CNET.com Launches New Home Page and Dynamic How-to Content.SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden -- In Time for Holiday Gift-giving Season, CNET's Streaming Video A one-way video transmission over a data network. It is widely used on the Web as well as company networks to play video clips and video broadcasts. Computers in home networks stream video to digital media hubs connected to a home theater. Features Help People Buy and Get the Most Out of Personal Technology CNET (body) CNET - Centre national d'Etudes des Telecommunications. The French national telecommunications research centre at Lannion. (Nasdaq:CNET)(www.cnet.com), the trusted resource for people interested in enhancing their life with personal technology, today announced a new home page and a range of streaming video-based how-to content features. Building on its comprehensive foundation of unbiased product reviews that help people make smart buying decisions, CNET is expanding its focus to help consumers unlock the potential of their new products and get the most out of personal technology. Over the last five years, consumer electronics sales have surged, thanks to the mainstream appeal of evolving categories such as digital cameras, video game consoles This is a list of video game consoles by the era they appeared in. Eras are named based on the dominant console type of the era (even though not all consoles of those eras are of the same type). Some eras are referred to based on how many bits a major console could process. , MP3 players A digital music player that supports the MP3 format, which was the audio format that started a revolution in online music downloads and distribution. All portable music players, the iPod being the most popular, support MP3 along with one or more other audio formats. , smart phones, DVD recorders (1) A recordable or rewritable DVD drive that is connected to the computer. It may be an internal or external device. See DVD drives, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R and DVD+RW. (2) , and HDTVs. In fact, sales of consumer electronics and technology products are expected to hit a record $108 billion in 2004, a significant 26 percent increase from 1999(1). "Consumers clearly recognize the life-enhancing value of today's tech products, but the daunting daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin prospect of choosing the right one, using it correctly, and enjoying its benefits creates a barrier to even more rapid adoption," said Candice Meyers, senior vice president of CNET. "Research shows that when buying tech products, consumers are most concerned about ease of use and their ability to seamlessly benefit - they are afraid of wasting their money on products that are too complex. It is CNET's job to help people break through, by showing them how to productively use the latest products, and integrate them with technologies they already own." As always, the holiday season promises to be a major driver of consumer electronics sales, and as people receive new devices, they will need help and support. With its new how-to features, CNET rounds out its unbiased service to consumers, from pre-purchase guidance to post-purchase support. Several new how-to sections feature not only the guidance of CNET's expert editorial staff, but also the knowledge base of its core audience of early adopters. This audience contributes their own recommendations and perspective, helping consumers gain confidence from the opinions and experience of fellow buyers. The new how-to features include: --Insider Secrets: Tips and tricks on how to maximize personal tech products, with complimentary video that shows experts doing things like synchronizing synchronizing, n a technique that a therapist uses to coordinate his or her breath with that of the client; builds trust and establishes relationship. two iPods with one computer, or adding a custom soundtrack to a favorite video game --Weekend Project: A weekly tutorial An instructional book or program that takes the user through a prescribed sequence of steps in order to learn a product. Contrast with documentation, which, although instructional, tends to group features and functions by category. See tutorials in this publication. that provides step-by-step, do-it-yourself directions and how-to video demonstrations for weekend projects like installing a home wireless network or making great home videos. An accompanying online forum enables editors to answer additional questions from users --Show us Yours: Leveraging the experience and creativity of its most tech-savvy audience members, this section showcases the technology choices they make and how they use technology in their homes, providing users additional ideas --Q+A: A searchable database Refers to databases on the Web that are searchable by typing in a query. The term is quite redundant because all databases are searchable. In fact, that is one of their major features. of answers to CNET users' most common questions, such as, "How do I upload my digital pictures onto my computer?" --Worst Nightmares: A look at the worst headaches people encounter with personal technology and a range of solutions to avoid them in the future --CNET Online Classes: After a three-month beta period already 200,000 people have signed up for these free, online, instructor-led classes on topics like digital photography and HDTV (High Definition TV) A set of digital television (DTV) standards that offer the highest resolution and sharpest picture. Although some HDTV sets are available in standard (rather square) screen sizes, the overwhelming majority of sets are wide screen, which eliminates --Holiday Features: From November 15 - December 17, for one hour each business day, CNET's Editor-at-large Brian Cooley will host a live video Web cast call-in show where users can get holiday tech buying recommendations. The hour will be spent focusing on hot topics like digital cameras, cell phones, laptops, or Wi-fi. "I can foresee fore·see tr.v. fore·saw , fore·seen , fore·see·ing, fore·sees To see or know beforehand: foresaw the rapid increase in unemployment. the day when CNET will make the need for dense product manuals a thing of the past," said Meyers. "Now, after consumers have purchased their new smart phone, they can turn to CNET to find great how-to videos that will ensure the investment doesn't end up on a shelf. Streaming video technology has come of age, and we're clearly ahead of the curve in capitalizing on the many ways it can raise the bar in content creation." The how-to video library builds on CNET's "First Look from the Labs" videos series, in which editors showcase the "look and feel" aspects of products that are hard to describe in written reviews, saving viewers a trip to the store. Already, hundreds of product reviews and how-to videos are featured on CNET, and the collection will continue to grow, with more than 100 new videos added each month. About CNET (www.cnet.com) CNET, a property of CNET Networks, Inc., is dedicated to helping people buy and use personal technology to enhance and enrich their lives. CNET's award winning editorial staff reviews thousands of products each year, providing expert and unbiased advice on what products to buy. The site also offers help and how-to features enhanced with video content that visually shows consumers how to get the most out of technology once they own it. And, with an extensive directory of more than 200,000 products and price comparisons, CNET also gives consumers the most up-to-date and efficient shopping resource on the Web. About CNET Networks, Inc. CNET Networks, Inc. (www.cnetnetworks.com) is a premier global interactive content company that informs, entertains, and connects large, engaged audiences around topics of high information need or personal passion. The company focuses on three categories -- personal technology, games and entertainment, and business technology - and includes such leading brands as CNET, ZDNet, TechRepublic, MP3.com, GameSpot, CNET Download.com, CNET News.com, Webshots, Computer Shopper Computer Shopper could referr to the following publications:
(1) Manufacturer-to-dealer sales of consumer electronics products according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. CEA CEA carcinoembryonic antigen. CEA abbr. carcinoembryonic antigen CEA (Carcinoembryonic antigen) Market Research Reports, June and January, 2004. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion