Online
Sky provokes backlash after iPhone viewing offer
BSkyB said last night it was not worried that its new Sky Mobile TV service for iPhones, where all Sky's sport content is now available for an all-time low price of £6 per month, will cannabilise sales of its core product – pay-TV sport – and damage its business model.
Inside Online
James Hong: 'Whether it was viral or word of mouth, it was always based on the content'
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
An interview with James Hong, co-founder of 'HotOrNot'
Turing play stays on website indefinitely
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
The pioneering internet audio drama about the death of the Enigma code-breaker Alan Turing, is to remain available indefinitely on The Independent website.
Google to buy mobile ad network for $750 million
Monday, 9 November 2009
Google is stepping up its push to sell advertising on cell phones, announcing a deal Monday to buy a mobile ad network, AdMob, for $750 million (£449 million) in stock.
At last, the web goes truly worldwide
Friday, 30 October 2009
For 40 years, the Latin alphabet has been the sine qua non of the internet. Jack Riley and Larry Ryan report on a linguistic revolution in cyberspace
On-demand TV helps Virgin beat expectations
Friday, 30 October 2009
More viewers than ever watching movies and TV shows on Virgin Media's catch-up service helped the group beat revenue expectations in the three months to the end of September.
Angry Facebook users revolting over changes
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
Facebook users have joined in protest against yet another set of changes to its homepage.
Hackers breach security on 'Guardian' website
Monday, 26 October 2009
A "sophisticated and deliberate hack" into the Guardian's UK jobs website has put the personal details of some users at risk, the newspaper revealed yesterday.
BBC Trust blocks plan to let rivals upload to iPlayer
Wednesday, 21 October 2009
The BBC's plans to allow rival broadcasters to show programmes online through its iPlayer media player were dashed yesterday, after the BBC Trust said the move was "too complicated".
Jimmy Leach: You won't pay for news
Wednesday, 21 October 2009
I missed this yesterday, but Media Week have reported a survey which shows that nine out of ten UK consumers won't pay for news stories online.
Most popular
Read
1 The dirtiest players in football
3 Three-minute therapy: Can 'speed shrinking' fix your head in 180 seconds?
4 The Ten Best Seduction Techniques
5 Patrick Cockburn: The general is right. Liam Fox is wrong
6 The Ten Best Scotch Whiskies
7 Ricky Gervais returns with new workplace comedy
8 Seattle's teenage Jesse James
9 Near death experiences caught on film
10 The ten best England v Brazil matches
11 Robinho's ingenuity stuns Italy
12 Chelsea title hopes hit as Lampard limps home
Emailed
1 Medvedev promises new era for Russian democracy
2 Leading article: A lack of strategy, not troops, is the key Afghan problem
3 The Traveller's Guide to: Christmas markets
4 Ian Birrell: It is patients who will end up losing out
5 Bell faces up to daunting Puma pack
6 Chelsea title hopes hit as Lampard limps home
7 Crabtree is the Big Daddy now
8 Cook pledges to keep on disturbing the neighbours
9 Rupert Cornwell: Burden of sending men to their deaths is starting to show
10 General who beat Tamil Tigers quits to challenge the President
11 Andreas Whittam Smith: Brown is plunging down the same abyss as Major
12 Matthew Norman: Resistance is futile in the face of this master of psychology
Commented
1Brown details tighter immigration rules
2Has Cameron done a deal with Murdoch?
3Anger over MoD civil servants' bonuses
4Undercurrent of doubt over electric motors
5Mandelson to become Government's 'TV face'
6The Rolling Stone who gathered no money
7Honduran crisis 'threatens democracy'
8They come in search of justice ? but end up thrown into jail
9Man sacked for belief in psychics backed by judge (but, of course, he knew that would happen)

