Welcome to My Internet For Business Blog

Hi My name is Marie Coyne and I am currently studying the Internet Computing degree at the University Of Derby.




Tuesday, 11 March 2008

Paramount launches movie clips app on Facebook

Even more top businesses are getting on board with the Facebook platform. Not just with advertising their product – developing their own applications.

This is an article I found on scenta.co.uk:

“Paramount Pictures has just become the first major studio to make clips from thousands of its movies available for use on the internet.The studio has teamed up with LA-based developer FanRocket to launch the "VooZoo" application on Facebook which lets users access footage from thousands of movies to send to others on the social networking site."The short clips for a movie that you've already seen before helps you relive the moment," Paramount senior VP entertainment Derek Broes said.”

Original Link: http://www.scenta.co.uk/gadgets/news/cit/1717484/paramount-launches-movie-clips-app-on-facebook.htm

Thursday, 6 March 2008

YouTube most popular UK user-generated site

I have found a lot of talk about the social networking sites being up there with the most visited sites for user generated content, but I found one very popular site that gets over looked in these figures as it is more media based, YouTube.

Here is a great article about its popularity in contrast to the others mentioned:

"YouTube, the video-sharing website, is now the most popular user-generated site in the UK after attracting 10.4 million people in January.Wikipedia: A very modern encyclopediaThe Google-owned site has seen a 56 per cent increase in traffic from the same time last year, knocking the user-edited encyclopaedia Wikipedia off the top spot, according to new Nielsen Online figures.
Nearly two-thirds of UK web users, or 20.8 million people, have visited at least one of the top 10 sites which are created by users uploading their own information, according to the data.
Wikipedia had 9.6 million unique users during January, while Facebook recorded 8.5 million. Blogger, the do-it-yourself blogging service, had 5.1 million users, ahead of social networking sites MySpace, at 5.02 million and Bebo at 4.09 million users.Facebook saw a huge year-on-year growth of 712 per cent since January 2007 while Slide, the photo display application, saw its user base increase by 207 per cent to 3.3 million over the same period.”

Original Link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/06/nyoutube106.xml

Monday, 25 February 2008

FT’s $3,300 Per Year Social Network Fails At Firefox

This is an article found, relating to my previous post at mashable.com:

"If you think LinkedIn is for kids and Facebook is for grandkids, perhaps you should consider Financial Times’ new social network, aimed at top level execs who can afford 1700 pounds (3,340 dollars) per year, because that’s how much (at the very least) membership costs.

The details about the network itself are sparse; it’s being described as a forum with a ‘user-friendly, simple, efficient and secure system’ for online networking. I’m guessing that the high price point will mostly relate to the exclusivity of the club and much less to the actual technical and other accomplishments offered within the network (see bottom of this article for proof). However, it’s partially redeemed with the fact that membership in the forum includes free attendance to one of
Financial Times‘ Global Conferences and Events, as well as a 20% discount on other events in the series, as well as 12-month subscription to the newspaper itself. Not bad, but 3,3k bucks? Ouch. "

Original Link: http://mashable.com/2008/02/25/financial-times-social-network-executives/

Financial Times launches social network with £1,700 membership fee

With most platforms available free to its users, and even business users, it would be very interesting to see why Financial Times have launched its own private social networking site, strictly for the rich as it seems with a £1,700 membership fee.

Article by journalism.co.uk:

The Financial Times has launched a social network for executives in the digital, new media and mobile industries.
Subscribers to the Telecoms, Media and Technology Executive Membership Forum, which costs £1,700-a-year before VAT to join, will have access to podcasts from FT conferences and be given a 12-month premium subscription to FT.com.
Today's launch shows the FT's development of subscription-based services to provide revenue as opposed to online advertising, Rona Fairhead, CEO of the Financial Times Group, told delegates at the FT's digital media and broadcasting conference.The forum is the first in a series of online networks to be launched by the paper with similar projects targeted at the property and luxury goods sectors planned for later this year.”

Original Link: http://www.journalism.co.uk/2/articles/531090.php

Thursday, 21 February 2008

You Tube slams Google into submission

This is a very strange article, as how can Google be possibly in completion with YouTube, when Google own YouTube? Surely they should be happy about its new found popularity and they snapped the site up when they had the chance...

Found at functionpix.com

"Functionpix is the world's fastest growing independent freelance news and pictures organisation and the only organisation of it's kind to donate profits to charity with the sale of every itemYouTube has overtaken Google in the popularity stakes following data released on Alexa.com the world’s web ranking specialists.Alexa.com ranks websites according to their visitor traffic, Web 2.0 video sharing site Youtube.com has now overtaken Google.com as the world's second most visited website.

PRWeb cofirm that after noticing a massive spike in popularity and traffic at video sharing sites such as Youtube.com starting early last year, internet marketer and website traffic expert Kevin Riley decided to see for himself if online video had more than just entertainment value. "

Original Link: http://functionpix.com/index.php/article/You_Tube_slams_Google_into_submission/1704/

Monday, 11 February 2008

US Internet advertising worth $25.5 bln in 2007: IDC

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5j-REod22HljrOHzkIR-EDx9fe8og

"WASHINGTON (AFP) — US Internet ad spending rose 27 percent last year to 25.5 billion dollars, research firm IDC said Monday in a report that showed Google losing market share for the first time in two years.

The survey showed a 28 percent gain in the fourth quarter alone to 7.3 billion dollars, IDC said.

IDC also found that Google's net US market share declined for the first time in two years due to slower growth in domestic fourth-quarter sales.

The market leader's net US Internet advertising market share was down 0.5 percentage points to 23.7 percent last quarter.

Google's estimated net US Internet advertising sales excluding the cost of payments to partners in their networks grew by a little more than 40 percent in the fourth quarter, but its year-on-year growth rate in the quarter before had been 50 percent, IDC said.

"If a merger between Microsoft's new media business and Yahoo would come to pass, the combined entity would have a net US advertising market share of about 17 percent based on our fourth-quarter data," says Karsten Weide, program director for IDC.

"It would not quite bring Microsoft-Yahoo to where Google is in online advertising in the US, but it would give them a much better fighting chance than if they went it alone."

Wednesday, 6 February 2008

Developers in garages seek Facebook acceptance

I have been reading a lot of Web magazines and online articles and I have been coming across this new (-to me, anyway) term "Facebook Garages" looks like a bunch of Facebook developers get to gather and talk about their ideas on applications that they have built for the popular platform.

Found at theage.com:

"To some, Facebook is a frivolous social forum, but Californian Lee Lorenzen regards it as "the lowest-cost customer acquisition vehicle on the planet".
A partner with Altura Ventures, Mr Lorenzen appeared via video at last month's Facebook Developers Garage meeting in Sydney. He told the gathering of Web 2.0 entrepreneurs that it took him nine years and "a lot of money" as CEO at Shop.com to get 500,000 registered users.
But then Facebook application iLike, from developer Rockyou, added 600,000 users in eight hours.
'Nine years versus eight hours - we knew there was something going on that was special inside the Facebook environment," Mr Lorenzen says. "This begs the question: which is more valuable - a user like those we had at Shop.com who came onto the site and registered, put in their email address and password and Shop.com was then able to talk to them from the website, or a Facebook user who primarily adds your application because a friend of theirs invites them? "If you break it down, there are a lot of steps required for a website registration compared to the one or two clicks required to install a Facebook app.'"

Original Source Link: http://www.theage.com.au/news/biztech/developers-in-garages-seek-facebook-acceptance/2008/02/04/1202090321339.html