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Re: The future of television
So the important point is that if a programme is scheduled on a "channel" at Wednesday, 9pm, and you dont watch it at 9pm on Wednesday, you have missed it (unless its scheduled to be repeated at some other time). Also, it doesnt matter how its delivered, just the fixed timing ?
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Re: The future of television
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The two key questions this and similar threads have tried to address over the years are: 1. Will traditional broadcast over satellite and terrestrial eventually be shut down in favour of exclusively IP delivery? 2. Will IP delivered content be scheduled, on demand, or a mixture of both? |
Re: The future of television
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---------- Post added at 14:58 ---------- Previous post was at 14:34 ---------- Quote:
Those comments seem rather silly now, but there you are. Wallow in the past and present if you want to, but I like to look at what may be coming down the road. I am perfectly aware of the fact that FAST channels are linear channels (I never said they were not) - what I am saying is that I believe the main channels on our EPG’s will be grouped under one brand in future and will be available on demand only. I’m at a loss as to why some people cannot grasp that simple concept. Instead, people are obsessing over whether a method of delivery is linear or not (etc, etc) and conflating what I have said into something completely different. Is it so difficult to grasp the concept of EPG channels being on demand only, with content accessed by category rather than channel? In the end, that is all I am saying. FAST channels may or may not survive in the long term and I have not formed a firm view on whether they will survive or whether this is just a transitional phenomenon. Anyway, enough. If all people want to do is argue and ridicule, I guess it’s pretty pointless trying to explain it any further. Only the passage of time will confirm what will happen. I’ve told you what I think. Make of it what you will. ---------- Post added at 15:02 ---------- Previous post was at 14:58 ---------- Quote:
It most certainly doesn’t really matter how content is delivered. All I have done is to say how I believe it will be delivered in the future. |
Re: The future of television
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Unfortunately, on this topic, you’re not - you’ve not just drawn a line in the sand about the future of linear programming, you’ve dug a 50 foot ditch, filled it with water and sharks, put minefields, barbed wire fences, and machine-gun towers either side of the ditch, then played loud music over the speakers on the towers so as not to be influenced by anything anyone else contributes… ;) |
Re: The future of television
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But you know that. ---------- Post added at 15:13 ---------- Previous post was at 15:07 ---------- Quote:
I have answered all the relevant points that have been put to me but it’s as if I haven’t said anything, and the constant repetition of what I am supposed to have said when I have repeated time and again that is untrue, shows that people on here are not listening. |
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2. I think a mixture of both, for a very long time yet. The difference between "scheduled+pvr" and "on-demand" is pretty much none. In both cases, it has an initial release time, but can be watched "on-demand". My wife watches all her shows like this, the sky box records them, she watches them when she is ready, sometimes weeks later. |
Re: The future of television
https://www.cableforum.uk/board/show...postcount=1197
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A sequence of continuous programming where everyone watching that channel (or stream) is watching the exact same thing at the same time according to what the broadcaster sends out. It’s completely agnostic to the method of delivery. |
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At a time of national emergency we're going to be reliant on terrestrial broadcasts. All Putin has to do is hack our BB networks, something he's quite good at... Tv isnt just for entertainment it's a public service, which needs more than one delivery medium to reach all. |
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Personally, I think these problems should be addressed before any switch off, but politicians are notoriously blind when it comes to planning for the future. Hence, they make decisions like turning off our access to fossil fuels before sufficient green energy is available to replace it. Similarly, following any decision made to switch off the transmitters for TV broadcasting, they will not have resolved the legitimate issues you raise. |
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https://www.cableforum.uk/board/show...postcount=1615 Quote:
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Linear TV definition Quote:
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Re: The future of television
In case you missed it, the media is describing scheduled TV as live TV.
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