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Re: The future of television
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How do they distinguish it from timeshifted using a Sky+ type device? |
Re: The future of television
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The only place I can find what you describe is on the TV Licencing website - everyone else seems to use the standard definition. Quote:
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Re: The future of television
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Here is another. https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-r...ne-only-switch 'All the same, there are strong hints that the days of the large, live TV audience, with everybody sharing a scheduled broadcast at the same time, are numbered.' You can trawl the internet for more if you want to, but really, this is nothing to do with how TV will develop. As ever, we are talking semantics here and it is of no importance. It's just a diversion, again. ---------- Post added at 18:10 ---------- Previous post was at 17:57 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The future of television
NFTs :rofl:
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Re: The future of television
The tulips of our age.
More interesting are the realisations that ad-supported tiers are likely to become commonplace (we were assured some years ago by a certain contributor here that this would never happen) and that dropping entire seasons of a show at once isn’t good for subscriber retention, implying a move towards quasi-scheduling, one episode per week. Disney and Amazon have embraced this; Netflix is clearly dipping its toe in the water too. |
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I thought streamers would not include advertisements because that would deter people who wished to avoid them from subscribing. However, we did not discuss tiering at the time, which does make sense, as does a free option with ads. |
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My next prediction is that free-with-ads is only an experiment to see what the appetite is like and draw punters in. Eventually those ad-supported tiers will have a subscription rate of their own, just as Sky does today. Ad-free in the long run will be a premium service |
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Much better value than any of these streaming services too. |
Re: The future of television
Bespoke subscriptions
Now from Sky does this already. I don't think there's enough Star Wars content to justify that particular example but doing it by genre is an option for a potential Warner Bros Discovery service. Less user privacy Makes sense to get a bit of extra cash in by selling user data. Embracing NFTs I agree with the idea of fostering communities and selling merchandise but that's nothing new. An NFT is just another bit of merchandise with a dubious reputation. An end to the binge model Obviously makes sense. Return of bundles The quoted examples of cinema tickets and theme parks don't seem significant to me. I can see Disney, Universal (Comcast-Sky) and Warner Bros Discovery wanting to market their theme parks/studio tours to their respective subscribers but I doubt they want to undermine theme park revenue too much or include a benefit that few would use. |
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Re: The future of television
I’m not aware of any streamers yet taking a sub *and* showing adverts in the middle of shows - did I miss something?
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Re: The future of television
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I think your opinion was formed by analysing TV broadcasting through a narrow technological lens rather than taking into account other considerations like commercial ones. |
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