Il s’agit d’une traduction assistée par ordinateur de la page Internet d’origine. Elle est fournie à titre indicatif et ne constitue en aucun cas une traduction complète et fidèle.
CBS' page d'exposition de TV.com des aides vous trouvez vos programmes de favori à l'aide plus rapidement du mur de Cooliris.
Passez en revue un mur des titres d'exposition, ou le filtre par le genre pour choisir des résumés, des guides, et des videos d'épisode de TV.com.
Nous sommes toujours excités pour travailler avec des destinations de ministre comme TV.com pour aider à augmenter leurs emplacements et à vous espérer appréciez ! Pour passer en revue les autres expositions et divertissement de CBS et d'autres fournisseurs, visitez le notre Page de canaux.
Ici chez Cooliris nous voudrions prendre un moment pour remercier nos troupes dessus Jour de vétérans. Il y a 23 millions de vétérans et de membres vivants de service de service actif des forces armées par USA, et jour de vétérans commémore leur courage et cela de leurs familles.
Garder avec la tradition, Le Président Obama a présenté une guirlande aujourd'hui au tombeau des inconnus au cimetière national d'Arlington en Virginie.
Le jour de vétérans a été au commencement célébré comme jour d'armistice, pour commémorer la fin « de la guerre pour finir toutes les guerres », Première Guerre Mondiale. Woodrow Wilson l'a déclaré des vacances nationales en 1938, et en 1954, le Président Eisenhower a signé une facture déclarant le 11 novembre pour être jour de vétérans. Au R-U, les vacances sont encore célébrées comme jour d'armistice.
Ce les vétérans particuliers le jour, plusieurs des causeurs de code de Navajo qui ont aidé à transmettre les messages confidentiels pendant la deuxième guerre mondiale ont parlé vers le haut de leurs expériences. Avec seulement approximativement 50 des 400 vivants encore originaux, leur histoire (ce que vous pouvez lire environ ici) risques étant perdus aux âges. Beaucoup de groupes de vétéran sont pareillement peu dans les nombres - et il est important que leurs contes soient racontés de nouveau.
Mon propre père a donné l'assaut à la Normandie dessus Jour J, gagnant deux coeurs pourpres pour ses dommages. Il a toujours eu un grand respect pour ceux qu'il a servis avec, les les deux les survivants et ceux qui étaient tombés. Il a possédé un certains patriotisme et fierté dans son service qui a dépassé la politique, et cette fierté était juste une de beaucoup de traits excellents que je me rappelle le près.
Prenez un moment aujourd'hui pour honorer un vétéran dans votre famille ou communauté - comme membres de service et en tant qu'êtres humains.
Fin de traduction
A simple “Thank You” goes a long way.
Happy (day before) Halloween! I’ve begun the festivities early – I’m dressed up today at the office as a mafia member, and have been distracted all day by the Halloween clips and scary videos on our Halloween channel.
The entire team also took part in a little costume contest – ranging from #Balloon Boy (yes, as a trending topic!) to Jack from Jack-in-the-Box . Here is some of our very colorful team… All the mess on the floor is candy from our piñata event for the upcoming birthdays!
From popular vote, the winner was a tie between Dima the barbarian and Gosia the fortuneteller:
On the other hand, the worst looking costume was decided to be Niels, the Dutch version of our CEO (all in good humor, of course):
What better way to start off the Halloween weekend? Hope you guys have a blast as well!
Here is another interview from our “Inside Cooliris” series. This week we are featuring our Executive Vice President of Product – Michele Turner. Read on to find out more about her professional past and well as her vision for the Cooliris product development.
Where did you work before Cooliris?
I came to Cooliris from Adobe Systems where I ran product marketing, developer relations, product management for the Flash Platform. I originally went to Adobe to work on Adobe Air, which is a really interesting breakthrough in technology. In addition to AIR, we re-launched the Flash Platform, made significant progress bringing on new developers, realigned our Mobile efforts and really built up the evangelism team while I was there. Prior to that I did consulting for several Web 2.0 start-ups, primarily focusing on product development and marketing. I helped launch a couple companies including Kosmix and Wink. I have also worked at some of the big Internet companies, including Excite@Home and AOL. I cut my teeth in product management at a company called Silicon Graphics, which was one of the big computer graphics companies back in the ‘90s. I was there for 9 years and I covered the gamut from product management to product marketing to developer relations.
How did you get into technology?
I was meeting with a friend who was at Silicon Graphics and he offered me a job as a Product Manager. So my first job in tech was as a product manager for the multiprocessing C compiler. It was a very technical product and I wouldn’t have probably hired me, but that opened the door for me. I ended up running software product management for SGI for a while and later took over Developer Relations. We had a nice little $50-million-a-year software tools product line, which back in 1996 wasn’t a bad thing at all.
