… home audio, automotive electronics, video games and systems, multimedia projectors, televisions,
satellite services, personal video recorders, cell phones and office furniture. ...
… service for a wide variety of Internet sites worldwide (including CNN, NBC, Reuters, LeMonde, XM
Satellite Radio, and many others), putting it in a nearly unique position to monitor aggregate activity across a wide range of online media outlets. ...
… TiVo ’s latest strategy of pursuing deployment of TiVo DVR units through deals with cable and
satellite television providers may boost revenue, but is unlikely to fatten the company’s profits. ...
You can already get XM
Satellite Radio on your Pioneer or XR Radio portable media player, so it only makes sense that Sony would be throwing ideas around right? Stan Glasgow, president of Sony Electronics’ told Reuters at a press conference that they have been talking with Sirius and XM Radio for more than a year now – exciting stuff if you ask us. ...
XM
Satellite Radio recently announced that it is expanding its basic service package, and that the monthly subscription price for XM’s basic service will increase to $12.95 beginning April 2, 2005. ...
… commercial-free music, plus news, weather, traffic, entertainment and the best sports offering in
satellite radio.”
. ...
… audio-video enthusiasts want to have answered is will News Corp provide more HDTV programming via
satellite? Currently, their $10.99 per month HDTV package is a nice offering of stations(HDNet, ESPN, Discovery HD and more) but cable systems in major cities like New York and Los Angeles offer significantly more channels. ...
… sparse at this point and will leave TV enthusiasts wanting to keep their existing digital cable or
satellite provider so that they can have a more robust choice of non-HDTVprogramming. ...
Rupert Murdoch’s move to online users to pay for content they read is infamous at this point. ...
A few months ago, Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. made headlines by announcing it was planning to start charging users to read online versions of the company’s newspaper properties , by putting portions of its content behind so-called “paywalls” that could only be accessed by paid subscribers. ...