iOS 10.2 introduces new features including the TV app (US Only), a new and unified experience for accessing your TV shows and movies across multiple video apps. Emoji have been beautifully redesigned to reveal even more detail and over 100 new emoji have been added including new faces, food, animals, sports, and professions. This update also includes stability improvements and bug fixes.
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It looks exactly the same as last year. It has that old circle Touch ID button. It still uses Lightning, not USB-C. And, you know what? It's fine. It works with last year's iPad cases. And it's the last iPad on Earth that has a real headphone jack. And its starting price is the same. But Apple's bumped the storage up, finally, with 64GB on the $329 (319, AU$499) version -- you could survive with that, just about -- and 256GB on the $479 version, which I'd recommend without a doubt if you're planning to download any movies for travel, or any content-making apps.
This app is still buggy. Users are having a hard time finding their Home videos. Apparently, when you put your iPad into Airplane Mode ( Settings > Airplane mode), the home videos show up in the new TV App. Others users have found that you can overcome this problem by just downloading a free TV episode from the store in the app and then it will list your home videos in the My Library section.
Surprisingly, we find that there is no easy way for your the iPhone or iPad to delete a video/ episode. We fully expected to see an edit button allowing quick episode deletion. But that, for now, appears to be missing in action from the TV app.
So we tried several things to see if it was hiding somewhere else. Long Pressing an episode or trying to swipe left/right etc. did not work. The only way we were able to delete/remove content from the TV app was if the content was downloaded into the iDevice.
Thankfully, one of our readers managed to figure out how to delete local video files. Go to Settings>General>Storage and select iCloud Usage and Manage Storage. Now try and tap on the TV app in the drop down to see any locally stored video. You should see your local video files along with an edit button that allows you to deletes individual movie files.
Sorry, Elizabeth. 10.2 is a malware disaster that has destroyed one of the most useful, if not the most useful iPad function: the ability to play downloaded movies and videos. The professional thing for Apple to do is to offer an update that restores the original Video icon and its functionality, with full access to already stored videos without having to reload the entire library of them thru iTunes. Any claim that this is impossible is just an admission that Apple does not want to invest in the programming effort to undo the vandalism perpetrated by their 10.2 update.
Once that free episode downloads, this reader discovered that their TV App worked normally. And all previous content including home movies synced and populated their Library.I wish there was a definitive answer for you, but this is the best we have right now. Alternatively, you could wait until the next iOS update to 10.3 later this month or possibly early March which is suppose to correct some of these issues with the new TV App.
After upgrading the software to 10.2.1 on my ipad the videos are not working.specially some websites of movies and YouTube .it just starts to load and loads forever. I have done resetting ,but not working.what should I do now? Please give me some suggestions.
I had the same unfortunate experience on a long plane trip and cannot even find the downloaded movies on my iPad although I can stream them from the iTunes store when I had an internet connection restored.Very Frustrating!
Prior to IOS 10.2 I could search for my home videos (MP4)by name via Spotlight Search app. The Video App was replaced by the TV App which has no means of searching the video library. I see three solutions that I will recommend.1. Allow us to download the original Video App that was just replaced, assuming this returns the spotlight search the capability to search for home video MP4 files.2. Add Home Movies, Movies, Videos (MP4) to the categories in Spotlight Search.3. Add search capabilities in the Library portion of the TV App.The ability to find personal files of any type should never have been removed. Whatever it takes to return this function as soon as possible should be done immediately, followed by APP upgrades that allow us to search rather than having to do it manually.
Up Next - Up Next is a feature that keeps track of what a user is watching, remembering which episode of a TV show was just watched or where a movie was paused, even across multiple devices. When an episode of a TV show is finished, or when there's a new episode available, Up Next automatically displays it in the Up Next queue. Siri can also be used with Up Next. Asking Siri to continue a movie or TV show plays the last thing that was watched.
Every so often we like to revisit our frequently asked questions about Nielsen Ratings. Here's the latest update:1. In your daily ratings breakdown, I always see the following information: "The Office" (7.30 million viewers, #8; adults 18-49: 3.7, #T3). What does it mean?Let's break it down piece by piece. In the example given for "The Office," here's what each number signifies:total viewers (in millions) = 7.30viewership rank (for the night) = #8adults 18-49 rating = 3.7adults 18-49 rank (for the night) = tied for #3The aforementioned data is mostly straightforward: 7.30 million people watched that night's episode of "The Office" live or on their DVRs before 3:00 AM ET (more on this in a second). Among viewers ages 18-49, it drew a 3.7 rating, meaning 3.7% of viewers in that age group watched said episode live or on their DVRs before 3:00 AM ET (also more on this in a second).2. Sometimes I see viewership denoted as something like 4.4/8. What does that mean?More than likely, you're looking at a show's household rating and share, not its actual viewership. Ratings and share are percentages not flat numbers. A 4.4 household rating/8 share means that 4.4% of all households (that is to say homes with a TV set, not total number of people) watched the indicated program, while among those households watching TV at the time 8% of them watched. Note the distinction here: a rating is based the entire sample (whether they're watching TV or not) while a share is based on those actively watching television. To break it down even further, for the 2010-11 season, Nielsen Media Research has determined there are 115.9 million television households in the U.S. So a 4.4 household rating means that 4% of those 115.9 million homes watched the program, or 4.636 million households (0.04 X 115.9 = 4.636). Furthemore, those 4.636 households also represent 8% of the people actively watching television at the time. And if you break out your freshman algebra (4.636/57.95 = 8/100), you can also determine that about 57.95 million households were watching TV at that time with the rest of the 115.9 million households (115.9 - 57.95 = 57.95, hey that turns out to be half!) weren't watching TV at all. 3. So what does a 3.7 adults 18-49 rating mean?If