Live video streaming apps have long been a desired get for iPhone enthusiasts. Once upon a time, they were a forbidden fruit only enjoyed by jailbreakers (devices running unauthorized Apple software), ...
See the original story in Japanese. Moi Corporation, the company behind Japanese mobile live streaming app TwitCasting, announced last week that its IPO application to list on the Tokyo Stock Exchange ...
Twitter is fun, but it’s not a very visual medium. Japan’s TwitCasting is trying to change that with its video broadcasting platform that’s tied very closely to Twitter. Today the startup has revealed ...
Moi Corporation, developers of TwitCasting and one of the pioneers in communications-focused live streaming, announced today the immediate availability of their new ‘Live’ and ‘Viewer’ apps on iOS.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Moi Corporation CEO, Yosuke Akamatsu. Moi Corporation owns TwitCasting, a mobile streaming app that has 10 million monthly users ...
Once upon a time, say about three or four years ago, there were all sorts of companies trying to help users live stream themselves onto the Internet. There was Livestream and Ustream and Justin.tv and ...
Late last year, Ustream and qik launched iPhone applications that let you stream videos from the iPhone to the web and allow others to watch them as they’re being recorded. And now there is an iPhone ...
50,000 Brazilians viewed the protest using the app. See the original story in Japanese. TwitCasting is a mobile livestreaming app developed by Tokyo-based startup Moi Corp. The company’s founding CEO ...
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Facebook has already admitted that teenagers are leaving its site — and the big question is: where are they going? In Japan, the answer may very well be TwitCasting, a service that lets you stream and ...
As teens around the world are fading away from Facebook, Japan is no exception. While short messaging app LINE dominates the tech headlines, TwitCasting is the "it" app among teens in Japan.