Popular Articles

Konda Surekha resigns as minister
Minister for women development and child welfare Konda Surekha submitted her resignation to Governor ND Tiwari on Thursday. The minister stated she had resigned as she was unable to continue in a cabinet without former chief minister YS Rajasekhara Reddy. Ever since the death of YSR, Surekha has been pitching for the chief ministership of YS Jaganmohan Reddy, the late chief minister"s son. She had even said earlier that she would resign if Jaganmohan Reddy was not made the chief minister.

Steering through year-end car deals
Buying a four-wheeler this month can help save on cost, but check first.

News of the day

Google postpones mobile phone launch in China
Google today postponed the launch of its mobile phone in China, adding to the potential commercial fallout of its dispute with Beijing over Internet censorship and e-mail hacking.
Online Business

YouTube may stream movie rentals

Google Inc’s YouTube, the most- visited video website, is in discussions with Hollywood studios to start an online movie rental service, according to two people with knowledge of the talks. - Gujarat realtors" delegation to visit Japan, Korea - Barista to invest Rs 40 crore - Listed firm promoters can make offer for sale: Sebi - Nifty may fall to 4,500-level - Cash discount catches fancy of home buyers - Common platform for all MF investments likely from March Sony Pictures Entertainment and Lions Gate Entertainment Corp are talking with YouTube about offering new releases, said the people, who asked not to be named because the talks are private. The discussions are preliminary, both people said. YouTube, which gets the bulk of its videos from users, is adding professionally produced material to lure more advertisers. The San Bruno, California-based internet company agreed last month to carry excerpts from Time Warner Inc’s CNN, Cartoon Network and Adult Swim, adding to the vault of older films and advertiser-supported clips from television programmes. “Google’s trying to find ways to better monetise this very good asset,” said Andy Miedler, an analyst with Edward Jones & Co in St Louis who recommends the shares and doesn’t own any. “As long as the economics make sense, I certainly applaud them for trying to increase the revenue stream.” Chris Dale, a YouTube spokesman, declined to comment on “rumors or speculation.” “We hope to expand on both our great relationships with movie studios and on the selection and types of videos we offer our community,” Dale said, without being more specific. The Wall Street Journal reported the talks earlier today, saying Warner Bros was also involved in the discussions. Lions Gate, based in Vancouver and run from Santa Monica, California, is interested in ways to sell television shows and films online, Peter Wilkes, a spokesman, said in an interview. The independent film studio sold 2 million downloads of its cable-television program “Mad Men” on Apple Inc’s iTunes store in the past year, Wilkes said. “We are always exploring alternatives for monetising our content in a digital environment,” Wilkes said. YouTube’s service would compete with online film rentals offered by Amazon.com Inc and Apple’s iTunes. Cupertino, California-based Apple and Seattle-based Amazon.com both advertise online rentals for $3.99.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):