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Re: The future of television
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https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/2023...-streaming-age Quote:
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Re: The future of television
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It’s difficult to argue that represents better value if you have to reduce your convenience (or arrange your viewing by month depending on what you subscribe to). Quote:
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I’m not sitting there like a Scooby Doo villain with a spreadsheet thinking “aha! If I take Netflix and Discovery Plus in month one, Prime and Apple TV in month two… etc, keep Now TV for Sky Movies throughout I’ll be 100% streaming, pay more, have less convenience but I’ll prove those pesky kids on CF wrong!” I’m completely agnostic as to what happens in the future. It’s your confusion, and dare I say deranged obsession, that keeps these threads going. Quote:
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Re: The future of television
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You are shrugging your shoulders and telling us nothing can be done. That’s not going to get us anywhere. |
Re: The future of television
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You view linear television, which you struggle to define, as a problem to ‘solve’ despite the fact it’s watched by millions of people day in, day out, generating revenues and returning profits to shareholders. Even going so far as propose Government intervention to either weaken public service broadcasting, mandate public service television over streaming or a combination of both. The rest of us - rational consumers in the marketplace - are mere observers noting that in the absence of any meaningful benefit to the companies involved there is no reason to not continue all forms of broadcast across all technologies. |
Re: The future of television
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https://www.theguardian.com/media/20...rector-general [EXTRACT] Davie said the BBC was committed to live broadcasting but Britons should prepare for the closure of many standalone channels and radio stations by the 2030s: “Over time this will mean fewer linear broadcast services and a more tailored joined-up online offer.” The future will involve “bringing the BBC together in a single offer”, possibly in the form of one app combining everything from television programmes to local news coverage and educational material. This could ultimately see the end of distinct brands such as BBC One or BBC Radio 4, although the programmes they currently air could continue online. I see Freely as being an intermediate step towards a streaming only future. I acknowledge that you see it differently. ---------- Post added at 09:08 ---------- Previous post was at 09:03 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The future of television
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I’ve been clear throughout my view on how I think the market will evolve. Differently and much more slowly than your fanciful, and unevidenced, speculation that often involve claims of commitments from major players that haven’t actually been made, claims aren’t meaningfully binding and claims of unquantified savings from ending linear broadcasting. Your absolutist view leaves you blind to the fact markets often evolve much more slowly, and ‘inferior’ technologies remain much more stubborn when they are the established standard, based on the real world habits (and spending) consumers actually do. You say you don’t want to go round in circles yet the next digital marketing blog, or report paid for by a steaming conglomerate, promoting their own products over others will be held up as gospel that the end is nigh. |
Re: The future of television
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b) "fewer linear broadcast services" ≠ "no linear broadcast services" |
Re: The future of television
TV can be an escape from whatever turmoil is going on in their lives, TV will be here for a long time.
It might change, and even have a Star Trek type holodeck version. |
Re: The future of television
I have just skimmed through this 'discussion'.
Frankly I'm no wiser.I suspect I never will because everyone seems to be argu...discussing completely different issues. So I'll bow out being no wiser. |
Yea I see that alot Maggy.. Threads rarely stay on topic and bickering occurs and then staff gets mad and closes it....
Its hard to have a good CALM discussiom now... (On any site) |
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Ages ago I did read that eventually TV would be in the form of a hologram in the corner of the room! |
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Currently in Bratislava watching the Scotland game on ITVX over a VPN. Not sure the rights holders would be happy but the benefits of the streaming future!
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Re: The future of television
Fox has launched Tubi (add supported) streaming ap.
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