Live Mobile Video Streaming right from your Cell Phone

Stre.am is a video platform that enables anyone with a mobile device to broadcast and share life’s experiences as they happen. Built from the ground up for mobile, Stre.am is easy to use, easy to share on other platforms, and just really fun. On the back-end, Stre.am leverages proprietary transcoding technologies to deliver a seamless high-quality experience.Download Stre.amiOS – Android 

Features

Real-Time Video, Real-Time Chat: Stre.am’s user interface offers a slick messaging overlay so people can chat in real-time during live videos. 
Save the important stuff with Reels: Stre.am allows people to record and save 15-second video highlights called ‘Reels’ for 24 hours. This lets people share in the important moments that they may not have been able to catch live. 
Sharing: While recording live video, Stre.am offers the ability to share to Twitter, Facebook, SMS and email–individually, or all together, as desired. 
Video-Only: With Stre.am, you can follow other users, but not be bogged down with posts other than live videos streams. You can also ‘Like’ streams, without the archive. 


MeerKat and Snapchat hit the Big Time

Meerkat the ISO only new instant 
Video Stream of "Anything"
The initial version of Meerkat was built by Rubin’s co-founder, Itai Danino, in eight weeks. ("The client is all duct tape," Rubin says.) The app was submitted to Product Hunt, Silicon Valley’s favorite cool-hunting destination of late, and quickly rose to No. 1 for the day. As the influential Product Hunt audience tweeted out their streams, Meerkat gained near-total awareness among the early adopter crowd, and Rubin announced that the app had gone from side project to full-time focus.

Over the weekend, Rubin and his 11-person team planned to hack together an app for Android users that would let them watch streams; a full-featured Android app is on its way. The bigger task by far is to sustain last week’s momentum into this one. Rubin is aware of how fast the hype cycle can turn — he went through it once with Yevvo, after all — but for now, the 27-year-old former architecture student says he is happy just to build Meerkat and watch people find uses for it. "If the product is really good, you should get value from day one — and then come back on day two," he says. "If it’s relevant, it will stick. That’s my mission with Meerkat."

At the same time, many of Meerkat's core features had been implemented by its predecessors: logging in with Twitter, comments that turn into tweets, and the main idea of broadcasting from a mobile device. Justin Kan, founder of Justin.tv, noted that his company had tried all three before successfully pivoting into Twitch, the video-game streaming platform acquired by Amazon last year. So had Ustream, Livestream, Qik, and Bambuser. "I think it's hard to provide value to the random person in broadcasting: most of the time when they go live, few people will watch, and there won't be much interactivity," Kan told me via email. "It's hard to know what to do as a broadcaster — even today I have viewers but no idea of what I should do on the service.

Snapchat is growing fast every day 
So hurry up and get it.
What makes a startup successful and what makes it more forgettable than a status update? We can’t know for sure, but perhaps an Ivy League education helps. Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook at Harvard… Instagram’s Kevin Systrom studied at Stanford… and now, the latest success story—Snapchat—comes from Reggie Brown, Bobby Murphy and Evan Spiegal, all three of whom created Snapchat while at Stanford.

Snapchat’s success is proof of what happens when a startup responds to the digital needs and tastes we have right at this moment. Since launching in 2011, Snapchat has quickly garnered attention by being a startup with one of the fastest growth rates seen in recent years. To illustrate, take a look at Snapchat’s user adoption rate. In December 2012 Snapchat had 50 million users; by April 2013, Snapchat had 200 million.

Part of Snapchat’s whirlwind success may stem from the simplicity of its premise. Snapchat is a photo and video sharing app: you can record short videos or take photos and quickly send them to your friends. What makes Snapchat stand out is this: once a video or photo is viewed, it disappears forever. And if you try to take a screenshot, good luck: not only is it extremely awkward to take one while holding a phone and holding your finger to the phone to keep recording, the sender is also notified if the app detects that a screenshot has been taken. In fact, Snapchat has a patent on this type of recording technology: one tap takes a photo, while holding the recording button takes a video. The immediacy and ephemeral nature of Snapchat is what’s getting people hooked, and for good reason.

By now, many people have clued in to the fact that what you put on the Internet can come back and haunt you. Whether you’re a high school student or a banker on Wall Street, the repercussions of an angry Facebook status or an inappropriate Instagram shot can cost you your job and your reputation. Snapchat is the solution: you can post without thinking twice, and don’t have to worry about it sticking around like a spectre afterwards. Although most of the users are still in between the ages of 15-25, the growth already exhibited by Snapchat shows that other age groups will adopt it soon, too. And Snapchat has made an effort to engage other age groups: the company has also released SnapKidz, a version of Snapchat for users under 13, and has released a guide for parentsto reassure parents about their children’s privacy and safety using Snapchat.

