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    ABC News is the latest to put original videos in your social stream

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    07.25.2017

    Media companies are scrambling to figure out how exactly to best utilize the different social networks, and many have taken to producing original content for them. Bloomberg, for example, is building an exclusive 24-hour news channel for Twitter. ABC News is the latest to explore this phenomenon: It's teamed with digital video company ATTN to produce original video for distribution through ABC News' social media accounts.

  • Heidi Gutman/ABC via Getty Images

    ABC's 'Good Morning America' takes you on a live VR safari

    by 
    Billy Steele
    Billy Steele
    02.22.2016

    If you're a fan of ABC's morning show, the network is offering viewers a rather unique take on remote reporting this week. From 7:00 AM to 9:00 ET tomorrow (February 23rd), Good Morning America will broadcast live in 360-degree VR from the Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania. ABC News' Amy Robach will be on location as the network captures footage from the Great Migration which includes the largest concentration of Africa's big mammals each February. Robach's report on the dangers the animals face from poachers will be presented alongside the immersive visuals. In fact, ABC says this is the first time on network television that VR cameras and gear will allow viewers to pick their adventure live and in real time.

  • Twitter will unveil something 'big' on Good Morning America tomorrow

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.17.2013

    Forget music halls -- Twitter thinks morning TV talk shows are where it's at for product announcements. It used The Today Show last year to unveil a profile page redesign, and we now know it will rely on Good Morning America this Thursday to unveil something... "big." But what does that cryptic clue mean? While logic would suggest Twitter Music given its semi-official status, we could also see TV in expanded tweets or something entirely unexpected. We'll keep our eyes (and possibly ears) open.

  • HTC Endeavor specs revealed in leaked ROM: Tegra 3, 720p, Sense 4.0 (update: screenshots)

    by 
    Sharif Sakr
    Sharif Sakr
    02.13.2012

    HTC fans spent the last couple of days (i.e., their weekend) unpicking a leaked ROM Update Utility for an officially non-existent handset called the 'Endeavor.' The specs revealed so far include a 1280 x 720 display spread over 4.7-inches, a quad-core Tegra 3 processor, eight-megapixel rear shooter, front-facing camera, NFC, 1GB RAM and the new ICS-adapted version of HTC's Sense UI. These leaked specs tally with an earlier tip-off to MoDaCo, which further hinted at a 1.5GHz clock speed and Beats Audio. There's also a bunch of screenshots showing off the Sense 4.0 skin that we already glimpsed in a fuzzy HTC Ville video -- and it conspires to look both new and deeply familiar.Update: Screenshot gallery just added below, via Android Central.

  • Disney / ABC totally, maybe, kind of, considering supporting Intel Widget platform

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    01.09.2009

    In a move that in some circles counts as "throwing its weight behind" Intel's CE3100 Widget platform, the president of Disney-ABC Television Group mentioned that shows like Good Morning America and Lost could benefit from interactive TV apps. Without commiting to any action, citing unspecified legal issues that could throw a wrench in any such move, they envision real time voting or commenting onscreen or additional clues for the more-than-convoluted-enough-already-thank you Lost mysteries. From here at least it's hard to see Intel's chips making enough headway to justify such support this season, but based on recent Grey's Anatomy plot twists or the Geico Cavemen TV show we can easily see a desperate ABC desperately seeking some kind of partnership in lieu of improving the quality of its content.

  • HDTV Mag does 2005 HD review

    by 
    Matt Burns
    Matt Burns
    01.31.2006

    Last year really was huge for the high definition world. Think about it. Flat panel HDTVs dropped almost half in price. More and more HD stations became available. Major programs started broadcasting in high-def. i.e. "The Late Show with David Letterman" first then Good Morning America a few months later. Don't forget, HD Beat went live in the summer of '05.HDTV Magazine has complied a very complete list of all the things that happened in our little high-def world. Check it out!