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Free tv streaming service now online
MSN Video Player Now Live 0

Microsoft’s television streaming service has gone live in the UK. As previously reported on Pocket-lint, the ad-supported intitative brings content from the BBC and All3Media together, including shows like Peep Show, Shameless, Hustle and Big Train.

It runs in the browser, and will be extensively promoted across all MSN properties. Microsoft says that it’s looking forward to developing the service further over the next few months, which should mean more content and more features.

Go check out the site, and tell us your opinion. Is the catalogue good enough? Does it stream effectively enough on your computer? Let us know what you think in the comment box below.

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Software Online Microsoft Home Cinema

MSN Video Player now live originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Mon, 03 Aug 2009 15:49:12 +0100

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Google Chrome Browser Themes Preview available

People are discovering that in the developer builds of Google Chrome browser there is theme support but so far it has been unclear just how a user displays said Chrome theme, perhaps by using an online gallery.

However as confirmation several themes have already apparently been discovered and said themes are available via hitting up here, although it has yet to go online.

However the themes can be previewed by opening in a new tab or window, clicking the “X” button to remove other visited sites and eventually you will gain a preview of the Google Chrome Theme.

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Milestone hit
Firefox hits 1,000,000,000 downloads 0

Slightly earlier than expected, Firefox has just announced via its @firefoxcounter Twitter feed that it has hit its billionth download.

The news was expected over the weekend, but publicity surrounding the milestone has increased the download rate, and the browser hit it early. On Monday, the company plans to launch www.onebillionplusyou.com, which will contain “a hub of information about the one billion downloads”.

The foundation told Pocket-lint “Mozilla has come a very long way from the start and are very proud of this massive milestone. This accomplishment is a direct result of the continually growing Mozilla community and Firefox supporters”.

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Software Browsers Firefox Mozilla Statistics

Firefox hits 1,000,000,000 downloads originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 15:58:11 +0100

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seamonkey-icon

I’ve been looking for an up-to-date, Gecko-based browser to replace the discontinued Netscape Navigator 9 on my old G4 Pismo PowerBook running OS 10.4 Tiger. Navigato still works well, is based on the now-ancient Firefox 2 and probably has some security vulnerabilities. Firefox 3.5 and Camino 1.6 are great on my Intel Mac, but kinda sluggish on the Pismo with its RAGE 128GPU and 8MB of VRAM.

Happily, another Gecko with relatively modest hardware demands is still actively developed. SeaMonkey is the last of the Internet suite browsers, with built-in email and newsgroup client, IRC chat application and a WYSIWYG Web page composer — essentially an updated, refined, security-patched iteration of the old Mozilla Application Suite and Netscape Communicator.

seamonkTAB

The non-browser elements of SeaMonkey aren’t of much interest to me, so I’ve had a tendency to overlook the program, but my quest for a Navigator 9 replacement sent me checking out the latest SeaMonkey 2.0 beta on the Pismo, and I’m liking it.

Firefox 3.5.1 Under the Hood

SeaMonkey 2.0 Beta 1 is thoroughly modern under the hood, using the browser core and web feature support from Firefox 3.5.1, including all security fixes, audio/video, downloadable fonts, and JIT-compiled Javascript.

Its download manager is completely reworked, including (hooray!) support for cross-session resumable downloads, new-tab and new-window command line options, and fully customizable toolbars.

smui

Mail archiving is now supported and history is stored in a better database. A huge improvement is support for post-crash session restore and the option to restore browser windows and tabs from the last open session when starting.

Interface Refreshed

A longstanding gripe has been that SeaMonkey’s UI looks “antiquated,” with the lack of eye-candy being one reason why it’s lively on older hardware like my PowerBook.

seamonkey1x

However, with SeaMonkey 2, the UI has a brighter, more contemporary look — still simple, but everything I need is there: tabbed browsing and a real progress bar. I do wish they’d put close buttons on individual tabs rather than having to mouse to the extreme right. Like the Gecko-based browsers (except Cocoa Camino), it doesn’t support OS X Services, but that’s about it for complaints.

sm2

“Everything But The Kitchen Sink”

Even as a beta, performance and stability are impressive enough to make me a fan, but if having “everything but the kitchen sink” in one application appeals, SeaMonkey’s suite of Web apps will be icing on the proverbial cake. Indeed I find this SeaMonkey beta so pleasant to use I’ve been running it on my Intel Mac as well for the past several days.



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Hustle, Shameless, Peep Show and the Young Ones included
Microsoft launches TV streaming site 0

In an interesting development, Microsoft is to launch a pilot TV streaming website in the UK. It’s an extension of current MSN Video functionality, but will include much longer content.

It’ll be launching with 350 hours of programs, mostly from BBC Worldwide and All 3 Media. That means it’ll have full series of Hustle, Shameless, Peep Show and the Young Ones, as well as other content from a variety of genres. More content is on the way too – “We’d like to be able to add movies”, Microsoft told us.

It’ll be ad-supported, and free to the end user for that reason. Users will have to sit through a 30 second pre-roll before they get to see their content, and then there’ll be normal ad breaks. We pressed Microsoft on whether that’d be UK-style or US-style ad breaks, and were reassured that it’d be British-style ones every fifteen minutes or so.

There’ll be a certain amount of editorial, but the development is notable for not including UGC content. Microsoft recently shuttered its SoapBox video upload service due to competition from YouTube, however it said at the time: “We also plan to add functionality into MSN Video to easily enable bloggers and citizen journalists to upload content to share with our MSN users”.That hasn’t materialized yet.

Like the iPlayer, the service will run in the browser and employ a combination of Flash and WMV technology – no Silverlight here. It’s cross-platform – it should work on Linux and Macs, but it doesn’t yet have a mobile or Xbox variant. “There’s no immediate plans for that”, Microsoft told us.

Microsoft says it picked the UK to pilot the service in because the British market is “the most advanced video audience in the world”, both in terms of consumers watching it, and producers being willing to license their content to the web. The company praised the BBC for accomplishing that, saying “the iPlayer changed the market completely”.

The streaming site isn’t live yet, but should be going online in the next week or so. When it does, we’ll make sure you’re the first to know.

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Software Online Microsoft Home Cinema

Microsoft launches TV streaming site 1 
Microsoft launches TV streaming site 2 

Microsoft launches TV streaming site originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Thu, 30 Jul 2009 00:01:00 +0100

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