you read question #2, you'll remember that ratings are percentages not flat numbers. So a 3.7 adults 18-49 rating means 3.7% of viewers ages 18-49 watched the broadcast. For the 2010-11 season, Nielsen Media Research has determined there are 131 million adults 18-49 in the U.S. so 3.7% of them would be 4.847 million (.037 X 131 = 4.847). Or to put it another way, each adults 18-49 ratings point equals 1.31 million viewers.4. What's the difference between metered-market ratings and fast national ratings?This is where a lot of confusion about ratings comes from. To better understand the answer, we must quickly go through what Nielsen Media Research does.Nielsen collects data from two different samples: a "National Measurement" and a "Local Measurement." Households in each sample are given a device that tracks their viewing habits. The 9,000 participating households (over 18,000 people) in the "National Measurement" are outfitted with what's called a "Nielsen People Meter." This device measures two things - what program or channel is being watched and who in the household is watching. It accomplishes this by instructing each member in the household to press a button indicating that they have begun watching television on that particular set. This process allows Nielsen to electronically gather demographic information. Every night this data is transmitted to Nielsen Media Research's Operations Center in Dunedin, Florida. Around 8:00 AM ET the next day Nielsen releases the preliminary "fast national" ratings from this data. This is the information you see reported every morning on the site.That afternoon, around 3:00 PM ET, Nielsen releases the "final national" ratings. These are the revised numbers which take into account various scheduling changes from across the country, most notably those due to live events (such as "Sunday Night Football" on NBC). These "final national" ratings are what you see reported in places like The New York Times, L.A. Times and USA Today as well as the various "weekly roundup" press releases we post to the site.5. So far so good. Now what about that "Local Measurement" sample you mentioned?The "Local Measurement" sample is used to track, as you might guess, information in a specific market, as opposed to the entire country in the "National Measurement."Approximately 22,400-28,000 total households participate in the "Local Measurement" sample or about 400-500 households in each of 56 of the largest markets in the U.S. These are what are commonly referred to as the "metered markets" (click here for the complete list). In total, the 56 metered markets account for 69.66% of all households in the U.S. This means that 30.34% of U.S. households are not included in the "Local Measurement" sample.Homes recruited for the "Local Measurement" sample are NOT equipped with People Meters. Instead they're given more generic electronic meters, which can only measure what is being watched in the household NOT who in the household is watching what (i.e. demographic information). Because of this, only household ratings and shares can be reported.In any case, every night this data is also transmitted to Nielsen and the following morning the "metered market" ratings are released. These numbers obviously will be different (but not obnoxiously different) from the "fast national" ratings also released by Nielsen. Generally speaking, since "metered market" ratings come from the largest urban areas, the numbers will skew in favor of more "urban" shows.While metered market ratings are less prevalent in terms of primetime ratings nowadays, they are used in our late-night ratings reports each day.6. So what about those paper diaries I hear about? Don't they count to?Yes, but they're not a factor in the numbers that are electronically reported each day. Basically, paper diaries exist as a supplement to the "Local Measurement" sample.Paper diaries are filled out during the months of November, February, May and July - periods generally referred to as "sweeps months." These diaries are used to record viewer habits, allowing each market to get some sort of demographic information (i.e., what it doesn't get from its electronic meters).As any regular TV viewer knows, the "sweep periods" are used by the networks to drum up ratings for their affiliate stations and often feature various stunts and special programming.Markets outside the 56 metered areas also use them regularly as they cannot afford Nielsen's electronic service. 7. What about TiVos (or other DVR services)? Does Nielsen track those viewers?The "fast national" ratings were report each day includes DVR viewership through 3:00 AM ET that night. Furthermore, advertising is sold on what's known as a "C3" basis. This means that all commercial viewership in the first three days of a broadcast (live or DVR) is used. So yes, DVR viewership is most definitely factored in.Nevertheless, it's important to keep in mind that DVRs are only in 38% of TV households, meaning the overwhelming majority of people doesn't have or use them. And the numbers reflect this: a recent report indicates DVR viewership on the broadcast networks only accounts for about 11.6% of a show's ultimate audience.8. But that doesn't explain why shows I don't care about do better than shows I do.There's two big things fans need to remember when it comes to ratings. First and foremost, ratings are NOT an indication of a show's overall reach, the devotion of its fanbase or any other anecdotal measurement. Ratings are designed to see how many people are watching the commercials on a TV show, you know, the things that pay for the TV shows in the first place. With that in mind, people who skip ads on their DVRs, watch shows online, download them illegally, view them on DVD, etc. aren't as relevant when it comes to advertising money. In 2008, the broadcast and cable networks made a collective $67.92 billion of traditional advertising. The rest - online advertising ($1.63 billion), DVD ($450 million), iTunes ($180 million) - is just peanuts by comparison. Until that paradigm changes, ratings are the most critical factor for a show's survival.Secondly, if you are reading this, you probably are not the average TV viewer. We get the e-mails all the time: "everybody I know watches show X, there's thousands of web sites devoted to X and X is always a bestseller on iTunes and/or Amazon, so Nielsen must not be counting viewership correctly." Or the converse: "I don't know anybody that watches show Y, there's very few web sites devoted to Y and Y is never a bestseller on iTunes and/or Amazon, so Nielsen must not be counting viewership correctly."There's a big problem with these types of assumptions. First and foremost, the overwhelming majority of TV viewers do not own a DVR, do not watch shows online and do not purchase TV shows on DVD and/or download TV shows. I'm guessing if you are reading this, at least one of those habits applies to you and the aforementioned "everybody you know." Furthermore, a quick glance at the 2000 Census data will tell you that only about 1% of America is "like you" in that they have the same age, race, relationship and housing occupancy. 2ff7e9595c
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