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Re: The future for linear TV channels
Yes, good article, bringing out the point that linear TV channels will have to re-invent themselves to survive. I'm not sure how they will do this in order to retain sufficient viewers, which is why I have been pessimistic about their ability survive. Maybe one of the answers is more interactive programmes so that viewers can participate, which you cannot do with on demand.
Where I disagree with the item is the assertion that live tv can only be broadcast via linear tv channels. We have discussed already the fact that live tv can be streamed. Talking of which.... http://www.csimagazine.com/csi/Faceb...ball-match.php |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
Nice to see you still have your rose tinted glasses on OB.;)
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Re: The future for linear TV channels
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It makes no difference whether the broadcast is over terrestrial, satellite, coaxial cable or IP. A live channel, requiring by its nature a schedule, is a linear channel. |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
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Forgive my shorthand, but I don't think most people are concerned with the semantics you are employing to avoid the subject. To be clear, there is no dispute that a live channel includes streaming. However, the user does notice a very big difference between the two. So if the conventional TV channels are replaced entirely by on demand and streaming services, this will make a big difference to the perception of TV viewing to the man in the street. |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
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That is precisely the semantic gymnastics I'm talking about. There is nothing in your original postings, over the first couple of months of this thread, that will back up your claim that you were actually referring to broadcast technology rather than the linear nature of programming. Quite the opposite in fact. |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
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He may get confused about whether something is broadcast or not, or whether a programme is live or not, but he has been pretty consistent all along. Linear programmes aka live shows, will be around probably forever. I don't see live news, football stopping anytime soon. But whether linear tv channels will be around in the years and decades ahead is arguable. Very. All the evidence says they won't. The only real mistake he made was in his first post in thinking that the BBC was going to be launching some revolutionary new show that would blur the lines between linear tv and on demand. I thought the same as him. I assumed we would be able to go into iplayer, on demand, and watch Victoria Derbyshire live. That was wrong, but it is clear what he was saying from the very beginning. I'm on Old Boy's side on this one! |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
Thank you, Horizon. Chris knows what I mean but I'm afraid he is being deliberately argumentative.
The points he makes I have answered on a number of occasions now. I am really not trying to avoid the issues and he has made some useful points about capacity. The language I have used is populist rather than technical and I apologise for any genuine confusion about that. However, I am certainly not the only one who does this either on the forum or in comparison with other articles. Most people refer to the BBC iPlayer as an on demand service and fail to distinguish the separate live streaming part of it as anything different. |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
.... its because sometimes you are confusing different things, ie using the word streamed, which can have different meanings. When you say streamed, you are thinking of it in on demand terms, I believe. Whereas others here are thinking of it as another way to "broadcast" channels. It can be both and that's one of the things causing confusion. You can have streamed a live linear channel, a non-live linear channel, a live on demand programme and a non-live on demand programme.
====== Where we are at now is a stepping stone. We have linear tv channels, both free and pay tv channels. We also have on demand in its various forms. THe next step is that the on demand part will get far more intelligent. Over time the menus on Netflix etc will go, perhaps in the medium term with some form of avator that presents a mixture of live, scheduled shows and non-live shows. Ultimately, you will switch on the tv to watch only one tv "channel". As an example, the tv will know that you like to watch Coronation Street, EastEnders and football. But on this day both EastEnders and the football are on at the same time. So the tv "channel" presents you with Corrie at 7.30pm, live football at 8pm and Eastenders at 10pm. To all intents and purposes, you have watched a linear schedule on a linear channel, except its nothing of the kind and I reckon this will happen within the next 10-20 years, if not a lot sooner. |
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Now that's not true in all instances, as some streaming services do allow downloads (Amazon Video, All 4 and iPlayer spring to mind), but that is streaming from a technical point of view. It's also worth noting that that definition is not tied to any particular technology or platform. All digital TV services do it, regardless of whether they are broadcast via Satellite, Cable, Terrestrial TV or IPTV over the internet. It's also the same definition used in computing. Games, for instance, often don't load entire levels into memory (even with many gigs of RAM, there wouldn't be room for some game levels). They either load a section of a level or map (the process is often hidden from the user by playing a cut scene while the section is loading), or stream sections into memory as and when needed. ---------- Post added at 15:47 ---------- Previous post was at 15:41 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The future for linear TV channels
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Totally agree, and good post Horizon......... |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
Thank you, Stuart and Horizon, for explaining the technical differences, these must be the most helpful posts we have seen on here.
As far as Netflix is concerned, Stuart, I don't mind if they include commercials in the future, as long as they always provide a subscription alternative. At least this would ensure that everyone can be included in this digital revolution. |
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When I invited him to repost his (probably revised) position on the topic using the correct terms he told me no-one but a few awkward types cared about the different meanings. And yet they clearly greatly affect his central claim. |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
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Despite going on and on about these fine differences, why not concentrate on what you know is the suggestion - that our conventional broadcast channels will ultimately die off as analogue has done? Stuart and Horizon have done a good job at explaining those differences so now we can all understand. Now let's move on, for pity's sake. |
Re: The future for linear TV channels
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Both are conventional linear, scheduled channels and can be accessed via conventional DSAT or cable, but both are also streamed. The linear channel is not, and cannot be, on demand. Content from both is, of course, available on demand. But than that's not linear. Words have meanings. Conversations are easiest when people stick to those meanings. As for your fall back that traditionally broadcast channels via DTT, DSAT and cable will one day vanish or all move online - why? I've shown you before how the costs of DTT and DSAT are fixed regardless of the numbers of people viewing - why would the broadcasters move to stream them when it costs more the more people who are viewing? Why would viewers ditch the shows they already love in favour of something else just because it happens to be on demand? EastEnders fans will continue watching BBC One for as long as Eastenders is on BBC One, ditto ITV and Corrie. Netflix and Amazon don't have those shows and people like to watch them live. So what real-world event will make them switch? |
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The premise is that those channels set out on the EPG will slowly start to disappear. I am not sure why you are questioning why broadcasters will change to on demand/streaming services. They are doing it already. This is why a question remains about why they would bother maintaining the conventional channels if they were no longer profitable. |
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