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Samsung & YouTube have come up with STAGE – The ultimate Talent Contest. Anybody from around the globe can participate and a total of $25k worth prizes will be given away to the winners. The competition has started from July 2011. And there are some very amazing videos uploaded by the participants. Check this video for example in which a guy is kicking the football into a bin from pretty decent distances.

Samsung STAGE

The last round of entries was closed on November 30th. And you can vote for your favorite video until 20th December. There will be one more final round of participation starting from December 21st. So if you’re interested in participating in the contest, grab a camera and record some interesting & creative videos.

You can see the videos & cast your votes on YouTube. You can also vote on Samsung Mobile’s Facebook page. The voting period is open until 20th December.

Also, STAGE Grand Finale will be held between 9th – 23rd January, 2012. If you’re a participant & you win in the finale, you’ll take home a grand prize of $10,000. The winner will also get a chance to star in their own professionally produced video! Here are the contest rules.

And if you’re not participating, vote for the best of the videos.

Here’s an example of professionally produced video. “Music to Life” below shows how a skilful drummer brings his music to life with the Samsung GALAXY Note’s amazing S Pen technology.

Also STAGE has it’s own Android app. You can upload & watch STAGE videos on your Android device with the STAGE Android app.

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YouTube blocks UK users from watching music videos

by Mahesh Kukreja on March 10, 2009

Google Inc. said Monday it will block U.K. users from watching music videos on its popular video-sharing site YouTube after negotiations with Britain’s music royalty-collecting body broke down.

Google said it would begin blocking British users starting Monday night. The Internet titan said it knew the move would cause “significant disappointment.”

But it said its hand was forced by PRS for Music, which it said is asking for royalties that would cause Google to lose money every time a video was played on YouTube.

“Our previous license from PRS for Music has expired, and we’ve been unable so far to come to an agreement to renew it on terms that are economically sustainable for us,” Google said in a statement. Until a solution is found, it added, “we will be blocking premium music videos in the UK that have been supplied or claimed by record labels.”

PRS for Music, which collects money on behalf of writers and publishers worldwide, said it was outraged by Google’s move.

“Google has told us they are taking this step because they wish to pay significantly less than at present to the writers of the music on which their service relies, despite the massive increase in YouTube viewing,” the group said in a statement.

Neither group revealed how much money is at stake in their negotiations.

YouTube has become an increasingly popular destination for record labels squeezed by declining sales for compact discs. The Web site has deals with three of the four major record labels but some rights-holders have balked at their cut of the advertising revenue.

In December, Warner Music pulled all of its music from YouTube, saying the payments it received did not fairly compensate the label or its artists and songwriters.

It was not clear how long the music videos would stay blocked. Both PRS for Music and Google said they hoped their dispute could be resolved quickly.

The video Leona Lewis’s “Bleeding Love,” licensed by Sony BMG Music Entertainment U.K. Ltd., which has garnered more than 83 million hits, was still visible from the U.K. late Monday.


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YouTube Videos Go Widescreen

by Mahesh Kukreja on November 25, 2008

For all YouTube Lovers,

YouTube announced Monday that it has expanded the viewable width of all videos appearing on the site, creating an image that viewers will likely associate more with a movie theater screen or high-definition television.

The video-sharing site announced the move in a blog posting Monday evening:

We’re expanding the width of the page to 960 pixels to better reflect the quality of the videos you create and the screens that you use to watch them. This new, wider player is in a widescreen aspect ratio which we hope will provide you with a cleaner, more powerful viewing experience.

The expanded viewing width will please YouTube users who are increasingly filming and uploading more videos to the site in the 16:9 aspect ratio. However, users worried that their 4:3 videos will be stretched to look like the TBS version of HD should fear not. Those videos will be centered with vertical black bars flanking the image.


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