Veeker Press Coverage

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  • ONLINE & SOCIAL NETWORKS

    CoolBusinessIdeas.com, December 29, 2006

    ONLINE & SOCIAL NETWORKS
    Veeker Video Peeks
    You may soon hear people saying "VM me" rather than "IM me". Veeker is a free video messaging service that enables a camera phone owner to shoot video and instantly share it with friends.

  • Social Networking on the Web

    Hellen Vanstrander, December 18, 2006

    More Related Stories
    DV Format - Veeks sent to VEEKER are viewable within seconds at VEEKER.com, and (using the embedded VEEKERplayer) on any website that accepts embedded codes, such as MySpace, Xanga, and Blogger. Veeks are sent from mobile phones as MMS messages, using the MMS

  • Mobile Communities help user-generated content achieve a key position in new-media sector

    Wall Street Journal, December 4, 2006

    Similar technologies can be used to share opinions. In the U.S., mobile video site Veeker, which allows users to share "video peeks" or "veeks", last month teamed up with Youth Noise, a Web based social network. Together they launched a free service designed to allow young people to use video-enabled phones to contribute opinions and impressions during the US mid term elections on November 7th.The service, called Veek the Vote 2006, invited users to capture and share happenings at polling stations, rallies, protests, parties and any other election-related activities or events.

    Election coverage not so long ago was pure television," says Rodger Raderman, Veekers Chief Marketing & Product Officer in San Francisco." Very recently, it became more decentralized by the blogsphere.Veek the Vote 2006 carries this trend a step further, giving young Americans the ability to instantly communicate their election day experiences with video, using nothing more that the mobile phones in their pockets. Over 750 mobile videos were uploaded to veek the Vote from around the US in just seven days.

  • More than 750 videos uploaded to VeektheVote during election day

    Reiter's Camera Phone Report, December 1, 2006

    More than 750 consumer videos were uploaded to Veek the Vote 2006 during Election Day, according to the Veeker.com press release (no direct link, unfortunately).

  • Geekery abounds for ambitious Young Dems

    Young Democrats of Atlanta, December 1, 2006

    Enter Veeker, a tweaky-named new website that quickly takes any video clip you send from your registered cellphone and slaps it up on your Veeker feed, player, and page -- and it sure has the folks over at Personal Democracy Forum all worked up. Partnering with YouthNoise, Veeker put together a large collection of cellphone videos documenting young people's impression of election day. The PDF folks talked it up quite a bit -- "Veekers "Veek The Vote" received over 750 mobile video messages from Americans using the video camera in a mobile phone to show the world where they stood on Election Day (thats a lot compared to Rock the Votes 24 submissions and Video the Votes 96)." -- so I signed up and got me one o'them Veeker thingies. To the right there you can see the one I've stuck on my personal website to give it a test drive. Once I was a member and started watching the Veek the Vote campaign, I was underimpressed; judging by the voice behind the camera, they only hit such an impressive number of submissions through the energy-drink-fueled video message compulsion of a few extremely motivated kids (interns, perhaps?). And while I like the flash player widget -- it does look like exactly the kind of blingy crap the yout's of today are happy to paste up on their MySpace page -- after playing with it for a while and comparing it to the alternatives, I'm not so sure how useful it can be to a group like a YD chapter. Your Veeker player shows on the first row the video clips ("veeks" for video peeks) you have, and in rows below that, the latest veeks from your friends. As you can see, I have no friends, but in my and Veeker's defense, this is still a new service with what appears to be very few users (and finding them is less than friendly; while you can search for people by name -- first OR last, searchign for my full name actually doesn't find me, sadly -- or email, the Veeker site currently lacks the social components of other sites, like browsing by interest or public Groups that can be used to aggregate veeks by content). There's also no way, as yet, to create an account (and thus a customized Veeker feed) based solely on an email address (say, for a group like YDAtl that doesn't have a particular cellphone number), so each new webmaster would have to build a selective group of friends whose feeds will appear in our player. Update: I was wrong: you needn't register a cellphone to view Veeks and make connections, so YDAtl now has its own account. You try keeping up with the rules of all these different websites while modeling 3D shear crack deflection. VeekerPlayers might start popping up all over MySpace pages any day now (what the hell do I know, I thought a YDAtl MySpace page was a terrible idea a year and a half ago because "that site is going nowhere"), but without further development for groups, I consider that experiment a write-off of a few precious dissertation hours. and we'll be ready for it. [Now that I've woken up to the fact that we might be able to form a group of Veekers for mobile media campaigns, I'm much more favorable to Veeker compared to the YouTube/BlipTV blog options below because there are less intermediate steps and fewer security issues.]

  • Veekin out?

    Shelbinator, November 29, 2006

    Kids these days: so many toys, I can't keep up. I'm only 32 and I seriously feel like I might as well get on board the ?I have no idea what kids these days are talking about" bandwagon, because it's just moving so flippin' fast.

  • Veek the Vote: Young People Smartmoblog the USA Election

    Federated Media, November 27, 2006

    Youthnoise, a "youth-based social network for social change," bills itself as "an activist haven, a socially conscious sanctuary." During the recent US election, Youthnoise teamed up with Veeker, a mobile video and photo website/service, to "Veek the Vote" -- young citizen journalists were asked to ask people why they voted, capture their answers via the video cameras in their telephones, and email the videos to "vote@veeker.com...

  • Veek The Vote

    Personal Democracy Forum, November 27, 2006

    MobileActive has a great article on a new mobile-to-Internet video communication service called Veeker and their debut of their mobile phone as a video capture and communication device during this year's U.S. election.

  • Over 750 Mobile Video Messages Show Americans Discussing Voting, Political Choices, Opinions and Analysis

    Consumer Electronics Daily, November 27, 2006

    SAN FRANCISCO, BUSINESS WIRE -- Veeker (www.veeker.com), a leading mobile video message and photo website, believes that the mobile phone as a video capture and communication device had its coming out party during this year's U.S. election. "Veek the Vote 2006," which received over 750 mobile video messages and photos from Americans using the video camera in a mobile phone to show the world where they stood on Election Day, represents a new milestone for citizen journalism in the United States. "Veek the Vote 2006" was the result of a partnership between Veeker and YouthNoise (www.youthnoise.com), the Internet's first social network for youth dedicated to social change.

  • Veek The Vote

    MOpocket, November 27, 2006

    MobileActive has a great article on a new mobile-to-Internet video communication service called Veeker and their debut of their mobile phone as a video capture and communication device during this year's U.S. election.

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