huffpost-live

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  • Huffpost Live tackles Xbox One with our reviews editor, Richard Mitchell [Update: watch the replay]

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    05.21.2013

    Update: The live segment is over, but you can watch the recording right here. Huffpost Live is diving into today's Xbox One announcement at 6:20 ET tonight – right now, even – for Tech Tuesday. Of course the Huffpost team needs an expert on the matter, so it brought in Joystiq Reviews Editor Richard Mitchell – after all, he spent the day immersed in Xbox One news. Watch Huffpost Live's "Tech Tuesday Talks Xbox, Apple & Microsoft!" right here, right now.

  • Huffpost Live talks 'silver gamers' with our own Jess Conditt

    by 
    David Hinkle
    David Hinkle
    03.20.2013

    Last night, our very own Jess Conditt appeared on an interesting Huffpost Live segment discussing older gamers and the stereotypes surrounding older individuals and their inability to work the doodads on the clicker – technology. And yet, some senior citizens are using video games to maintain mental acuity.Jess specifically goes into how Indie games run the gamut from the simple to the most complex gaming experiences on the planet; how they may cater to today's older gamer and how the iTunes App store and the upcoming Ouya will factor into things. The segment itself is around 20 minutes long, so grab a snack before you settle in and hit the play button on the video above.

  • AOL strikes deal with YouTube to start streaming content from various brands

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    10.01.2012

    AOL's continuing push to boost its video presence on as many internet places as possible has just secured many of the company's brands a spotlight inside one of the world's biggest sites. According to AllThingsD, AOL and YouTube have inked a deal that will bring "branded channels" with content from sites such as Huffington Post, TechCrunch, Moviefone and even clips from the recently launched HuffPost Live over to the video streaming platform. And while AOL did previously offer some tidbits on YouTube, this move is expected to better solidify and highlight the vid work from properties like the ones mentioned above -- which, of course, could only be accomplished by reaching a new "everyone wins" type of revenue sharing agreement. [Disclosure: Engadget is part of the AOL family]