Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
02-11-2018, 16:18
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#391
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Media Watcher
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Essex
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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Originally Posted by OLD BOY
This report suggests that linear TV will only save itself if it comes up with something innovative to make such viewing an attractive option, which is what I've been saying for the last three or four years.
Sadly, I cannot think what that could be, can you?
https://www.broadbandtvnews.com/2018...signs-of-life/
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Nope.
It's the same as high street shops.
It used to be exciting going into department stores and browsing all their multiple selections and walking along the high street browsing the multiple different shops. But the shops never changed. They replicated themselves so that every high street looked identical to each other with the same chain shops and people got bored with them, then Amazon and other online players came along...
Why would future generations (assuming they can afford to pay for the streamers), choose tv channels, most with adverts, over instantly available shows ad free?
As I keep saying in others threads, the biggest piece of evidence I can put forward as to why we're into a whole different world with tv now and why linear will decline somewhat is simply to look at what Rupert Murdoch did.
He built up a company over decades, only for Netflix to come along and destroy the business model he knows.
The days of television being dominated by a few broadcast channels ended when Rupert Murdoch launched Sky. He was the disrupter, the new kid on the block then.
The days of linear tv dominating ended when Reed Hastings decided sending DVDs out to people was a pain in the arse and it was much better to stream all the stuff over the internet. Things move on. Simple as that.
(Having stuff like Jeremy Kyle and Come Dine with Me, just hastens the inevitable decline of most linear tv.)
Last edited by Horizon; 02-11-2018 at 17:34.
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02-11-2018, 16:42
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#392
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Rise above the players
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chad
I didn't take that from the article at all. Maybe it's been edited since you posted the link.
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Yes, something has changed. Here is a different link on this story.
https://advanced-television.com/2018...inues-decline/
Globally in 2018, linear TV has shown no new signs of life; ratings continue to fall, even with mainstays like the NFL. Despite this, linear TV has sustained advertiser demand, implying the perception that linear TV is as effective and essential as ever, but for how long and in what balance relative to alternatives?
---------- Post added at 16:42 ---------- Previous post was at 16:39 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Horizon
Nope.
It's the same as high street shops.
It used to be exciting going into department stores and browsing all their multiple selections and walking along the high street browsing the multiple different shops. But the shops never changed. They replicated themselves so that every high street looked identical to each other with the same chain shops and people got bored with them, then Amazon and other online players came along...
Why would future generations (assuming they can afford to pay for the streamers), choose tv channels, most with adverts, over instantly available shows ad free?
As I keep saying in others threads, the biggest piece of evidence I can put forward as to why we're into a whole different world with tv now and why linear will decline somewhat is simply to look at what Rupert Murdoch did.
He built up a company over decades, only for Netflix to come along and destroy the business model he knows.
The days of television being dominated by a few broadcast channels ended when Rupert Murdoch launched Sky. He was the disrupter, the new kid on the block then.
The days of linear tv dominating ended when Reed Hastings decided sending DVDs out to people was a pain in the arse and it much better to stream all the stuff over the internet. Things move on. Simple as that.
(Having stuff like Jeremy Kyle and Come Dine with Me, just hastens the inevitable decline of most linear tv.)
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I agree 100% with your assessment, Horizon.
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02-11-2018, 17:34
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#393
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Media Watcher
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Essex
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Posts: 2,408
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
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03-11-2018, 00:19
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#394
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 4,098
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by Horizon
Nope.
It's the same as high street shops.
It used to be exciting going into department stores and browsing all their multiple selections and walking along the high street browsing the multiple different shops. But the shops never changed. They replicated themselves so that every high street looked identical to each other with the same chain shops and people got bored with them, then Amazon and other online players came along...
Why would future generations (assuming they can afford to pay for the streamers), choose tv channels, most with adverts, over instantly available shows ad free?
As I keep saying in others threads, the biggest piece of evidence I can put forward as to why we're into a whole different world with tv now and why linear will decline somewhat is simply to look at what Rupert Murdoch did.
He built up a company over decades, only for Netflix to come along and destroy the business model he knows.
The days of television being dominated by a few broadcast channels ended when Rupert Murdoch launched Sky. He was the disrupter, the new kid on the block then.
The days of linear tv dominating ended when Reed Hastings decided sending DVDs out to people was a pain in the arse and it was much better to stream all the stuff over the internet. Things move on. Simple as that.
(Having stuff like Jeremy Kyle and Come Dine with Me, just hastens the inevitable decline of most linear tv.)
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Spot on, but, there are others on here, who have their heads firmly up their arse, and will deny what is so obvious.
