Sky bets on pay-as-you-play online TV

Sky Now TV
Sky has announced a pay-as-you-go on-demand service

This week, we discovered that the new iPad gets quite warm when you charge it - so warm, in fact, that if you were to touch it you'd probably say "hmmm, that's quite warm".

Rather more importantly, we discovered that for Lovefilm streaming video is now doing more business than physical DVDs and Blu-Rays.

More frames, more apps

While YouTube could change home video forever, Jamie Carter reports on technology that could do the same for blockbusters: instead of recording films at the standard 24 frames per second, there's a move to increase that to a whopping 120fps. Why? To get shot of the juddering that sometimes mars flashy camera moves. It's not your kit: it's the film.

It wasn't all TV and video this week, though: sound and photography got a look-in too. Hipsters rejoiced as Hipstamatic and Instagram teamed up to share photos between one another's services, while streaming music service Spotify announced a bunch of new apps including one for the evergreen Now That's What I call Music series.

Spotify apps

Then there was the daddy of all imaging apps, Photoshop. For a limited period you can play with Adobe's heavyweight imaging application for free: the forthcoming Photoshop CS6 is in public beta and offers 62% more awesomeness.

There's lots of good stuff in the beta, as our in-depth guide explains: there's a new, darker interface, GPU acceleration and lots of new tools including video editing. Don't get too hooked on it if you're broke, though: when the beta period expires Photoshop CS6 will set you back around £440.

Carrie Marshall

Contributor

Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than twenty books. Her latest, a love letter to music titled Small Town Joy, is on sale now. She is the singer in spectacularly obscure Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind.