Vulture Bytes: Five Tech Treats for Your Black Friday Shopping
An easier way to beam Hulu back to your TV, a worldwide-radio app, and rock-bottom Kanye.
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Good news for cable companies! Bad news for waistlines!
Will someone come out on top soon, please? Because we want to watch Hulu on our TV.
There are 150,000 free videos available to subscribers, and the message to Hulu and Netflix is clear.
Sex with garbage cans is beyond the pale, apparently.
It added almost 2 million new subscribers in the period from June to September.
This news actually broke last night, but we were too busy watching movies on Netflix's iPhone application to notice.
Plus: LeBron movie on hold until next summer.
Netflix ended the year with 31 percent more subscribers than it had when it started, leaving it with somewhere between 15.5 million and 16.3 million subscribers.
A cool interactive map links movie rentals with neighborhoods.
Given Hollywood's allergy to all things easy, cheap, and convenient, you probably figured this was coming.
Why do big studios want us to leave our house for entertainment?
Surely it's only a matter of time before one of those germ-filled Netflix envelopes in your mailbox gives you swine flu or the Ebola virus, right? Maybe not!
They'll finally be able to experience what Netflix-using 360 owners have had access to for a year.
A USPS employee pleaded guilty yesterday to stealing 3,012 Netlix DVDs from the mail he was supposed to be sorting.
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