The BBC’s 3D project will go on a three-year hiatus at the end of the year, despite the recent announcement that the corporation will be broadcasting Wimbledon matches in 3D.
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Superfast broadband services surpassed 4 million users in the UK in April, now accounting for 20% of all UK consumers and delivering 30 megabits of data per second.
Over 120 live performances and more than 250 hours of live coverage was broadcast across multiple screens, with mobile and tablet accounting for 42% of traffic.
Samsung has bought Apple competitor Boxee, a US web TV service, for a reported $30 million.
BT Sport will host live broadcasts from the grounds for 25 league matches, plus both legs of the play-off semis and the Promotion Final at Wembley, from the start of the 2013-14 season in August.
EE will officially switch on double-speed 4G in twelve UK cities on July 4, seeing EE’s network reach a theoretical maximum speed of 150Mbps – rivalling mobile networks in Europe, the US, Japan and South Korea.
The matches will include both the men’s and women’s singles semi-finals and finals, free for those with access to a 3D TV set and to the BBC’s HD Red Button service.
The latest Screen Life study has revealed some key differences between watching TV live and on demand, and between different types of VOD.
The unique comedy pilots include The Cariad Show, Nick Helm’s Heavy Entertainment, Going Native and Fuzzbox and will launch later this year.
BrandPoint will offer online video the ‘same accountability as TV’ by proving that a target audience was reached, allowing for advertisers to select age and gender targets across a number of video formats.
