The full description of the panel is:
Online video is simple to produce, and as a result, the industry has seen explosive growth in recent years. However, there's been a shift in the online video landscape as users demand higher quality video. This panel will discuss audience expectations and the challenges of moving to online HD.
Consistent CNET look and feel
The first thing you'll probably notice is that CNET TV has lost its black background. This was probably the hardest decision we had to make in the redesign process, but in the end we felt that having a header and navigation consistent with the other CNET sites you're already familiar with would make for an easier user experience.
New channels
In CNET TV 1.0, our channels had catchy names that just never caught on. In CNET TV 2.0, we've renamed our channels with easy-to-understand titles and provided subcategories to allow you to find exactly what you're looking for.
Promotion of hot videos!
When we asked our users what kind of video they want to see, we heard the same answer over and over again. They want to see the "hottest, coolest, latest, and most interesting" videos. Since this is a bit different for everyone, we've carved out a good chunk of space on our home page to display a wide array of the "hottest, coolest, latest, and most interesting" video. These change all the time, so you can come back frequently and never get bored. (I'd suggest 20 times a day, if possible.)
Product metadata
We can only squeeze so much content into a video, but that doesn't mean we don't know a whole bunch more about the products we review. To solve this, we've added metadata tabs. On the video view page (the one you get to by clicking on any promotion on the home page), you'll see a series of tabs directly under the video. These provide a summary of our editor's full review, user opinions, specs, and even the latest prices.
But wait, there's more!
I've only outlined a few of our new features; you'll have to do some exploring to find the rest. And if you're wondering why this is still beta, it is because we have a bunch of features left to add. In the near future, look for true full-screen support, video podcasts, RSS feeds, and more exciting features that I'm not allowed to divulge. I hope you enjoy the new CNET TV and I'd love to hear any feedback you have, just click the big feedback button on the right side of the page. - JustinHello, world! Believe me, that little geek joke is more appropriate than you know right now. I'm Molly Wood, executive editor for CNET TV, and if you're thinking, "there's no Molly Wood on CNET TV," it's because I've been on a tiny little hiatus; quite tiny, really. How tiny? This tiny:
In the last two weeks we've gotten a large number of reports of choppy video on CNET TV. The symptoms were so odd that I had to reproduce them myself before our engineers would believe them. Users have reported that they hear the audio on CNET TV just fine, but to get the video to play smoothly, users reported, "I have to move my mouse in circles."
The good news is we have narrowed this down to a bug that occurs in earlier versions of the Flash Player when running Windows Vista, with IE 7 in Protected Mode, with a site that has two Flash components that need to talk to each other. The not-as-good news is that we can't fix it on our side, but you can easily fix it on your side. Just follow these simple steps:
1. Uninstall the Flash player. You can download a small application from Adobe that will do this for you:
2. Install the latest version of the Flash Player.
Even if you have the latest version and you are having this problem, you'll need to uninstall it and reinstall it to solve the problem.
If this doesn't solve your problem, please let us know--either via the feedback link on CNET TV or in the comments here--and we'll try to help. Let us know:
1) What OS you are running?
2) Did you upgrade to that OS?
3) What browser and version do you use?
4) What version of Flash are you using? (Find your version of Flash here)
This is a cool, behind-the-scenes picture that CNET photographer Sarah Tew took of me and Chris Parker, my videographer and editor extraordinaire, while we were shooting an NOC.
We try to find cool places in New York to shoot...so enjoy!
That white thing hanging out of my pocket, by the way, is a tissue--we didn't notice it until after a take or two. Going from warm inside to cold outside makes my nose run. Okay, too much information.
I loved this guy. CNET TV is definitely for him, this blog -- maybe not so much.
What is the CNET TV Blog? Another blog on gadgets and the tech industry? Another news blog? No, it's a blog about CNET TV content! It's about the people who dig CNET TV and want to see it get better. It is where you find the people who make CNET TV and the people who love CNET TV. You will find posts from Veronica, Rich, Molly, Tom and Brian about what coverage they are contemplating, technology they are obsessed with, what their favorite drink is, how they missed their plane on the way to cover an event in Vegas and had to spend the night in the airport, or (in Molly's case) stories about Eli--her new baby boy. You'll hear about Veronica and her producer's 18 hour days in Autin at SXSW or how Tom got the iTV at home even though it doesn't support 1080i, how one of our on camera hosts is obsessed with James Bond...that kind of stuff.
This is also where you will hear from the people who actually are behind the scenes. You will hear from our product manager Justin who will slip you secret features we are working on to upgrade the experience and ask for your feedback, and you will hear from me on ideas about new programming, shows we're contemplating and events we are covering. We'll ask you for feedback on what is working with CNET TV, and what isn't. We want to know what you think we can do better, what we should STOP doing, or what you want more of--that kind of stuff. We want the CNET TV blog to be as much about you as it is about CNET TV -- so please participate and keep us on our toes, hold our feet to the fire! We love that kind of stuff.
Mark Larkin
Executive Producer
CNET TV


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