NBC's Olympic on-line coverage will be delivered by the MSN Network-
"NBCOlympics.com on MSN"-- and use Microsoft's Silverlight Technology to
Stream Thousands of Hours of Exclusive Interactive Video from Beijing Games
NEW YORK and LAS VEGAS, Jan. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- NBC Universal, owner of
the exclusive U.S. media rights to this summer's Olympic Games in Beijing,
China (August 8-24, 2008), announced today that it was teaming up with MSN
and Microsoft in an unprecedented strategic alliance to create
"NBCOlympics.com on MSN", a next-generation online experience for Olympic
fans across the United States. With thousands of hours of competition video
in both live and on- demand formats, deep analysis and results delivered
from NBC's award-winning broadcast and digital media teams, and Microsoft's
Silverlight technology to deliver deeply immersive user experiences,
NBCOlympics.com's coverage will be powered by MSN and Microsoft technology
to complement NBC's broadcast programming and put millions of fans in
control of the Olympic sports, athletes and countries they want to watch.
"Over the past 20 years, we have continually expanded our coverage of
the Olympics to new platforms as they have become available, and the
Beijing Games will mark another milestone," said Gary Zenkel, President,
NBC Olympics. "By teaming up with MSN and Microsoft, we can give both the
core fan and casual consumer of the Olympic Games an amazing online
experience, combining high-quality video with the storytelling and analysis
that we're known for. We chose to partner with MSN and Microsoft because
technologies such as Silverlight help us deliver the kind of
next-generation online viewing experience that will change the way the
Olympics is experienced for millions of fans in 2008."
The new alliance was announced during the keynote presentation of
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas. The two companies will work together to deliver Olympic coverage to
the U.S. online audience, powered using Microsoft's Silverlight technology.
During the Beijing Games, NBCOlympics.com (http://www.nbcolympics.com)
content will be prominently featured on the MSN.com homepage
(http://www.msn.com), seen by over 100 million users per month, as well as
on MSN Video (http://video.msn.com) and across the MSN and Windows Live
networks, all moving the massive MSN Network audience to NBCOlympics.com's
complete coverage of the Games.
As a result of this unprecedented alliance, "NBCOlympics.com on MSN"
will deliver:
-- 2,200 hours of live event video coverage, with more than 20
simultaneous live video streams at peak times
-- More than 3,000 hours of on-demand video content including full-event
replays, highlights, features, interviews and encore packages.
-- An "enhanced playback mode" powered by Silverlight that gives users the
choice of a high-quality full screen viewing experience that is as good
or better than anything on the Internet today
-- Unique metadata overlays powered by Silverlight that enable fans to
have access not only to high quality video, but also to the wealth of
related content including results, statistics, comprehensive bios,
rules and expert analysis from NBC's Olympic digital media team in
Beijing
-- Live video alerts so fans can stay connected to the events and teams
they care most about
-- Social networking features that enable fans to share aspects of their
Olympic experience with friends
"We are pleased to partner with NBC to bring immersive, interactive
video experiences to millions of sports fans during the Beijing Olympics,"
said Kevin Johnson, president of the Platforms & Services Division,
Microsoft. "Combining NBC's rich history in covering the Olympic Games with
MSN's reach and Microsoft's Silverlight technology will help change the way
people connect to and consume rich content on the web."
NBCOlympics.com, which is the U.S.' single destination for Olympic
coverage, is live today and covers every Olympic summer sport as well as
key athletes and events leading up to the 2008 Beijing Games. Coverage will
expand in May 2008 to include the U.S. Olympic Team Trials.
About NBC Olympics:
NBC, "America's Olympic Network," owns the exclusive U.S. media rights
to the Olympic Games, television's most powerful property, through 2012,
which includes Beijing in 2008, Vancouver in 2010 and London in 2012. The
2008 Olympic Games from Beijing, China will represent the 11th Olympics
broadcast by NBC, a record for the most Olympic broadcasts by any network.
From August 8-24, 2008 NBC Universal will present an unprecedented 3,600
hours of coverage, highlighted by NBC 's live primetime coverage of
swimming, gymnastics and beach volleyball and more than 2,200 hours of live
streaming video for the first time on NBCOlympics.com. In August 2004, 203
million viewers watched as the networks of NBC Universal-NBC, MSNBC, CNBC,
USA, Bravo, Telemundo, and NBC's HD affiliates -- offered a then record
1,210 hours of Olympic coverage from Athens.
For additional information, go to NBCOlympics.com, a year-round
destination for fans of Olympic sports, featuring news, Beijing previews,
athlete features, expert blogs, photos, Olympic video from the NBC archives
and social tools enabling users to build communities around their favorite
sports, post comments and blogs.
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