A creative partnership between two Salt Lake City nonprofits—Salt Lake Valley Habitat for Humanity and the American Cancer Society (ACS), Intermountain Region—combined with the generous donation of an abandoned church and the 2.2-acre lot it sits on…
“I think it’s really big,†says Ken Brueck, co-founder and CMO of UpLynk, a streaming service provider that’s powering ABC’s new Watch ABC app, which was released in May.
SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) - Work began Wednesday on the site of the future Hope Lodge in Salt Lake City. It’s the American Cancer Society’s project and through a lot of community donations will help cancer patients and their families.
Volunteers on Wednesday began stripping a former LDS Church building of its hardwood floors, lighting fixtures and other materials, which will be donated to Habitat for Humanity for new homes and its retail store, ReStore.
SALT LAKE CITY — Weeds growing through cracks in the pavement and taped-up windows reveal the deterioration of a chapel that has been abandoned for six years.
Looking to avoid the chicken-and-egg scenario that plagued the early days of HDTV and attract new customers to the next-generation UltraHD (4K) TV, Sony Pictures is licensing video compression technology from a company called eyeIO to deliver some of its most popular movies stored on its $699 FMP-X1 4K media player to Sony’s UltraHD TV sets, which will […]
At CES eyeIO claimed its software suite was “studio grade” 4K ready and it will be put to the test soon, since Sony Pictures is licensing it to deliver movies to theFMP-X1 4K media player this summer. Sony didn’t have any more details to reveal about its 4K delivery plans just yet, but eyeIO’s press release claims […]
EyeIO, a Palo Alto startup, announced today that its Ultra HD compression encoding technology has been licensed by Sony Pictures to offer 4K content delivery using the Sony FMP-X1.
eyeIO has confirmed that its UltraHD compression encoding technology has been licensed by Sony Pictures to enable the studio to offer the first-ever 4K UltraHD content delivered to the home.
Palo Alto, Calif.-based technology company Eye IO has licensed its 4K Ultra HD technology to Sony Pictures, helping the studio deliver 4K content to the home for the first time.
EyeIO said Friday that Sony Pictures has licensed its Ultra High-Definition compression-encoding technology to support native 4K movie downloads to the home.