Comments on: The Internet and the future of TV
You may soon view TV shows directly over the Web instead of subscribing to cable or satellite services.
You may soon view TV shows directly over the Web instead of subscribing to cable or satellite services.
January 2, 2010 6:26 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:56 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:16 PM PST
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the internet without mentioning Apple's recent offerings? As far as
I know, