Craig Crossman photo Craig Crossman
National Newspaper Computer Columnist

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WEBSITE LETS YOU LEGALLY WATCH PREMIUM VIDEO CONTENT

Thanks to computer technology, most of us don't watch television the same way we used to just a few short years ago. Back then, we had to watch TV shows when they were aired, a slave to the broadcasting schedule whim of the networks. The introduction of the affordable VCR heralded the beginning of scheduling choice. We could record programs to be viewed at some future time of our choosing. Of course those recordings could only be made based on network broadcasting schedules. Time-shifting DVRs like the TiVo made their debut making network recording even easier. With them you could record more than one show simultaneously and even pause and rewind live TV. Still though, you remained a slave to that broadcasting schedule. Now there are Video On Demand (VOD) services being offered by content providers like DirecTV and cable companies that let you select from a growing library of movies and TV shows you can record whenever you want. Television schedules most likely will never go away but at least there are ways being offered that let you view and even record premium television content on your own schedule.

There are many reasons why I may not have recorded a show on my DVR. I may have simply forgotten to record something or set it up incorrectly. I recently missed a show because unbeknownst to me at the time, the President's news conference went longer than expected and everything got shifted forward a half hour. Of course my DVR recorded part of the news event and chopped off the end of the show I wanted to record. Or it rained and my recorded show got pixilated beyond recognition. There are countless reasons why something doesn't get recorded properly but fortunately there's a really good chance we can now go online to see the shows we missed.

While it's getting easier to access recent movies online, recent TV show episodes are proving to be one of the most elusive to capture on places other than the networks' websites. A new website is making great strides in providing on-demand, premium television programming and it's all legal. Hulu.com is able to bring a whole lot of premium television programming, movies and archived classics because although the website is an independently operated entity, NBC Universal and News Corp are equal equity partners in the venture. Through their efforts and collaboration with other networks and movie production companies who wish to have their content made available online, it looks like hulu is making some real headway in the online premium video venture. According to hulu, they currently have over 130 content providers with which they have partnered including FOX, NBC Universal, MGM, Sony Pictures Television, Warner Bros. and more.

Many of the networks provide some of their shows on their own websites but hulu is a great place to start looking for what you want because it aggregates a whole lot of shows from a wide variety of sources. When you go to hulu's home page, you can simply search for the show you want by its name or its category such as Science Fiction, Home and Garden or Comedy for example. I recently missed an episode of Medium and was able to see the new episode the day after it aired on television. Before, the only way I could see the missed show was to hope that it re-aired later on that week. I know there are many bit-torrent services out there where you can download recently aired shows but those are illegal and the video quality of the files can be pretty bad.

Hulu makes its content available for free however there's usually a short commercial inserted at each break. It's a small price to pay for excellent video quality and video on demand at no charge. Hulu requires no special software to see the content other than a modern web browser and it works on Windows and Macintosh computers. Future versions are planned to work on mobile devices such as the iPhone.

So don't worry if you missed something really good. Chances are it will be waiting for you to see at hulu.com.

www.hulu.com

 

Craig Crossman is a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern time.  Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com

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