Para profesionales que redactan proyectos, directores de ejecución de obras y project managers, empresas constructoras y promotoras. Descubra Presto 25
While films struggled with distribution, television flourished. The production hiatus of 2020 gave writers extra time to refine scripts, resulting in a bumper crop of high-quality TV in 2021.
TikTok trends in 2021 spanned an incredibly wide range, from the nostalgic to the absurd. The app revived , turning Scottish singer Nathan Evans into an unlikely global star. It launched viral food crazes like baked feta pasta and salmon rice bowls , causing real-world shortages of ingredients. It gave athletes a platform at the Tokyo Olympics, with Olympians offering rare and charming behind-the-scenes content from the Olympic Village. And it turned mundane observations into memes, from #WFH Woes to "Bones Day vs. No Bones Day," a phenomenon centered on a pug named Noodle.
The year 2021 was a transformative period for global entertainment and popular media. Coming off the heels of the initial 2020 pandemic lockdowns, the media landscape experienced a unique intersection of delayed blockbuster releases, the exponential growth of streaming platforms, and the rise of decentralized creator economies.
Musicians, athletes, and Hollywood studios began launching their own digital collectibles. While the market faced intense criticism over environmental concerns and speculative bubbles, it represented a radical new attempt to monetize intellectual property directly through communities. The Lasting Legacy of 2021 Media buttmansfavoritebigbuttbabes1xxx 2021
While theaters struggled, the streaming world experienced explosive growth. In 2021, global streaming subscriptions rose to 1.3 billion, a 14% increase from 2020. In the U.S. alone, subscriptions reached 353.2 million. The streaming wars intensified as new players like HBO Max and Disney+ continued to chip away at Netflix’s longtime dominance. According to JustWatch, in the second quarter of 2021, Netflix maintained a 28% market share in the U.S., followed by Amazon Prime Video (20%), Disney+ (14%), and Hulu (13%). However, when measuring "demand share" for original content globally, Netflix was far ahead at 47.1%, with Amazon Prime Video at 12.2% and Disney+ at 7.4%. Despite losing overall market share to its growing rivals, Netflix remained the dominant cultural force in streaming.
The scale of this industry transformation was staggering. Global consumer spending on entertainment in the home and mobile market (including digital and physical) reached an astonishing in 2021, a 24% increase from the previous year, driven almost entirely by the digital sector. In the United States alone, total entertainment spending jumped 14% year-over-year to $36.8 billion .
Gaming transitioned into a comprehensive entertainment ecosystem, generating more revenue globally than the film and music industries combined. The app revived , turning Scottish singer Nathan
Rodrigo was not alone in her monumental success. Justin Bieber returned to the top of the charts with the breezy, R&B-infused “Peaches,” featuring Daniel Caesar and Giveon. Lil Nas X continued to break boundaries with his unapologetically queer and visually provocative music, scoring hits with “MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)” and “Industry Baby,” the latter becoming one of the biggest tracks of the year. The streaming landscape was also dominated by a surprising country music controversy. Morgan Wallen, despite being caught on video using a racial slur in early 2021, saw his album Dangerous: The Double Album become the No. 1 album on the Billboard Top 200 chart. On streaming platforms, a different king reigned. Bad Bunny was named Spotify’s most-streamed artist globally for the second consecutive year, amassing over 9.1 billion streams, a testament to the global power of Latin music.
The video game industry continued to thrive as a dominant form of popular media, though it faced massive hardware supply chain bottlenecks.
Other platforms also delivered major hits. Disney+ scored a cultural hit with and "The Mandalorian" . HBO delivered the critically adored mystery "Mare of Easttown," while Hulu saw success with the Disney's acquisition of FX series like "Reservation Dogs" and "The Great." Apple TV+ continued to cement its reputation for quality over quantity with the second season of the feel-good hit "Ted Lasso," which dominated award season. And it turned mundane observations into memes, from
Beyond dance, 2021 was a year of unforgettable memes. Perhaps none was as enduring as the image of Senator Bernie Sanders at President Joe Biden’s inauguration, sitting alone with his arms and legs crossed, wearing a pair of oversized, handmade mittens. The image was photoshopped into countless scenarios, from famous movie scenes to historical events, and the senator himself leaned into the joke, using the viral fame to raise $1.8 million for charities in his home state of Vermont. Another bizarre but beloved viral moment was "Gorilla Glue Girl," where Tessica Brown documented using the industrial adhesive as a hair product, sparking a series of memes and a conversation about the dangers of DIY beauty hacks. These trends highlighted how social media served as a collective coping mechanism, turning absurd or mundane moments into shared sources of entertainment and relief during another challenging year.
The defining television event of 2021 was not from Hollywood, but from South Korea. Squid Game became a global juggernaut, named Netflix’s biggest original series launch of all time shortly after its September release. The show's popularity was so immense that it sparked Halloween costume trends, viral social media challenges, and even real-world attempts to recreate its deadly children’s games. By the end of the year, Squid Game had amassed an estimated 16.4 billion minutes viewed on Netflix, making it one of the most-streamed series of 2021. It was the top show on the platform according to FlixPatrol, garnering a total of 57,980 points for its chart-topping performance. However, looking only at Netflix's own metrics misses the bigger picture. Nielsen’s ranking of overall streaming, which counts library content, tells a different story. In terms of total minutes viewed across the United States in 2021, the top series was not Squid Game , but Netflix’s own Lucifer . The long-running supernatural drama amassed a staggering 18.3 billion minutes across its 93-episode library.
The internet remained the pulse of entertainment culture in 2021.
While films struggled with distribution, television flourished. The production hiatus of 2020 gave writers extra time to refine scripts, resulting in a bumper crop of high-quality TV in 2021.