How is it being a woman in the tech world?
In business meetings, I am often the only woman in the room, but I really don’t notice it anymore. Unfortunately that’s the nature of the Valley to some degree, as there are simply fewer women graduating with engineering degrees. I think that the Internet has been a bit of an equalizer – there are a lot more women doing product management, design and web development, in addition to marketing, for consumer internet products. There are also more female CEO’s in the consumer Internet space – Meg Whitman and Carol Bartz who is now at Yahoo! are two who immediately come to mind. There are definitely more women in technical roles than there were ten years ago. However, I think it’s critical that companies really work for gender and cultural diversity in their hiring. It’s always important in order to create a balanced team, but when you’re creating products for consumers it’s even more important as it helps you have an internal reality check on how applicable your offerings are to different types of people.
When did you come on board in Cooliris? What’s your role?
I joined Cooliris in July to run Product and Marketing. What I am really focused on right now is trying to figure out the next generation of Cooliris. We have a really great product for viewing photos and videos on the web. It’s very fast and efficient, particularly for finding images that you are looking for, and it’s a fun way of viewing them. What we are working on now is how to make Cooliris a product that people want to use every day. We are also working on performance improvements to make the current product experience better. So job #1 is shoring up our foundation and making sure that the current product works well across platforms and browsers, and that we start looking beyond our current installed base to more opportunities that we can address today. The second thing we are focused on is to better expose the great functionality at Cooliris that people have a hard time finding. The third thing we are spending a lot of time on is defining our 2.0 release – creating a product that solves a problem for people, that’s delightful to use and has them coming back every day.
What new can the users expect from Cooliris?
Two big things are coming up – first is performance improvement. We just released Cooliris 1.11.5,which provides significant performance improvements for Windows users overall and IE users in particular. Our upcoming 1.12 release is going be focused on personalization – particularly around the Cooliris channels and content. We have amazing content from Hulu, CBS and Warner, but it’s hard to find today. We are focusing on helping people realize that we actually have this incredible content in the first place, and make it more discoverable. Right now we don’t even surface the content in a logical, time-based sequence in the Wall – there is a lot of room for improvement. We will also allow people to start favoriting items and personalizing their Cooliris experience a bit more so that it would be easier for them to find what they want.
What can the users expect for the 2.0 release?
We are moving to a new platform for 2.0 which will open the door to many new product opportunities, including new and more effective ways of viewing content. The Wall works very well for viewing videos and photos, but for viewing text-based content it is not as effective. We’re still in the product definition phase, doing a number of user studies. What we want to provide people with is the best way to discover and share the media that they love.
Favorite feature of Cooliris?
There two things I use it for a lot. I like looking at Facebook photos on Cooliris because it’s fun, and gives me a better viewing experience than I get on Facebook. Second, I have 3 kids so I have a lot of family photos. I first became hooked on Cooliris when I was looking for one specific photo of my son and I couldn’t find it because I have 5000 photos on my machine. I was paging through iPhoto and I thought, “Oh, what about using Cooliris to find this”. It took me less than a minute to find that photo using Cooliris. My husband was looking for the exact same photo on his PC, paging through endless screens of images, and it took him 45 minutes to find the same photo. So if I’m searching for a photo – one of mine or something on the web, Cooliris is definitely the place I start.
One fun fact about yourself?
I’m a runner, and years ago I ran the Berlin Marathon. It was the year the Berlin Wall came down, and we were some of the first westerners to run freely through what was then East Germany. I will never forget the sight of the Germans running through the Brandenburg Tor with tears in their eyes as they crossed into East Berlin. It was an amazing and touching experience.
We hope you’ve been enjoying Cooliris version 1.11.5! If you haven’t yet gotten it, hurry and get it at cooliris.com, because the performance has been improved up to 30 percent on Windows machines, meaning a faster, slicker Cooliris!
In addition, we know you’ve been writing us about supporting Bing Image search and we’re super excited to announce that it is available now! Simply click in our search toolbar and select Bing as your search engine, or launch Cooliris from any Bing Image search webpage. In light of Halloween coming up in four days, here’s a Wall of some funny Halloween comic strips!
We sincerely hope that you’ve been enjoying our recent performance and usability enhancements to the Cooliris product. In Michele Turner’s words (our very own Executive Vice President of Products), “Supporting platforms, devices, and sites that are important to our users will allow our unique user experience and superior browsing capabilities to spread beyond our immensely happy community. We are thrilled to continue our support of Microsoft’s platforms and innovations through our continued investment in improving their users’ experiences on IE, Windows, and Bing by providing the fastest, most visually compelling, interactive, content browsing experience available.”