Look Ma, No Wires! ASUS BR-HD3 does wireless HD
Now that analog TV is officially dead and buried and we’ve paid our respects, it’s time to fully embrace the joys of digital media. One such pleasure is the ASUS BR-HD3 Wireless High Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) kit. Part of ASUS’ latest suite of must-have products, the BR-HD3 will help to build the ulitmate home [...]
Read MoreWhy You Need Opera Unite
Many are heralding Opera Unite as the future of the worldwide web. It turns your computer into your own personal web server. That’s not it, though. It provides a rich set of applications that run on this server, allowing you and your friends to connect in ways that were much more difficult before, especially for [...]
Read MoreBest Buy Wants to Fund Your Startup
Consumer electronics retailer, Best Buy is looking to get into the startup business. Best Buy will be provided the capital for a new investment fund dealing solely with digital media. The fund will be managed by Fuse Capital formerly Velocity Interactive Group. Fuse brings it’s experience investing in technology startups while Best Buy brings the [...]
Read MoreOpera Unite: Sidestepping The Server
Opera recently unveiled the innovative Opera Unite, which will go live in Opera 10. Opera Unite basically serves as a web server inside of a web browser, allowing users to directly share files and photos, send messages, chat, build networks and even host their own websites from their computers. Opera Unite is aiming to cut [...]
Read MoreAudio: Interview with Vibe’s Chief Content Officer Danyel Smith
In this episode of the Black Web 2.0 Show, we sat down with Daynel Smith, Chief Content Officer of Vibe Media Group. Danyel joined VIBE in 1993 and was appointed music editor a year later. In 1996 Danyel became Editor-In-Chief of Vibe Media Group, serving until 1999. Danyel returned to VIBE in 2006 as Editor-In-Chief, and in [...]
Read MoreMySpace Eliminates 30 Percent of its “Bloated” Staff
MySpace, a division of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, announced that it has cut 30 percent or approximately 400 people from its payroll in effort to return to a “startup culture.” The layoffs will reduce the number of MySpace employees to around 1000.
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