Technology | Apple The Real Macworld Scoop: Video Podcasts on Apple TV Under the radar advancement offers new world of free programming By Sam Gale Rosen Posted Jan 16, 2008 12:38 PM CST Copied Apple CEO Steve Jobs, right, talks with Google founder Sergey Brin, left, as Google CEO Eric Schmidt, center, looks on after Jobs' keynote at the MacWorld Conference in San Francisco, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2008. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma) (Associated Press) Thin laptops and online movie rentals got the hype, but NY Times blogger Saul Hansell says the real news from Macworld is the inclusion of video podcasts on Apple TV. This opens up a new world of free, ad-supported, on-demand programming on our televisions, which he predicts will eventually outperform paid show downloads from iTunes. The format could do for television what blogs did for writing, Hansell writes, and is a step closer to the "browser for television that many TV watchers have been wishing for." It isn't just wannabe lonelygirls who make video podcasts—networks are starting to release some of their content for free with ads, which could usher a whole new strategy for distribution. Read These Next One critical island in Iran has remained unscathed in airstrikes. For the first time in decades, team pulls out of World Cup. Iran's new supreme leader is said to already have war wounds. Girl who vanished in 2020 in California is found in North Carolina. Report an error