![]() |
Re: The future of television
Quote:
|
Re: The future of television
Quote:
Realising they have some spare airtime they could run trailers, or sell adverts. They could even break up the programme itself - giving the advantage of the captive viewer to sell to advertisers. Once they've done this for say, um, 168 hours a week they could publish the sequence in which programming can be viewed first run or, if required, repeat showings to pad it out a bit. They could even explore innovative ways to supply content advertising funded, perhaps to non-subscribers, if only such a transmission system existed that people could receive such programming by default. Broadcast, if you like, into their living rooms in an accessible form. Like you just switched on your TV and it's there. |
Re: The future of television
Streamers (aside from Netflix) often do release one episode per week.
The difference is that once released, you can watch it whenever you want, without having to record it. |
Re: The future of television
If we are going as low as superfast (using the greater than 30 megabits definition) in 2014 the UK had 85-90% coverage. More than enough to stream high definition television at that time and develop a market of over 20 million households.
The notion that there is some kind of “game changer” in terms of progress in content delivery that’s more likely to fall in the next decade than the last one is flawed. |
Re: The future of television
Quote:
I’m not asking for any brownie points, anyhow. I’m just saying what I think. Either I’m right or wrong - no big deal. ---------- Post added at 19:43 ---------- Previous post was at 19:38 ---------- Quote:
Maybe the streamers will also issue subscribers with a free fake portable aerial to put on their TV sets, just to make people of a nervous disposition feel safe…. Maybe they could also reduce picture quality during very hot weather and when it rains heavily so you can kid yourself nothing’s changed. ---------- Post added at 19:45 ---------- Previous post was at 19:43 ---------- Quote:
---------- Post added at 19:47 ---------- Previous post was at 19:45 ---------- Quote:
|
Re: The future of television
The straw man army has new recruits.
As ever you either missed, potentially intentionally, the point being made. That which you are unable or unwilling to answer. Why will the next decade be different from the last? The tech is in place to support the streaming market for the vast, vast, majority of UK households. The economics are now less favourable - they’re no longer minor add ons, often supplementing the existing pay-tv services among those households who do subscribe. They’re becoming higher cost at a time they’re investing ever decreasing amounts in content. The biggest issue for your vision is that rational consumers in the marketplace continue to watch live, linear television. Whether they’ve had access to on demand content and hard drive recorders for twenty years. They still watch. You come up with ludicrous ways for “the streamers” to accommodate the viewing habits of rational viewers (dropping programme once a week) for example that contradicts the viewing habits of the average streaming viewer (to binge). Neither can a streamer command when someone is likely to first watch in the same manner as a linear broadcaster who dictates the time. Streaming still needs the “content aggregator” and someone else to develop the user interface that none of them rationally would want to sign up to. |
Re: The future of television
Quote:
|
Re: The future of television
You say that OB, but you never address the points made to you. Instead opting for some perverse argument nobody made. For example these:
Quote:
|
Re: The future of television
It's a lot cheaper to broadcast to each viewer via DTT than streaming.
The only way that DTT will be switched off (partially or fully) is if too few people use it to make it viable to continue or if the Government decide they want the spectrum to be used for something else. |
Re: The future of television
Quote:
I really can’t see broadcasters not wanting to take advantage of simply uploading streams than going to the bother of scheduling. |
Re: The future of television
Quote:
Public Service Broadcasters distribute where government tells them because it’s part of the licensing terms (or charter terms in the BBC’s case). They don’t get to decide to end DTT broadcast and wait for government to intervene. They must continue to broadcast via DTT unless and until a change in regulation permits them not to. |
Re: The future of television
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: The future of television
ButbutbutOfcomProjectKangaroo
|
Re: The future of television
Quote:
Anyhow, that’s beside the point, I have been making it very clear that this will only happen if the government decides not to intervene. ---------- Post added at 17:25 ---------- Previous post was at 17:23 ---------- Quote:
|
Re: The future of television
Quote:
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 22:23. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum