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May 8th, 2010 by Wadds

BBC iPlayer: social extensions not here yet, but they’re coming

The latest version of the BBC’s iPlayer doesn’t incorporate social networking features but they’re coming.

I don’t have a TV in my flat in London and my family has been without a TV at home in Northumberland for 4-months while we renovate our house so I’ve become an ardent user of TV over the internet services such as iPlayer.

Speaking to The Daily Telegraph at The Guardian’s Changing Media Summit in March, Erik Huggers, director, BBC Future Media & Technology said that social extensions would be incorporated in iPlayer 3.0.

“We are close to launching the third version of the iPlayer in beta which will have many more social functions embedded within it,” said Mr Huggers. “People will be able to bring their Facebook friends onto the iPlayer so they can share what they are listening to or watching with each other more easily.”

In the meantime here’s what is new in version 1.5 of iPlayer:

  • Radio programmes now in high-quality stereo
  • Bigger playback window
  • Programmes automatically pick up from where you left off
  • Scrolling carousels give fast access to featured programmes
  • Your last played programmes will show up here, right after you’ve played your first programme
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September 9th, 2009 by Wadds

You can’t cheat a network

This snippet from the Daily Telegraph’s City Column has been circulating around the PR community on Twitter since it was published last Friday.

Spinning so fast you lose all sense of REALITY

A company called Seventy Seven has just launched an online poll to decide on the PR agency of the year.

“Who would YOU make the agency of the year …?” the company asks (capital letters are not mine), and then adds this proviso. “If you can AVOID voting for your own agency it might make it a bit more interesting.”

What happened? A PR company called Cake immediately got 57pc of the vote.

Here’s the original post on the Seventy Seven blog.

Networks are open and can be manipulated but the social element means that it is almost impossible to cheat a network. Rogue behaviour can quickly be identified and outed.

(via @drewb and @daljit_bhurji).

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