InvestorsHub Logo

Jackroch

10/03/12 10:28 PM

#9069 RE: AlanC #9066


TelVue(R) Cloud Services Power Neon Alley, a New Anime Live Programmed Channel
Print
Alert
Telvue Corp. (QB) (USOTC:TEVE)
Intraday Stock Chart
Today : Wednesday 3 October 2012


TelVue® Corporation (OTCQB: TEVE), the innovation leader in Television and Internet Broadcasting for media companies, cable operators and communities, is proud to be powering VIZ Media's launch of Neon Alley, a new 24-hour programmed anime channel available exclusively on a popular Internet connected gaming system. VIZ Media is the largest publisher, distributor and licensor of manga and anime in North America. Neon Alley will feature the world's best anime, dubbed in English and uncut, and in HD when available, and is a subscription-based service subsidized with limited commercial advertising.
The Neon Alley 24x7 Channel is being originated at TelVue's cloud-based "Virtual Broadcast Facility." This facility is the basis of TelVue's CloudCast™ service, which provides all the traditional video channel origination services of a brick and mortar broadcast center, but in a virtual environment. CloudCast Hosted Broadcasting from TelVue allows programmers to launch television channels faster, with less expense and higher reliabilitythan building a dedicated hardware broadcasting system from scratch.

"The launch of Neon Alley on TelVue CloudCast marks the beginning of the future of broadcasting from the cloud," said Jesse Lerman, President and CEO of TelVue. "The TelVue hosted broadcasting solution makes it possible for VIZ Media to manage an entire channel without having to support any of its own broadcasting hardware."

"Neon Alley is going to offer the best anime titles in the world to our fans in North America," said VIZ Media Vice President of Animation Brian Ige. "TelVue CloudCast offers the Internet broadcasting and flexibility we needed to launch our channel, as well as access to detailed analysis of what our viewers want to watch."

TelVue's suite of cloud-based services can handle every step of the broadcast workflow, from aggregation, to content management, transcoding, scheduling, and distribution to multiple platforms.

About TelVue Corporation

TelVue® Corporation is a broadcast technology innovator and leader that helps video broadcasters automate their channels, expand their audiences across multiple screens, and broaden their ability to monetize their content. TelVue's professional quality broadcast equipment and cloud video services include all-in-one digital broadcast servers, live Internet streaming, IP video on demand (VOD), multi-user contribution and transcoding, and web-based digital signage. TelVue® serves the local origination and leased access needs for 8 of the top 10 Cable and Telco MSOs, powers over 1,250 hyperlocal and PEG channels, and delivers local programming to over 30 million households. For more information about TelVue®, please visit http://www.TelVue.com

About VIZ Media

Headquartered in San Francisco, California, VIZ Media distributes, markets and licenses the best anime and manga titles direct from Japan. Owned by three of Japan's largest manga and animation companies, Shueisha Inc., Shogakukan Inc., and Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions, Co., Ltd., VIZ Media has the most extensive library of anime and manga for English speaking audiences in North America, the United Kingdom, Ireland and South Africa. With its popular digital manga anthology WEEKLY SHONEN JUMP ALPHA magazine and blockbuster properties like NARUTO, BLEACH and INUYASHA, VIZ Media offers cutting-edge action, romance and family friendly properties for anime, manga, science fiction and fantasy fans of all ages. VIZ Media properties are available as graphic novels, DVDs, animated television series, feature films, downloadable and streaming video and a variety of consumer products. Learn more about VIZ Media, anime and manga at www.VIZ.com.

PR Contact:

Paul Andrews

800-885-8886 x102

Email Contact

Eliot Ness

10/04/12 6:34 PM

#9076 RE: AlanC #9066

The CLOUD isnt new. TEVE is just in the marketing phase. lmao
By Leo Notenboom

With security compromises happening at what seems a regular pace, many people are wondering if they should be using ‘the Cloud’ at all. My take? It’s as safe as you make it, and you’ve already been using it a lot longer than you realize.

One of the comments that I received recently to my article on lessons learned from a recent and fairly public online hacking was very concise:

“That’s why the Cloud is dangerous.”

That actually sums up what I think a lot of people are starting to feel to varying degrees.

And I think it’s wrong.

I also think believing so prevents you from taking advantage of the things that the cloud can do for you. Things like protecting your data.

As well as things you’ve already been doing. For years.

What Is “the Cloud”?

“The Cloud is nothing more than services you use that are provided online over the internet.”
I have to start by throwing away this silly, silly marketing term “the Cloud.” It’s nothing more than a fancy marketing term. Ultimately, it really has no real meaning.

The cloud is nothing more than services you use that are provided online over the internet.

Seriously, that’s all it is.

Be it services that provide a place to store your data, services that enable you to communicate with others, services that provide applications, services that sell you things or services that answer your technical questions – it’s all happening in the Cloud.

And that’s nothing new.

The Cloud is new in name only

Online services are nothing new.

You’ve probably been using online services long before anyone ever thought to slap the name Cloud on ‘em.

Have email? It gets from point “A” to point “B” through … the Cloud.
Have an online email account like Hotmail or Gmail? You’re keeping your email in the Cloud.
Upload pictures to a photo sharing site like Flickr, Picassa, or Photobucket? That’s the Cloud.
Use an online backup service? You’ve been backing up to the Cloud.
Hopefully, you get the idea.

I really, really want to drive home the point that this thing people are calling the Cloud is nothing new, and you’ve been using it already – probably for years – and almost certainly before that silly name was attached to it.

So let’s jettison the name and all the baggage that seems to come with it, and call this what it really is: online services.

Read the rest of the story here..http://ask-leo.com/is_the_cloud_dangerous.html

This post is excerpted with permission from Leo Notenboom.


http://techtalk.pcpitstop.com/2012/09/24/is-the-cloud-safe/?leo-iscloudsafe=