![]() Surely the fastest way to post a picture from live TV to Twitter.Īt 256kbps, the video quality is decent, more than enough actually, for news. LiveStation makes it easy to take a screen grab of what you are watching and post the image to Twitter along with your comments. Want to do more? Connect your Twitter account, and then you can tweet while you watch. You can also chat with other users who are watching the same channel. wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Reuters_TV_logo.The free version of LiveStation player offers a number of free channels to watch – the good ones are already there, namely, BBC, Al Jazeera, NASA TV, ESPN Live, and oh! MTV, Cartoon Network and few other entertainment channels thrown in, in case you get bored watching the news. ![]() The current service was announced in November 2014. Preparations for the service began in 2012 originally testing the concept on YouTube. Live feeds from the service had also been available via Livestation before Livestation was shut down. On Wednesday, January 15, 2020, Reuters removed their channel from Roku and the Apple TV App store. The service was available via several digital media players as well as the Reuters and Reuters TV apps and the Reuters TV website. Reuters TV is a mobile video news service operated by the news organization Reuters.dbt:Television_news_in_the_United_States.dbc:Internet_properties_established_in_2015.wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Reuters_TV_logo.png?width=300.On mobile devices, users spend an average of 12 minutes per session, while on streaming TV devices like Apple TV and Roku, the average time spent was 21 minutes per session when the service was available there. In 2017, it was reported that Reuters TV had over 1 million viewers monthly, with users coming to the video service three times a week on average. In 2016, Reuters launched Reuters TV for publishers. The stories are chosen by user's interests, time and location (for example, an American viewer is likely to receive a longer report of an American-related news story than a French viewer.) Originally costing 1.99 dollars a month, the service was made free in August 2015. and international version of the service, with news tailored to both. The service offers two services: “Reuters Now”, a constantly-updated customisable, skippable and downloadable news lineup of lasting between 5 and 30 minutes composed of story clips, and uninterrupted live feeds of global events. The service was launched in 2015 and promoted as "Netflix for News" and features “curated but personalized news coverage” via short video reports. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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