Hulu set to launch tomorrow

By Tim Conneally | Published March 11, 2008, 12:10 PM

The ad-supported streaming video site, and product of a partnership between NBC Universal and Fox, is opening its doors to the general public tomorrow after approximately five months in private beta.

For the first time, users will be able to freely stream Hulu's Flash-based, ad-supported TV and movie content. Many had actually expected the site to go live today, and several sources simply reported that it already had.

Content comes from over 50 partners including Sony Pictures Television, MGM, NBC Universal, Fox, Warner Brothers Television, and Lionsgate. Still absent from the lineup is CBS, which instead hosts full episodes of its programs on its own site. ABC also offers streams of some of its shows, including content in HD.

Hulu will continue to remain off limits to users outside of the US, largely due to foreign rebroadcasting rights which traditionally take a long time to get approved. For example, a recent study cited in The Register stated that it takes an additional 16.7 months on average for an American television program to make it to Australian television. Given the volume of content Hulu has claimed to have at its disposal, it looks like the wait could be a while.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

FINALLY!!! The beta is fantastic and the substitute sites that stream from them ar quite frankly the WORST possible experience after playing with the beta... I mean common What makes Hulu great is the instant streaming entertainment with full screen ability!!! And yea its got ads, ok so what? Thats Television? This is the best legal option there is. The BBCs iPlayer service was a HUGE success, and quite frankly its about time the USA got something similar. And Hulu is the BEST of the technologies for on demand streaming I have ever seen. Well beyond anythign MS or real or even apple ever produced. I mean this is FAST. click and watch. Buffer lag is Minimal if at all.

And all of it Legal free and fullscreen!!!

Best of all they allow you to embed your favorite shows into your webpages without 1 problem... Hello fan sites!!!

Fair use is back baby. At least for a little while...

PS to those outside... I watch the BBC for free via proxy all the time from the USA. I even submitted beta test reports to their site lol. No worries at all. You can count on that being the case with Hulu as well, Proxies will become your friend...

Score: 0

|

www.joost.com

Score: 0

|

wow fancy that yet another legal service only available in the usa

"believe it or not their is a real wide world outside of the usa"

and this is only going to annoy more people of the world because yet again going the legal route gets us not only content restrictions but now global location restrictions.

and people wonder why there is piracy

will they ever get it right?

Score: 0

|

As a native Detroiter, I fully appreciate the hard workers coming from our southern neighbor, Canada, willing to work for industry average salaries while paying taxes to multiple countries.
If it weren't for them, more of us would have to get jobs! (Of course, more jobs would *be available*, but that's another rant.)

That being said, most of Canada's populace would be free of the "foreign rebroadcast" restrictions mentioned in the article, as the most populated areas of Canada can receive US transmissions just fine, and have no need to rebroadcast.

As for Hulu checking your IP address: it is a simple matter to set up (or register on) a proxy site which has a US address, and stream the content through that. This is already being done with conventional broadcast video.

Score: 0

|

Looking forward to Hulu. We travel up to Canada frequently visiting family. Woui=ld like to obtain Hulu there especially as most of Canada watches and retransmits US TV!!!!
Neville Shevloff
Cape Coral
Florida

Score: 0

|

Boy, someone didn't read the article!

"Hulu will continue to remain off limits to users outside of the US.."

Last I checked, Canada isn't part of the US...they probly restrict access by IP address, not by the users' home address.

Score: 0

|

Far as im concerned, Canada belongs to US.... albeit as the dark sheep, communist, non-personal-accountability, welfare-touting son...

Score: 0

|

Sounds better than the USSA under Adolf Bush.

Score: 0

|

hehe! good one

Score: 0

|

Well, you do know that Canada is our Northern Territories...... Just kidding!

Score: 0

|

If I read the post by shevloff correctly, they would LIKE it if they could receive Hulu in Canada when they travel, not they expect it to actually be there. Their argument is that most Canadian states can watch American TV without the normal broadcast restrictions, probably because most of them live close enough to the border to be able to receive the broadcasts that don't stop at the border as they follow the laws of physics instead of man-made laws.

I don't know that for fact; I am just ASS-U-ME-ing this from my interpretation. :-)

Score: 0

|

Just curious, what does this and the former post have to do WTFA? Just another way to put down the current administration?

Score: 0

|

Report: Microsoft to randomize Europe's browser screen choices

The fact that "A" is for "Apple" was apparently at the heart of browser vendor objections to Microsoft's alternative to listing IE first.

Acer eclipses Dell for #2 spot in global PC shipments, says iSuppli data

It literally does look like a 360-degree turnaround in Dell's fortunes, as the bells of bad tidings now toll solely for Dell.

Microsoft, don't hang up on Windows Mobile, but do call for help

Only a Manhattan Project can save Microsoft's phone strategy now.

See ya later, WinMo: Microsoft's mobile strategy needs a reboot

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: Hands up if you're considering upgrading to a Windows phone for the holidays...Anybody?

Playing catch-up in 2010: Windows Mobile, BlackBerry, and Symbian

Microsoft, RIM, and Nokia are each working on improved mobile operating systems. But could these efforts add up to too little, too late?

Will Nokia's plans further alienate American consumers?

A look at Nokia's plans for the coming years does little to shine up the company's increasingly dull image.

Bing bonked by service outage Thursday, Microsoft configured the wrong server

It's always nice to have a backup, but it's even nicer to remember which one is the backup. That's the lesson Bing's admins learned yesterday evening.

Survey reveals there are more women then men, including on social networks

If you think you can market your products and services online as though you're selling car batteries in the middle of halftime, think again. And again.

Android team updates 'Donut' and 'Eclair' SDKs

The Android SDK includes components which optimize app development for each version of the mobile operating system. Today, the 1.6 and 2.0 components got updates.

The Black Screen Syndrome, or, Tech news in search of the apocalypse

Scott Fulton On Point: This is a story about something that should not have been a story, about something that at one time was a story.

Online advertising evolves away from display, toward interactive software

Marketing departments and agencies are increasingly establishing positions for "creative technologists" who can steer designers and developers toward platforms that enable direct connections with consumers.