About
You can hire me to do video-blogging of any technology event around the world. Cover my travel and accomodation expenses and pay me a bonus upon delivery of good content if you want, and I will be on my way.
For the past 4 years, I have been traveling to consumer electronics shows around the world and have filmed hundreds of interviews of the representatives of the companies and demonstrations of their products. All my videos are posted in HD quality since August 2005. With over one and a half million video views per year on all the videos, with top Google and Youtube search results for many of the people and products covered.
Companies can also sponsor my next travel and accomodation expenses to the next consumer technology event any place in the world. I can put my sponsors logo in the bottom right corner of every video posted in HD and on lower resolution and lower bitrate flash sites like Youtube.
As well as being a video-blogger at http://techvideoblog.com, I am also working to try and launch a new HD video-blogging system athttp://payhd.tv.
You are welcome to contact me:
Email and Gtalk: charbax@gmail.com
Skype: Charbax
Voicemail: +45 36947366





May 26th, 2011 at 1:23 pm
[...] to the Web? While at LeWeb08, this past December, I run into two passionate video bloggers: Nicholas Charbonnier and Teemu Arina. Nicholas has actually a blog fully dedicated to video technologies at [...]
September 27th, 2011 at 4:03 pm
IT System Engineer
January 5th, 2012 at 2:09 am
This is getting a bit more subjective, but I much prefer the Zune Marketplace. The interface is colorful, has more flair, and some cool features like ‘Mixview’ that let you quickly see related albums, songs, or other users related to what you’re listening to. Clicking on one of those will center on that item, and another set of “neighbors” will come into view, allowing you to navigate around exploring by similar artists, songs, or users. Speaking of users, the Zune “Social” is also great fun, letting you find others with shared tastes and becoming friends with them. You then can listen to a playlist created based on an amalgamation of what all your friends are listening to, which is also enjoyable. Those concerned with privacy will be relieved to know you can prevent the public from seeing your personal listening habits if you so choose.
March 23rd, 2012 at 4:04 pm
Thank you for the work. Write-up aided me a lot