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Re: The future of television
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Re: The future of television
https://www.forbes.com/sites/bradadg...ing-heres-why/
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Re: The future of television
Exactly. Broadcast is the shop window. A chunk of people will watch live, or near-live, and those who catch on to a new series weeks late can get it via streaming.
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My wife frequently watches episode 1 of something on broadcast then immediately watches the rest of them on demand
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Re: The future of television
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The future of the NHS maybe does, or climate change, or whether you've put the bins out? ( because Mrs OB certainly won't have done it ;) ) |
Re: The future of television
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---------- Post added at 23:56 ---------- Previous post was at 23:49 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The future of television
I prefer to record my programmes rather than stream them as streaming services have expiry dates and sometimes don't have subtitles. They also don't have QuickView (though as Virgin are phasing this out, this is now a moot point),
I had hoped that if linear TV channels ended up being streamed instead of the traditional way, that the technology would allow us to continue recording them. However, i've now discovered that ITV and (from the 27th) the BBC are to limit what you have recorded onto your hard drive to what's available via VOD if you receive your TV signal over the Internet on EE or BT TV. I'm sure that this will be rolled out to other platforms and by other broadcasters for any devices with a recording facility (though the new Sky & Virgin streaming boxes don't have recording facilities anyway). There's the usual spin about how TV is evolving and how it will benefit the consumer. How, exactly? If you record something not available on VOD, you won't be able to watch it. If it expires, you'll no longer be able to watch it. I suspect that you'll no longer be able to FF through adverts on the commercial channels on your own recordings too. https://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.ph...g-feature.html |
Re: The future of television
I have not seen any streaming services for a while that do not offer subtitles. I'm sure it is a requirement now. Heck the iplayer sometimes adds sign language options for show now. It's all about accessibility for everyone.
Sky and Virgin main tv boxes still have the ability to record. The only ones that don't are their new streaming boxes they offer. |
Re: The future of television
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Oh wait, there is. |
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I suspect that any systems that still allow recordings will eventually adopt this system though. This will mean that we will have gone full circle to the days when viewers had no way to avoid the adverts being played out (unless they pay) and to a situation where TV channels control what is watched, only this time they will be able to harvest and possibly sell our data. Perhaps it will also be used to detect TV Licence evasion too?? |
Re: The future of television
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Re: The future of television
Very meta… ;)
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