May 8th, 2009 - Washington Post
After backing out of a planned TV ad campaign during the Olympics broadcast last summer, the normally TV-shy Google (NSDQ: GOOG) is ready to go primetime to promote its Chrome web browser, WSJ reports. No word on what media buyer Google will use to purchase air time. As our Tameke Kee noted last month, Google created a Chrome Shorts page on YouTube with 11 videos (see one example after the jump) that were estimated to cost under $10,000 each.
Related stories:
Jeff Norman: Antiabortion Activist Takes on Planned Parenthood with Hidden Camera
May 11th, 2009 - The Huffington Post
As someone who participated in one of the most audacious hidden camera pranks ever perpetrated, the April 26 Los Angeles Times article about pro-life activist Lila Rose and her clandestine video recordings naturally caught my attention...
Mozilla's Prism: a First Look at a New Firefox Add-on
May 11th, 2009 - PC World
Mozilla Labs has unveiled the beta of a new application called Prism 1.0 that takes the Internet off your browser and plants it onto your desktop. Prism is both a useful...
Diane Francis: Republican lies about Canada's superior health care
May 11th, 2009 - The Huffington Post
Just who is this jerk, Rick Scott who bankrolls the propaganda-mongering Conservatives for Patients' Rights? He and his group are fabricating negatives about Canada's health care system and I resent this...
Could the Hulu, Disney Deal Create a Tangled Video Web?
May 2nd, 2009 - eWeek
Hulu, iTunes, Disney, YouTube and others are engaged in a battle for viewers that is heating up the lucrative video streaming business. Meanwhile, Apple co-founder Steve...
What Disney-Hulu Means for Apple
May 1st, 2009 - BusinessWeek
When Walt Disney (DIS) said it would start streaming shows via online video site Hulu, attention immediately turned to what the deal means for Hulu rival YouTube as well as for CBS...



