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Re: The future of television
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It was an edgy call in 2014, pushed back at least once, he’s desperately keen to avoid extending once more. Thus the onus is on Sky, Virgin, etc - the multimillion dollar companies you reference - to “make it work”. |
Re: The future of television
Less than half of Generation Z watch broadcast TV
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crgm9z1dpkpo Quote:
I was one of the 12.1 million that watched the New Years Eve fireworks, but other than, there is pretty much nothing for me. The main thing I still used to watch was Doctor Who - I gave up on the current nonsense, besides which its on Disney+ first now anyway. |
Re: The future of television
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You seem more bothered than me about whether that date is actually met spot on, which is a bit silly, really. ---------- Post added at 08:32 ---------- Previous post was at 08:30 ---------- Quote:
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How can a 'cost effective business model' work if you starve the traditional channels of content? Because that's exactly what is happening before your eyes. |
Re: The future of television
Which linear broadcast channels have reduced their hours on the basis of their being less content available?
There’s plenty of content out there. There has never been more content. In practice you have such a dystopian view of the future that the exact same series on a “streamer” would be good and on a linear channel like ITV1 would be bad without consideration of the content at all. |
Re: The future of television
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I’m glad you are perfectly happy with this situation, jfman, but many of us are not, and that’s why so many are resorting to the streamers. Soon, they will stop paying for TV channels altogether, because everything will be on the streamers. The TV channels will either die off naturally or the plug will be pulled at some point. There are more free options coming along now as well, which will encourage Freeview only viewers to opt in as the new Freely service takes over. I’m not ‘gagging’ for all this, which you claim persistently - I am merely observing what I see in front of my eyes. I don’t really understand why you are getting so exercised about it - it’s not me making it happen! |
Re: The future of television
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Re: The future of television
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What’s so special about Virgin Stream over their standard TV packages with recording features? |
Re: The future of television
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Just spent a few days at a holiday park in Cumbria. Wi-fi varied between 4 and 20 meg, 4G got 20-30. Enough to support a handful of “streaming” users at most. |
Re: The future of television
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Freesat and Freeview together provide access to free-to-air TV to more than 99% of the UK population. That’s the level super fast broadband access will have to get to before it is viable enough as an alternative for those services to be switched off. And even then, nobody has yet begun talking about the fact that broadband isn’t free. At present once you pay your TV licence you can access whatever you want. If our TV service goes IP only, then you have to pay for fast broadband service as well. |
Re: The future of television
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I am not looking forward to 2028 when Sky via Satellite is likely to end, and will instead have to rely on the internet. |
Re: The future of television
Does seem a big backward step to depend totally on one broadband connection - phone, tv , and interweb. One outage and you're stuffed for all 3 services. . Atm they are all independent of each other, in my house anyway. Even if the electricity goes down, my old-fashioned land line phone will work (Vm haven't 'upgraded' it to voip yet).
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Re: The future of television
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I am excited by the changes coming, but you are petrified. Why? All I am doing is describing what I believe will soon be reality and drawing attention to the fact that we are getting towards that place. Virgin Stream has the attraction of providing most of the popular streamers, with a watchlist, without having to pay for the TV channels. Haven’t I always described this as what I wanted to happen? The reason I like this is because I have a lot of choice of what I want to watch, with no restriction of when I can watch it. Your views as expressed on here appear to be steeped in the past. I understand that that is how you think, but it won’t stop the streamers from continuing to advance at the expense of the TV channels. ---------- Post added at 20:28 ---------- Previous post was at 20:23 ---------- Quote:
Certain audiences may struggle with broadband speeds initially, but that will be sorted, and frankly, I cannot see TV companies want to continue having two methods of broadcasting, whatever some viewers and jfman think. |
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The difference is I’m able to disassociate in my mind my preferences as a consumer with the marketplace as a whole. Quote:
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