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Re: The future of television
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No adverts, undoubtedly appealing to anyone who watches television, has been debunked. Quick movement of "streamers" into the top tier of sports rights has not came to pass. Quote:
Nor would a content owner have additional rights costs in broadcasting both. Quote:
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Re: The future of television
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Not at all your favourite ‘straw man’ scenario. Your argument is based on viewer preferences, whereas I am saying that the broadcasters, not the viewers, will determine the position. Quote:
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Re: The future of television
There must be better causes in your life OB? How about supporting John Redwood in his hour of need , or saving the Panda, or Wokingham Town FC ? They need your support more than streaming TV :).
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Re: The future of television
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The viewing preferences for the public as a whole are a matter of public record across linear, on demand, etc. through ratings and Ofcom surveys. I understand the value of content in a technologically agnostic way, not that I expect rights holders would necessarily approve of me taking up services not targeted at the UK. I don’t sit there and be a slave to whatever the Netflix window wants to promote to me because 20,000 or less people watched it in the UK in the last 7 days and make an assumption of quality on that basis. ---------- Post added at 21:28 ---------- Previous post was at 21:21 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The future of television
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You are also incorrect in stating that this supposed USP was that you could ‘skip ads’. This is incorrect. You don’t need to skip ads if the ads aren’t there in the first place. The USP was clearly the vast video library at one’s fingertips, which you could select from just like Blockbusters, but without getting out of your armchair. Other streamers such as Amazon Prime were set up on a similar basis, without ads. As time has passed, and after shedloads of money have been spent on content, and debts have mounted due to the initial investment and the need to continue to create more and more originals of a suitable quality, the streamers have hit on the idea of cheaper subscriptions with ads that people can opt for, increasing their customer base while increasing yield still further with the money gained from commercials. Note that the absence of ads on the premium package has been preserved, and with time I hope the streamers will provide a more limited library with ads free of charge to increase their audience and revenue from advertising still further. Quote:
Channel 5 has even taken to making the first episode of a series available on its channel and telling us that to see the rest, we have to go to the streamer. Open your eyes, jfman. What you keep saying is impossible is already happening. Quote:
I am well aware that at present, many people consume TV through the ‘linear’ channels as well as through streaming. I am also well aware that a lot of people currently watch scheduled TV only. What is your point? What I have been saying is that in the future, that choice may not, and probably will not, be available. People can’t watch on a service that has been pulled. I don’t know why you perceive me being in a ‘rage’ about this. You’re the one relentlessly picking over the bones on this subject like your life depended on it. I could ask you why you keep carrying on with this same old argument. You may disagree, which is your right, but you are so determined to have everyone believe that I am wrong, you just can’t leave it alone, can you? I am opining over nothing. As long as I have choices, as I have now, I am happy. The demise of ‘linear’ TV is simply my view of what I see as where this is all leading. You don’t see it. Fine. Watch and learn. Quote:
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I’m not making anything happen. I’m observing. You are burying your head in the sand with your fingers in your ears singing “La la la” at the top of your voice. Quote:
You say the move to digital only would be ‘arbitrary and needless’ despite the evidence that transmitters will be used for other purposes in the next decade and that most homes are now connected to broadband. It is also what the broadcasters are pushing for. Transmitters and satellite transponders are expensive, and it costs more to run ‘linear’ channels than it does to add content to a streamer. It is not a matter of ‘what the public want’ which you keep repeating over and over. It’s what the broadcasters decide - why don’t you get that? People cannot tap into a service that doesn’t exist. The rest of your point is rather vague - I don’t get the point you are making. Nobody is a slave to Netflix, but many people are slaves to the schedules. |
Re: The future of television
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Why would Channel 5, keen to promote it's content, readily give up it's position of being beamed free to air into 28 million households? Quote:
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No broadcaster on DTT is going to readily give up these positions. It's free money, raises their profile and complements their streaming offering. I'm not sure how you can claim to be completely indifferent given the words you are devoting to this despite no indication from the regulator, the BBC, ITV, Sky or any of the other major broadcasters that they have plans to cease their broadcast linear television offerings. Even if they did, there's no indication they won't attempt to create a linear-over-IP offering to cement their own status at the top of EPGs as everyone switches on their television. You say 'watch and learn' as if you have a track record of being correct. |
Re: The future of television
Sigh! Why don't/can't you two agree to disagree and move on?
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Re: The future of television
I predict the future of TV will more hardware gimmicks to get the punters to shell out for new screens, increased ads with no ff facility, less original UK content/production. Repeated increased channels / increased imported crap. ie. An increase in quantity, decrease in quality. Everything to increase profits and disadvantage the consumer.
Try the radio or your local theatre instead :) |
Re: The future of television
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Thanks for the intervention. |
Re: The future of television
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https://www.cableforum.uk/board/show...&postcount=324 |
Re: The future of television
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I believe you had a point about the difficulty in including ads in the stream, but I don’t think Netflix wanted to incorporate ads when it started off. I think they probably thought that global income would more than cover their costs and make them a nice handsome profit. Either that was a miscalculation, there was too much uncontrolled expenditure on content or perhaps they didn’t anticipate the amount of competition there would be with all these other streamers getting in on the act. But a cheaper or free ads option was an obvious step to take as the market started to mature. |
Re: The future of television
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Here’s a gem from the same thread: https://www.cableforum.uk/board/atta...1&d=1724503154 https://www.cableforum.uk/board/show...4&postcount=66 But don’t forget, he never said, or implied, that he was predicting the landscape in 10 years. Honest. |
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Re: The future of television
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I've equally no interest in your circuitous nonsense - however to that end it'd be helpful if you didn't resort to ad-hominem attacks, skewed by your interpretation that I have a preference for linear broadcasting. I personally do not - most of my viewing (aside the BBC, or live sport) has been time shifted since the advent of Sky+, however I'm capable of commenting on the whole marketplace as distinct from my own viewing habits, noting that a change on the scale that you predict often requires significant regulatory intervention to facilitate it (e.g. digital switch over). I'll leave you to address the posts by spiderplant or Chris for the time being. |
Re: The future of television
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I think most people agree that things look very different now, with about half the viewing now through the streamers. Think what a difference another decade will make. |
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