: We want to see what developers and users can do with ultra high-speeds, whether it’s creating new bandwidth-intensive “killer apps” and services, or other uses we can’t yet imagine.
    * New deployment techniques: We’ll test new ways to build fiber networks, and to help inform and support deployments elsewhere, we’ll share key lessons learned with the world.
    * Openness and choice: We’ll operate an “open access” network, giving users the choice of multiple service providers. And consistent with our past advocacy, we’ll manage our network in an open, non-discriminatory and transparent way.

    We basically read that as bridging the gap between webapps and desktop apps by making the connection so fast that most people won’t be able to tell the difference. And, forcing other ISPs to upgrade their pipes to compete with Google, since they say it’s going to be released at “a competitive price”. Think of it as the Nexus One of service providers. Google is going to make an offering that’s better than other comparable devices/services in order to make everyone else play catch-up.

    So, if you want my address, Google, to know where you need to deploy the test, you’ve probably got it already. Seriously man, I need this. [Google]






  • ESPN peeper has more victims

    Federal prosecutors say the west suburban man who stalked ESPN reporter Erin Andrews and shot nude videos of her through a hotel room peephole videotaped 16 other women and ran background checks on 30 others, including female sports reporters and TV personalities.

    According to a sentencing memo filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, the Internet background checks Michael Barrett conducted can produce birthdays and home addresses, but it’s unclear what information he obtained and how he may have used
    it.

    Barrett, of west suburban Westmong, has pleaded guilty to interstate stalking and agreed to a 27-month prison sentence.

    A judge is scheduled to sentence him March 8.

    The filing notes that Andrews wants the 48-year-old insurance executive to pay her more than $300,000 in restitution.

    Read the original article from FOX Chicago News.


  • As Advertisers Expand Online, Covario Adds Web-Based Tools to Measure Their Success

    Covario_logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    A new generation of corporate marketing executives was in attendance last week when San Diego-based Covario convened its fourth annual corporate partners conference at the downtown Hard Rock Hotel. As a rock band jammed onstage, the gathering crowd included JP Morgan Chase’s vice president of search governance, Amgen’s senior marketing manager for oncology, and the consumer insight manager for Sony Online Entertainment.

    Search governance? Consumer insight? Welcome to the world of corporate search engine marketing.

    Covario, a startup backed by Seattle-based Voyager Capital, Dubilier & Co., and FT Ventures, specializes in interactive marketing technologies and services. It holds the meeting each year to discuss the latest trends in the highly specific world of search engine marketing and online advertising.

    Search engine marketing, which promotes websites in search engine results by paying to ensure certain search terms are displayed (and by other techniques), is a highly profitable business dominated by Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft. Covario operates in a different segment,  providing Web-based tools, analytical software, and other technologies that enable companies to optimize their websites and to measure just how much bang they get for each search-term buck they pay to Google and the other big boys.

    Search engine marketing is growing much faster than traditional advertising. For all its precision, however, search marketing remains a …Next Page »





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  • ATG Banks $101M, Veracode Collects $12M, & More Boston-Area Deals News

    Rebecca Zacks wrote:

    It’s only been a few days since I last rounded up the deals news from New England’s tech and life sciences companies, but there are still a few new transactions to report.

    —Irvine, CA-based Allergan (NYSE:AGN) revealed in an earnings report that it acquired Medford, MA-based biomaterials maker Serica Technologies late last year. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    —Art Technology Group (NASDAQ: ARTG) raised $100.6 million in an underwritten public offering. The Cambridge, MA-based e-commerce firm sold 28.75 shares at $3.50 apiece, with Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank Securities serving as underwriters for the deal.

    —Security software maker Veracode of Burlington, MA, raised $12.3 million in equity-based financing, according to a regulatory filing. Previous backers of Veracode include Atlas Venture, .406 Ventures, Macrovision, Polaris Venture Partners, Symantec, and In-Q-Tel.

    —Datanetis, an Israeli “influencer marketing” startup, raised $6 million in Series A funding from Battery Ventures, changed its name to Pursway, and moved its headquarters to Waltham, MA. Wade investigated what exactly the startup means by “influencer marketing.”







  • Real Spins Off Rhapsody

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based RealNetworks and MTV Networks announced today they will spin off their digital music service joint venture, Rhapsody, into a separate company. Under the terms of the deal, RealNetworks (NASDAQ: RNWK) will no longer be the majority owner and operator of Rhapsody; the new company will not have a single majority owner. Real says this is a significant first step in making itself more focused and profitable. More information on the restructuring can be found in the Form 8-K that Real filed with the SEC today. The deal is expected to close at the end of this quarter.





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  • M/C Gains in NuVox Sale

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Boston’s M/C Venture Partners is the big winner in the $647 million sale of NuVox, a Greenville, SC-based provider of business telecommunications services, to Windstream Corporation (NASDAQ: WIN), a deal announced yesterday. In a press release yesterday, M/C said that it became NuVox’s largest shareholder after NuVox absorbed M/C portfolio companies NewSouth in 2004 and Florida Digital Network in 2007. Little Rock, AR-based Windstream, which provides phone, Internet, and digital TV service to customers in 21 states, paid $280 million in cash and $187 million in stock to acquire NuVox, and also repaid $180 million in NuVox’s outstanding debt.





