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  • ARTA partners with Google Maps for transport info

    The Auckland Regional Transport Authority (ARTA) is teaming with Google to deliver public transport information and directions using Google Transit, a feature of Google Maps.
    ARTA’s general manager customer services, Mark Lambert, says the move is another step in ARTA’s drive to make planning public transport journeys easier and more accessible for customers. 
    "People searching for directions in Auckland on Google Maps will now have the extra option to view public transit options," he says. 
    Initially, the service will extend to bus services in the Auckland region, however, in the coming months train and ferry information will be added to the service.
    “The service provides a link through to the MAXX website (maxx.co.nz) where people can find out more details about fares and schedules," Lambert says.

  • Online suppression not a lost cause, seminar told

    Despite the legal maxim that the law should not spend effort on a futility, stopping the online release of suppressed information in should not be regarded as a lost cause, said Attorney-General Chris Finlayson, opening a seminar under the title “R v the internet” in Wellington last week.

  • Hybird TV, Sky face off

    Hybrid Television may cross swords with Sky Television by including Prime's programme listings on digital video recorder TiVo's electronic programme guide without the permission of Sky.

  • Hearst plans e-reading service around content

    The Hearst publishing company unveiled its long-awaited e-reader plan on Friday, describing an "e-reading service platform" coming next year that will distribute content from multiple publishers to a variety of wireless mobile devices.

  • Analyst tips 141,000 Kiwi IPTV subscribers by 2014

    New broadband networks are being tipped to propel the deployment of internet television, or IPTV, services in New Zealand and Australia.
    New Zealand is forecast to have 141,000 IPTV subscribers by 2014 as a result of its new broadband network, according to projections by analyst firm Frost & Sullivan.See also: Freeview NZ strikes a different path to IPTVAustralia's planned National Broadband Network (NBN) will boost IPTV service rollouts there with 235,000 subscribers by 2014.

  • Freeview NZ strikes different path to IPTV

    While Australian free-to-air TV networks appear to be heading towards a central hub for online TV delivery, New Zealand broadcasters still have a range of options open to them.
    Freeview, the industry marketing group representing all Australian free-to-air TV players, confirmed this week that it would launch a Freeview-branded IPTV (internet protocol) hub in the second half of next year allowing shows from all the networks to be watched after broadcast.See also: Analyst tips 141,000 Kiwi IPTV subscribers by 2014However, Freeview NZ general manager Sam Irvine says Freeview here will continue to deliver a platform on which broadcasters can choose their own methods of content delivery. He expects interactive channels for use by broadcasters to be available sometime next year.
    Irvine says Freeview expects to provide a new specification for Digital Terrestrial Television that will allow broadcasters to deliver interactive channels. Reception of these channels does not need to be browser-based, he says, as a lot of TVs now have ethernet ports to connect to the internet.
    Freeview can use MHEG 5 to as a vehicle for interactive channels on which broadcasters can use technology similar to the BBC-developed iPlayer to deliver on-demand services.
    A proof of concept demonstration is planned before Christmas.
    The choice of how services are provided across the Freeview platform is up to the broadcasters, he says.
    Freeview Australia chief executive Robyn Parkes said details of her group's planned industry-wide service were still being worked on but it had the backing of all the commercial and public TV networks.
    ''It will be like the ABC's iView offer with catch-up TV initially and it will be across all channels,'' she said. ''We haven't finalised all the details yet, but you may go to the Freeview [online] portal or [TV screen] icon and it might shoot you out to Yahoo!7 or ninemsn or ABC to view the catch-up episode.
    "So you won't have to manually think where to go to view a TV show. It will all be under a central EPG [electronic program guide] from one spot. We haven't got the date yet, but it will be the second half of next year. And by the time we launch, it may even be further along than [catch-up TV].''
    Ms Parkes' confirmation is the first official signal by the industry that it will support a one-stop shop for free-to-air broadcasters.
    Electronics giant Samsung also confirmed yesterday that it would launch its own internet-delivered TV service to Samsung TV sets in Australia by the March quarter of 2010, featuring video content negotiated globally by Samsung and with local partners such as Channel Nine and ninemsn.
    Sony has already flagged its intention to launch Bravia Internet TV early next year in Australia and is in discussions with TV networks to feature their programming along with Sony's international content deals. Sony's PlayStation 3 is already testing internet-delivered content with the likes of the ABC's iView service.
    A handful of other aspirants are also racing to launch IPTV services next year in which TV shows will be delivered to home screens and PCs to allow viewers to choose what they watch and when.
    Any doubt among broadcasters about the need to embrace internet-delivered TV is rapidly fading.
    The Hulu online TV portal, controlled by the US TV networks, is seeing massive take-up this year. In October, Hulu streamed 856 million TV shows online from the likes of ABC, NBC and Fox, up from 583 million in September. The number of people who viewed shows from Hulu topped 42 million last month in the US. Hulu is now back in the Australian market trying to launch with local broadcasters next year (Australia is said to be ranked sixth in Hulu's priority for international expansion).

  • Prosecutors seek prison sentences for Google execs

    Milan prosecutors on Wednesday sought prison sentences ranging from six months to one year for four Google executives accused of violating Italy's privacy laws over the posting of a video showing the bullying of a handicapped teenage boy.

  • 'Unfriend': Oxford's word of the year

    The New Oxford American Dictionary has announced the verb "unfriend" as its word of the year, confirming the social networking term's ubiquity.

  • Closer ties for Vodafone, Sky

    Sky Television and Vodafone have announced that Sky customers who have their landline and broadband with Vodafone will receive Sky’s MySky HDi personal video recorder at no extra cost over their Sky subscription from December 7.

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