That said, Snapchat initially received a lot of flack for its potential to be used by teenagers as a sexting app. However, the founders of Snapchat are not too concerned about that reputation: Spiegel said, “we are not advertising ourselves as a secure platform. We are advertising ourselves as a communication platform.” Investors don’t seem to be concerned, either: Snapchat recently wowed the tech world by winning $60 million in funding led by Institutional Venture Partners, despite the fact that they don’t have a solid model of monetization yet. In the eyes of venture capitalists, Snapchat is now worth $860 million. The founders say they’re moving towards in-app sales and native advertising as monetization models, but it’s yet to be seen how well those models will perform through Snapchat.

It’s also interesting to note that in a way, Snapchat is almost an anti-Google. Google has built its empire on storing information and making it accessible to anyone in a highly personalized and efficient way. If you google yourself, you’ll probably find a link to a MySpace account you created eight years ago, not to mention a schwack of other ancient information you thought you had deleted. Snapchat is a turn in the opposite direction, offering us a break from the never-ending digital footprint; and based on its immediate popularity, this opposite direction is appealing to more and more users who are embracing digital means of communication.

"Socialnomics" The Social Media Mobile Revolution 2015

"Socialnomics" 
The Social Media Mobile Revolution 2015
Mobile drives over 50% of e Commerce traffic

Over 1.35 billion users on Facebook

Over 50% of the world’s population is under 30-years-old

53% of millennial generation respondents (those born between 1981 and 2000) said they’d rather lose their sense of smell than their technology

More people own a mobile device than a toothbrush

By 2018 video will account for over 2/3 of mobile usage hence why 2/3 of orgs will increase spending on video this year

Every second 2 new members join LinkedIn

The LinkedIn age limit has been lowered to 13

Grandparents are the fastest growing demographic on twitter

90% of buyers trust peer recommendations

The average attention span of a human is 7 seconds

The average attention span of a gold fish is 8 seconds

Social Media Sharing with Beast Marketing

We all want to be the go-to person with the latest news, the most intriguing viral content, or the hidden gems followers wouldn't have otherwise found. Easier said than done, though, right?
It actually might be easier than you think--as long as you take the right approach.

The following is a guest post from Courtney Seiter, a content crafter at Buffer, a tool that makes social-media sharing smarter and easier. (You can read her posts on social media, productivity, and marketing on the Buffer blog.)

Here's Courtney:
The currency of social media is the share, and some people just have a knack for finding and crafting the perfect share. The rest of us have to work a little harder. Really, great social-media sharing is a skill. And like all other skills, it requires a little strategy and a lot of practice to perfect.

Here's a road map to quality social-media sharing, including what to share, when to share it, and how to share.
What to Share

Every day, we're inundated with lots of stuff--stuff to read and watch and see and think about. Probably too much stuff, honestly. The average American consumes 34 gigabytes of content and 100,000 words of information in a single day. That means the biggest challenge of great sharing is to make sure your stuff is better than all that other stuff. Want to know if it is? Ask yourself these four simple questions:

1. Would my network thank me for it?
According to Ann Handley, head of content at MarketingProfs and author of Content Rules, this is a good place to start. Is the content so useful that your audience would thank you?

Beyond that, would your audience's audience thank you? We've written before about the power of thinking beyond your audience to the next level of connectivity--it's a great method for attracting a broad, engaged audience. Your audience will definitely appreciate getting content it can then share with its audiences.

2. Does it make me say, "Holy smokes"?
"Useful" is only one of the signs of great content. Content can also be so funny, so ridiculous, or so rage-inducing that you simply must pass it on. What we're looking for here is the "holy smokes" reaction, which Jason Falls explains.
You want your audience to think, "'Holy smokes,' this message is: incredible/sad/awesome/beautiful/intelligent/informative/some other declarative response. According to Jason, ideally your audience will think, "Holy smokes; I have to share that with my friends."

3. Does it pass my Facebook test?
Think about the way people in your audience share and the patterns you've observed to determine whether the content you're considering will get traction. Buzzfeed chief revenue officer Andy Wiedlin says he urges Buzzfeed clients that produce sponsored content to think about how the content will play in the confines of Facebook.

"People share things that make them look clever and cool. They are building their own personal brands," Wiedlin said. "We spend a lot less time thinking how to target and a lot more thinking about what people are sharing."

Rule of thumb: If you would want to see it in your own Facebook feed, you're on the right track.

4. Would I email it to a friend?
This important question comes from Buffer's Leo Widrich, who uses it as a guiding principle for our own blog. Leo explains:
"It's an extremely simple proposition, yet it has changed my writing completely. If I put myself into a reader's head and can picture him or her saying, "Oh, this is interesting... John will really like this," then I feel good about publishing it. If not, I will iterate, find more research, get more examples...until I can truly imagine that happening."

Beast Marketing New Programs

Beast Marketing programs that are just getting started in 2015 that will make you money starting today. These are Pre Launch offers so hurry before they are gone. Click the Photos to view marketing programs
Make Money Today with Instagram
Click the Photos to view marketing programs
If you are not using Instagram to make some extra cash each month then you are seriously missing out. Armed with nothing more than their Instagram account, their mobile phone and their love for taking pictures, people are turning their passion into cash. And so can you!

Let me ask you, what would an extra $1,500 a month mean to you? If you are anything like the people we’ve helped then you’d probably say “$1,500 would be awesome!”

20,000 members have seen the raw power of InstaProfitGram and now we want to invite you to be part of this awesome crowd, and its EASIER than you think!
   
Make Money Today with Twitter
Click the Photos to view marketing programs
There's a lot of people out there that are wrongly convinced that it's not possible to make money using Twitter, are you one of them? There's another group of folks that thinks that Twitter has to eat up all your time.
Both are dead wrong.
Did you know there's an exclusive group of people that are quietly laughing as they steadily earn more and more from using their Twitter accounts every day? Sure, you might have heard about the celebrities that are making HUGE stacks of cash every time they Tweet, but what about the "Average Joe" that hasn't struck it big in Hollywood? Can Joe make money on Twitter?

Going Fishing Today ? Use Beast Marketing

Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty lady is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves. Sometimes you put walls up not to keep people out, but to see who cares enough to break them down. 

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.
Do not follow where the path may lead- go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.
You must take personal responsibility. You cannot change the circumstances, the seasons, or the wind, but you can change yourself. That is something you have charge of. You don't have charge of the constellations, but you do have charge of whether you read, develop new skills, and take new classes
If you give a man a fish he eats for a day. If you take the time and teach him to fish he will eat for a life time. So I'm going to help a couple people a week learn how to "Fish" with "Beast Mode Marketing" for your Local, Small, Home Based Businesses, Product or Service. New Customers with my proven strategies using Magnetic Marketing, Dark Post with Funnel marketing that targets you niche markets. Yes even Network Marketing, MLM'ers any where in the world no matter what product or service is !

Mobiletivity is the future of Business

The Trillion Dollar Marketing Industry is listening to the stars of prediction for the new trends of whats the next big thing is going to be ...  Take a few minutes and watch this Google Video talking about what is going to happen in the future (remembering this video was released in 2010) and then watch the next video that Google produced about the same subject.
Now just one year later Google did this video (Released 2011) and started a new business venture to put there money where there month is video. SO take a moment and watch the next video.
So now today we are in 2015 and all the predictions are happening today and the super stars of business are jumping on the band wagon and taking advantage of this new trend that isn't really a new trend because it was predicted 5 years earlier, Please Take a moment and watch, listen to Gary Vaynerchuk

Motivation will Change your Life

Even the most motivated of us — you, me, Tony Robbins — can feel unmotivated at times. In fact, sometimes we get into such a slump that even thinking about making positive changes seems too difficult.
But it’s not hopeless: with some small steps, baby ones in fact, you can get started down the road to positive change.
Yes, I know, it seems impossible at times. You don’t feel like doing anything. I’ve been there, and in fact I still feel that way from time to time. You’re not alone. But I’ve learned a few ways to break out of a slump, and we’ll take a look at those today.
This post was inspired by reader Roy C. Carlson, who asked:  
“I was wondering if you could do a piece on why it can be hard for someone to change direction and start taking control of their life. I have to say I’m in this boat and advice on getting out of my slump would be great.”
Roy is just one of many with a slump like that. Again, I feel that way sometimes  
myself, and in fact sometimes I struggle to motivate myself to exercise — and I’ll use that as an example of how to break out of the slump.
When I fall out of exercise, due to illness or injury or disruption from things going on in my life, it’s hard to get started again. I don’t even feel like thinking about it, sometimes. But I’ve always found a way to break out of that slump, and here are some things I’ve learned that have helped:

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The Mobile Revolution is just getting started

Mobile Revolution is ramping up so jump on for a ride
to the top of this multi-trillion dollar New Technology 
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