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  • Serviço de e-mail do Facebook?

    Facebook

    Segundo os últimos rumores, o Facebook está interessado em lançar um serviço de e-mail gratuito disponível para todos os utilizadores da rede social.

    Ao que parece, este rumor já foi confirmada pelo Facebook e estes estão mesmo a preparar um novo serviço de webmail e a reescrever o seu sistema de chatting que existe actualmente.

    Project Titan é o nome código do desenvolvimento deste novo projecto no Facebook. Os endereços dos utilizadores serão baseados nos urls dos seus perfis e o serviço de e-mail terá suporte completo a POP e IMAP, permitindo assim os utilizadores usarem aplicações 3rd party para aceder às suas contas de e-mail.

    Uma vez que é uma das maiores redes sociais da Internet, o Facebook poderá com este novo serviço atrair novos utilizadores. É a cereja no topo do bolo.

    WebTugaServiço de e-mail do Facebook?

  • FBI Wants To Follow You Around The Internet

    FBI chief Robert Mueller wants to ISPs to track everything their customers do on the Internet, and keep those records for two years. The government plan would give the FBI access to “origin and destination information” for all users. Hey, at least they’re not doing it in secret and lying about it.

    The FBI says it’s not interested in actual content; they just want to know who you are, where you’ve been and what you did while you were there. Oh, goody.

    “The question at least for the bureau has been about non-content transactional data to be preserved: transmission records, non-content records…addressing, routing, signaling of the communication,” [Greg] Motta [of the FBI’s digital evidence team] said. Director Mueller recognizes, he added “there’s going to be a balance of what industry can bear…He recommends origin and destination information for non-content data.”

    Motta pointed to a 2006 resolution from the International Association of Chiefs of Police, which called for the “retention of customer subscriber information, and source and destination information for a minimum specified reasonable period of time so that it will be available to the law enforcement community.”

    Telcos are balking, at least for now, mainly because they’re worried about the resources required to keep that much data (what, you thought they were worried about your privacy?). They’ll inevitably come around, though, since the government can, you know, make them do it — and they’ve already been told they can do whatever they want with your personal data.

    We assume the FBI will eventually get its way, just as the NSA did last year. Then again, if it snows a little more in DC, Congress may just shut down until spring, delaying the inevitable just a little longer.

    FBI wants records kept of Web sites visited [CNET]

  • Jack In The Box’s Free Wi-Fi Experiment Ended. Did Anyone Notice?

    Knowzy.com, the website that’s been tracking which Jack in the Box stores were offering free Wi-Fi, reports that the restaurant chain has pulled the plug. The Wi-Fi offer came with the installation of HDTVs that displayed ads in the dining area, but those are gone too: “In mid-2009, the TVs and the Wi-Fi began disappearing. By the time McDonald’s made their free Wi-Fi announcement in December, Jack had completely dismantled his Wi-Fi network.”

    Knowzy says it spoke with a Jack in the Box employee who said the chain really was after the HDTVs, and the Wi-Fi was just an added benefit to the deal they struck with a company called RippleTV. That deal has apparently ended and RippleTV was acquired by another company last fall.

    Knowzy says that even though the official program has gone away, there are at least six franchised locations (all in California) that are still offering free Wi-Fi unofficially, perhaps in a local effort to remain competitive with Wi-Fi-blasting McDonald’s locations. They’re listed on the Knowzy page.

    “Free Wi-Fi at Jack in the Box is Gone!” [Knowzy.com]

    RELATED
    “Select Jack In The Boxes Offering Free Wi-Fi”

  • Amazon Buys Touchco, Infinia Raises More Cash, the Truth About Photobucket, & More Seattle-Area Deals News

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Another quiet week for deals in the Northwest as we head into the depths of winter. Nevertheless, there were a few notable deals in software, hardware, and energy.

    —Kennewick, WA-based Infinia snapped up another $11.5 million in equity financing in a round that could total $75 million over time, as Luke reported. The investors in the round included Paul Allen’s Vulcan Capital and GLG Partners, both existing investors in the company. Infinia has raised more than $100 million, including a previous investment from Vinod Khosla, who says he is no longer involved with the company. Infinia, led by CEO J.D. Sitton, uses satellite dishes that capture rays of sunlight and channel them to a focal point that contains a single-piston Stirling engine, which uses the heat energy to produce electricity.

    —Who bought whom in the Ontela-Photobucket merger announced in December? It turns out News Corporation, which previously owned Photobucket, sold the subsidiary to Seattle-based Ontela and its investors at a $29 million loss. Although News Corp. still owns a stake in the merged company (Photobucket), Ontela’s investors—Steamboat Ventures, Oak Investment Partners, Covera Ventures, and Voyager Capital—apparently control the firm now. Ontela, which had 23 employees as of December, was formed in 2005 and backed by about $15 million in venture funding. Last week, Ontela co-founder and former CEO Dan Shapiro said he is leaving his role as chief technology officer of Photobucket.

    Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) formed a partnership with the National Science Foundation (NSF) to provide cloud-computing resources to selected researchers and research groups through its Windows Azure software platform. Financial terms of the agreement weren’t given, but NSF will be in charge of awarding and managing the projects through its usual review process. Microsoft will grant the selected researchers free access to Azure’s cloud-based tools for three years.

    —Seattle-based Amazon has acquired Touchco, a touchscreen technology startup based in New York. The news was first reported by the New York Times. No financial terms were given, but according to the report, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) will merge the New York University spinout’s technology and staff (about six people) into its Kindle hardware division, Lab126, based in Cupertino, CA. There is strong speculation that Amazon plans to add touchscreen capabilities to its Kindle e-reader device, in part to compete with Apple’s iPad.







  • IdeaScale Used for 24 Government Sites

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based Survey Analytics has rolled out a total of 24 crowdsourcing websites for U.S. government agencies to help them solicit and manage feedback from citizens. Financial details of the current partnerships weren’t given. The sites are powered by IdeaScale, the company’s software platform for hosting and managing feedback from communities and customers. Last May, the White House announced it was using IdeaScale to power its Open Government Dialogue site. And this past weekend, California’s chief technology officer, P.K. Agarwal, said he is using IdeaScale to help gather ideas to improve the state’s IT systems. Survey Analytics has been bootstrapped since 2004 and is led by CEO and co-founder Vivek Bhaskaran.







  • Quattrone Predicts VC Shrinkage, ViaSat CEO Says Bandwidth Was Key to Internet Satellite, UCSD Scientists Win Google Grant, & More San Diego BizTech News

    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    With online video consuming more and more bandwidth, ViaSat’s decision to design its own high-capacity satellite for Internet service is looking more and more prescient. We’re beaming that and the rest of the news to you now, so take off your foil hats and tune in.

    Frank Quattrone, a former investment banker and controversial figure following the dot-com boom, told a San Diego Venture Group gathering that the financial industry has grown too large, too over-extended, and strayed too far from its traditional focus on lending, trading, and principal activities. Quattrone spoke nostalgically about the tech IPOs he handled before Netscape’s 1995 IPO, which he also handled. That transaction, triggered a casino mentality of ever-bigger deals, he said.

    Merger rumors about San Diego’s Leap Wireless (NASDAQ: LEAP) are resurgent, following a Wall Street Journal report last week that Leap has hired investment bankers to advise the company on its strategic options. Leap, which provides flat-rate phone service through its Cricket operating company, has previously explored merger opportunities, primarily with Dallas-based MetroPCS. In a report Saturday, the San Diego Union-Tribune cast doubt on the latest speculation, citing a JP Morgan Chase analyst.

    —Plans by Carlsbad, CA-based ViaSat (NASDAQ: VSAT) to launch its own satellite to provide high-capacity Internet service were helped significantly by the company’s $568-million acquisition of …Next Page »





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  • Improv wiki roundup

    I thought this might be a semi-regular, fun entry for the blog. About a year and half ago, I started an improv wiki on my other site. It’s grown quite a bit with well over 1000 pages now for groups, performers, shows, concepts and more. If you are an improvisor, please create an account and start adding information that you know. At the moment, there is a lot of good information about the New York scene, but the Chicago and LA improv scenes are not as well documented.

    This week I started pages for the New York groups Centralia and Burn Manhattan. I also started a page for Inside Vladimir, a long running Chicago team that featured Tina Fey and Amy Poehler (I added some info to both of their pages also, but they are still a bit sparse). I also added a little information on a team I was on and coached in NYC called Ice-Nine. There is also a fairly new page for the team Leo Callahan and updates on the pages for the Magnet Theater and New York performer Micheal Short.

    There are lots of pages that could use some love. I’m trying to get the guys from Vladimir to add more information about the group to their page. I was a bit surprised that there was not a page for The Real Real World, given it’s long run in New York and the many early UCBT improvisors who were a part of that show. There was also a Chicago version that included many performers from Vladimir. I’d also like to get something up for the Living Room. This was a show created by The Family in the 90s at ImprovOlympic (now iO) and also featured Fey and Poehler. It had a very simple format of creating a fake living room on stage where the performers could discuss issues and tell stories and then jump up and do scenework whenever an idea came to mind. The goal of the original run was to make a TV pilot, which did get shot, but wasn’t sold to my knowledge.

    If you have information about any of these items that you would like to add, please start an account there and add it.

  • TV Gorge – Episódios de Séries Online

    TV Gorge

    Se é viciado em séries de televisão, então provavelmente este site é para si. O TV Gorge é um agregador de episódios de séries de tv online que lhe assegura o acesso a centenas de episódios gratuitamente com a garantia de que a qualidade será sempre a melhor possível.

    Provavelmente já conhece o site Hulu, que tem também milhares de episódios e até mesmo filmes completos, no entanto tem restrições geográficas.

    O TV Gorge é uma alternativa ao Hulu, sem as restrições geográficas e graças à verificação manual de cada vídeo, é possível obter o melhor streaming.

    Veja aqui a lista completa de todas as séries disponíveis no TV Gorge.

    WebTugaTV Gorge – Episódios de Séries Online