Streetball Calls Out Basketball and Web 2.0 Websites

Streetball.com is doing something I never imagined.  Just watch the streetball video.  By the way, the video includes Scout.com, Rise Magazine, And 1, Yardbarker.com, MaxPreps.com, Rivals.com, Takkle.com, NBA, MySpace.com, SlamOnline.com and other basketball and sports websites.  Check out the Streetball.com Remix of Ace Hood’s popular video, “Cash Flow.”

Ace Hood Cash Flow Streetball Remix

Ace Hood “Cash Flow Streetball Remix”

Streetball.com Logo

Streetball.com Logo

Streetball Avatar

Streetball Avatar

Streetball Avatar

Streetball Avatar

AtomicOnline.com Purchases HoopsVibe and StreetballTalk.com

CraveOnline.com a leading lifestyle destination for men featuring video, movies, TV, music, sports, games, cars, humor and more, announced today that it has acquired established hoops fan and basketball culture site, HoopsVibe.com , continuing to bolster CraveOnline’s leadership position in the highly competitive online male youth market. The acquisition will support CraveOnline’s parent company, AtomicOnline , in their strategy to acquire and grow a family of quality owned and operated niche properties.

HoopsVibe was founded in 2002 with the goal of building a basketball site that covered all aspects of basketball culture, catering to the whole spectrum of fans, from the casual spectator to the dedicated stat junky. The site offers the day’s biggest stories, keeps tabs on the top prospects in high school and the NCAA, covers basketball shoes and related merchandise releases, and provides players in the HoopsVibe community with training schemes, diet plans and a range of instructional videos.

Founded in 2005, StreetBallTalk was created as a part of HoopsVibe to give streetball fans a place to discuss news, share playing tips and generally keep tabs on the world of blacktop basketball. Since then, its user base has grown to becoming the biggest streetball community on the web. Its members include high school-aged players and several professional trainers and coaches, who trade training advice and keep logs of their improvements throughout the season.

Hoops Vibe and StreetBallTalk serve as destinations for active members who visit the site on a daily basis,” stated Mike Dodge, SVP/General Manager of AtomicOnline. “CraveOnline’s wide and deep content offerings and creative resources continue to attract major brand advertisers wishing to connect with men engaged in the content they crave.”

About CraveOnline.com

CraveOnline.com is a leading lifestyle destination for young men ages 18-34 and also serves as the demographic/psychographic hub for a family of other male-centric web properties featuring video, movies, TV, music, sports, games, cars, humor and more. As one of the fastest growing destinations on the web with sites like ComingSoon.net, Sherdog.com, ActionTrip.com, Superherohype.com and SpikedHumor.com. CraveOnline attracts nearly 26 million unique visitors per month, and is larger than leading competitor Heavy Networks and twice the size of Maxim. For advertisers, opportunities for sponsorship and creative integration go beyond the banner to make marketing messages an uninterrupted part of the user experience. Recent brand advertisers include Axe, 20th Century Fox, Rockstar Videogames, the U.S. Army and Air Force. The company is based in Los Angeles with sales offices in New York, Chicago and San Francisco. CraveOnline is part of AtomicOnline , a diversified online media company.

Asterpix and Streetball Videos


California-based startup Asterpix next week will debut a service that
allows users to create interactive videos with embedded hyperlinks for
navigating into and out of objects. The service, which has been in beta for the past three months, works
similarly to hypertext where objects in videos, such as people, places,
or locations, become clickable links that guide people to other
content.

To let users known that there’s an embedded link in a video Asterpix
has created “hot spots,” or markers represented as a flashing circle or
a dotted rectangle, that allow users to navigate through the video and
get information on objects displayed on the screen.

The hypervideos can be embedded into other Web sites, blogs, and
e-mail. Bloggers, for example, can link their blog entries to parts of
a video to tell a better story.

Additionally, Asterpix supplies the hypervideo browser that
includes a location bar, “forward” and “back” buttons, history,
selectable hot spot markers, and fast access to hot spots in video. The
browser also comes with a “share” button that lets users share
hypervideos or link to specific scenes within a video.

“In the months since we launched our beta offering, we have
found that interactive videos are great for sports where everyone wants
to be John Madden and scribble their notes on screen; great for “how
to” videos where the viewer can drill-down on the links for more
information; for travel videos where viewers want to follow their own
itineraries; and so on,” wrote Nat Kausik, Asterpix’s CEO, in his blog.

From the beta trial, Asterpix found that users interacted with hot
spots 70% of the time and clicked on the hot spots to navigate to other
content 20% of the time, according to Kausik. The beta users have
created more than a thousand hypervideos using Asterpix.

Asterpix doesn’t require the installation of desktop software
or offline production tools. It’s a free Web application supplied by
the startup that lets anyone create hypervideos from YouTube, MySpace,
DailyMotion, Streetball.com, ESPN,Google (NSDQ: GOOG),
and other video sources. Earlier this week, Asterpix also launched a
hypervideo application for popular social networking site, Facebook.

The service will officially launch next Monday at Asterpix.com.

Asterpix was founded in October 2006 and is financed by venture
capital firm New Enterprise Associates. So far, Asterpix has received
$4 million in venture funding from the group.

Mark Cuban Deals

Stanford University HDTVStanford Streetball

Mark Cuban has always enjoyed a good scrap. Now the volatile Dallas Mavs owner wants to mix it up as a martial arts businessman. A MMA fan for years, Cuban recently unveiled his latest brainchild, HDNet Fights, a new MMA organization poised to make an impact on one of America’s fastest-growing sports.

Through HDNet Fights, Cuban will sign pro fighters, broadcast bouts on his high-def cable channel and promote live events. His first card is set for this Saturday at the American Airlines Center in Dallas.

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