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03-11-2018, 18:15
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#395
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Media Watcher
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
It is not obvious what will happen in the future, but the evidence for what is happening now is obvious and very clear:
1. Murdoch sold most of his business' because he couldn't compete with trillion dollar tech companies and Netflix.
2. Cord cutting in America shows no sign of abating with people cancelling their traditional pay tv subs eroding the viewing figures for many channels.
3. Netflix's and Amazon's rise shows no sign of abating. Netflix now has 130m subscribers and Amazon has 100m. No traditional pay tv network can compete against that.
I said somewhere at the beginning of this thread or another ages ago, that I do think a core group of channels will survive. But to use the high street analogy again, these channels will ultimately be no more than shop windows into their respective company's streaming services.
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03-11-2018, 20:09
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#396
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 12,313
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
I'm not sure how you work out no one can compete with the subscriber numbers , I remember reading recently Discovery discussing it's global reach through it's many deals it has with pay TV platforms and it way exceeded the number of subscribers you quote for Netflix.
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03-11-2018, 22:10
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#397
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Media Watcher
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
That's the point muppetman, it's those other platforms that have the subscribers, not Discovery directly, unlike Netflix.
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04-11-2018, 11:15
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#398
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Dec 2016
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by Horizon
That's the point muppetman, it's those other platforms that have the subscribers, not Discovery directly, unlike Netflix.
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It's totally irrelevant how many subscribers a streaming company has around the world, it is how manly they have in this country that counts as PL rights are sold on a geographical basis.
I assume no streaming company would be allowed to obtain worldwide rights for PL as any broadcaster isn't even in this country.
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04-11-2018, 21:10
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#399
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Media Watcher
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Geographical basis for now... do you really think it will remain like that with global steamers which have audiences/subscribers of hundreds of millions?
I don't assume it will remain as it is now, in fact I assume it won't.
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04-11-2018, 22:09
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#400
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laeva recumbens anguis
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mad Max
Spot on, but, there are others on here, who have their heads firmly up their arse, and will deny what is so obvious.
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Play nicely - people can disagree without being abusive.
Repetition of this sort of language will result in infractions being issued.
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07-11-2018, 12:41
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#401
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by denphone
l have been watching that space for many a year and apart from a receding of the hair and a receding of the brain not a lot of really changed and nor will it long into the future in regard to Linear TV.
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Well, little by little, you can see the future beginning to unfurl.
I've drawn attention before to the scrape ITV got into a few years back with the reduction of advertisement placement on its channels.
It seems that TV advertising is now expected to be flat, but on line revenues are increasing.
Seems like Carolyn Mc Call has got it right with her focus on improving the ITV Hub.
https://www.a516digital.com/2018/11/...er-online.html
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07-11-2018, 12:49
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#402
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Mar 2010
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
The point you seem to be missing with this shift from linear viewing to On Demand the advertisers have to advertise somewhere get ready for adverts before and after your On Demand shows.
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07-11-2018, 15:30
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#403
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Rise above the players
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by muppetman11
The point you seem to be missing with this shift from linear viewing to On Demand the advertisers have to advertise somewhere get ready for adverts before and after your On Demand shows.
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The answer appears to be to permit viewers to choose between subscriptions with no ads and no subscriptions (or less costly subscriptions) with ads.
Anyway, why should the media companies be concerned with the plight of advertisers per se? They are only interested in relation to their own funding models.
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07-11-2018, 17:30
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#404
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Architect of Ideas
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 10,489
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
I’m not sure how many subscribers a company that is yet to turn a profit is relevant.
The business models rely on large numbers paying a small amount per month. To buy say, worldwide Premiership rights would cost over £7bn, give you a compelling product in one country and add on content for the rest. So realistically you’d need the compelling content in every region: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, etc.
How many tens of billions have you spent? Will the 100m subscribers paying £8 a month suddenly pay you £££s a year to cover your costs?
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07-11-2018, 18:10
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#405
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Dec 2016
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Re: Linear is old tech - on demand is the future
Quote:
Originally Posted by jfman
I’m not sure how many subscribers a company that is yet to turn a profit is relevant.
The business models rely on large numbers paying a small amount per month. To buy say, worldwide Premiership rights would cost over £7bn, give you a compelling product in one country and add on content for the rest. So realistically you’d need the compelling content in every region: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, etc.
How many tens of billions have you spent? Will the 100m subscribers paying £8 a month suddenly pay you £££s a year to cover your costs?
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It's not only the cost of rights you have to factor in
Cost of supplying each game to the subscribers
Cost of advertising to encourage people to be subscribers
Cost of processing subscriber payments
Cost of support staff
To name but a few
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