Uncategorized · October 1, 2007
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Loc​at​eTv​.com

My employer has just launched the open beta of a new web­site called loc­at­etv. It’s not some­thing I’ve worked on, but I sit next to (and reg­u­larly drink with) some of the guys that do. I think it’s a pretty cool site, and encour­age any­one with an inter­est­ing TV to check it out.

The gen­eral idea is that you type in the name of a TV-​​Show (either the series name, or a spe­cific epis­ode title,) movie or cast mem­ber, and the site searches TV list­ings local to you and shows you a list of the next few times you’ll be able to see what you searched for on TV. That’s pretty cool in itself; it’s a bit more tar­geted than the numer­ous TV-​​guide style web­sites out there, and the site itself is light­weight and fast to use, so it’s a lot less pain­ful than (say) the Radio Times site.

The really neat fea­ture, though, is the embeds. Designed pretty much spe­cific­ally for blog­gers these allow you to embed a small applet in your own site that links to a spe­cific show or movie or actor. That means that, for example, if I want to talk about a spe­cific epis­ode of Her­oes (let’s say God­send), I can stick this on the site:

Click to see LocateTV results for Heroes » Season 1 Episode 12  » Godsend. Always up to date, always relevant to you.

That box is gen­er­ated every time this page is viewed, so it always has up to date (and local to the reader) sched­ule inform­a­tion in it. In a TV themed blog that would be an extremely use­ful tool. It means that users who didn’t watch a show, but have their interest piqued by the post find out auto­mat­ic­ally when they can next catch it (rather than just being told when it was on — maybe in another coun­try,) which in turn increases the chances that they’ll be back to com­ment on the post, and be more likely to revisit that blog in future since it provides use­ful inform­a­tion. It makes the reader’s life easier, and gen­er­ates more traffic and com­ments for the blog: Everyone’s a winner.

Of course, I don’t often blog about TV, so it’s prob­ably not the most use­ful tool in the world to me, but there are a lot of sites that would really bene­fit from this sort of thing and I’d love to see it succeed.

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