TikTok trends in 2021 spanned an incredibly wide range, from the nostalgic to the absurd. The app revived , turning Scottish singer Nathan Evans into an unlikely global star. It launched viral food crazes like baked feta pasta and salmon rice bowls , causing real-world shortages of ingredients. It gave athletes a platform at the Tokyo Olympics, with Olympians offering rare and charming behind-the-scenes content from the Olympic Village. And it turned mundane observations into memes, from #WFH Woes to "Bones Day vs. No Bones Day," a phenomenon centered on a pug named Noodle.
The year 2021 was a transformative period for global entertainment and popular media. Coming off the heels of the initial 2020 pandemic lockdowns, the media landscape experienced a unique intersection of delayed blockbuster releases, the exponential growth of streaming platforms, and the rise of decentralized creator economies.
Musicians, athletes, and Hollywood studios began launching their own digital collectibles. While the market faced intense criticism over environmental concerns and speculative bubbles, it represented a radical new attempt to monetize intellectual property directly through communities. The Lasting Legacy of 2021 Media
While theaters struggled, the streaming world experienced explosive growth. In 2021, global streaming subscriptions rose to 1.3 billion, a 14% increase from 2020. In the U.S. alone, subscriptions reached 353.2 million. The streaming wars intensified as new players like HBO Max and Disney+ continued to chip away at Netflix’s longtime dominance. According to JustWatch, in the second quarter of 2021, Netflix maintained a 28% market share in the U.S., followed by Amazon Prime Video (20%), Disney+ (14%), and Hulu (13%). However, when measuring "demand share" for original content globally, Netflix was far ahead at 47.1%, with Amazon Prime Video at 12.2% and Disney+ at 7.4%. Despite losing overall market share to its growing rivals, Netflix remained the dominant cultural force in streaming.
The scale of this industry transformation was staggering. Global consumer spending on entertainment in the home and mobile market (including digital and physical) reached an astonishing in 2021, a 24% increase from the previous year, driven almost entirely by the digital sector. In the United States alone, total entertainment spending jumped 14% year-over-year to $36.8 billion .
Gaming transitioned into a comprehensive entertainment ecosystem, generating more revenue globally than the film and music industries combined.
Rodrigo was not alone in her monumental success. Justin Bieber returned to the top of the charts with the breezy, R&B-infused “Peaches,” featuring Daniel Caesar and Giveon. Lil Nas X continued to break boundaries with his unapologetically queer and visually provocative music, scoring hits with “MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)” and “Industry Baby,” the latter becoming one of the biggest tracks of the year. The streaming landscape was also dominated by a surprising country music controversy. Morgan Wallen, despite being caught on video using a racial slur in early 2021, saw his album Dangerous: The Double Album become the No. 1 album on the Billboard Top 200 chart. On streaming platforms, a different king reigned. Bad Bunny was named Spotify’s most-streamed artist globally for the second consecutive year, amassing over 9.1 billion streams, a testament to the global power of Latin music.
The video game industry continued to thrive as a dominant form of popular media, though it faced massive hardware supply chain bottlenecks.
Other platforms also delivered major hits. Disney+ scored a cultural hit with and "The Mandalorian" . HBO delivered the critically adored mystery "Mare of Easttown," while Hulu saw success with the Disney's acquisition of FX series like "Reservation Dogs" and "The Great." Apple TV+ continued to cement its reputation for quality over quantity with the second season of the feel-good hit "Ted Lasso," which dominated award season.
Beyond dance, 2021 was a year of unforgettable memes. Perhaps none was as enduring as the image of Senator Bernie Sanders at President Joe Biden’s inauguration, sitting alone with his arms and legs crossed, wearing a pair of oversized, handmade mittens. The image was photoshopped into countless scenarios, from famous movie scenes to historical events, and the senator himself leaned into the joke, using the viral fame to raise $1.8 million for charities in his home state of Vermont. Another bizarre but beloved viral moment was "Gorilla Glue Girl," where Tessica Brown documented using the industrial adhesive as a hair product, sparking a series of memes and a conversation about the dangers of DIY beauty hacks. These trends highlighted how social media served as a collective coping mechanism, turning absurd or mundane moments into shared sources of entertainment and relief during another challenging year.
The defining television event of 2021 was not from Hollywood, but from South Korea. Squid Game became a global juggernaut, named Netflix’s biggest original series launch of all time shortly after its September release. The show's popularity was so immense that it sparked Halloween costume trends, viral social media challenges, and even real-world attempts to recreate its deadly children’s games. By the end of the year, Squid Game had amassed an estimated 16.4 billion minutes viewed on Netflix, making it one of the most-streamed series of 2021. It was the top show on the platform according to FlixPatrol, garnering a total of 57,980 points for its chart-topping performance. However, looking only at Netflix's own metrics misses the bigger picture. Nielsen’s ranking of overall streaming, which counts library content, tells a different story. In terms of total minutes viewed across the United States in 2021, the top series was not Squid Game , but Netflix’s own Lucifer . The long-running supernatural drama amassed a staggering 18.3 billion minutes across its 93-episode library.
The internet remained the pulse of entertainment culture in 2021.
Presto soporta muchas otras opciones específicas, que lo convierten en un modelo económico de un proyecto de construcción, muy completo pero al mismo tiempo fácil de entender y aplicar.
Completo y flexible
Presto es un programa fácil de personalizar, flexible para trabajar en diferentes entornos legales y culturales, que dispone de acceso multiusuario a las obras, en red local y a través de Internet.
Está integrado bidireccionalmente con Microsoft Office, Primavera, Revit y otros programas utilizados en el proyecto y la ejecución de obras.
Además, permite la creación de complementos o plugins mediante un API (Application Programming Interface) para cubrir las necesidades particulares de los clientes.
Se entrega firmado digitalmente y verificado por VeriSign.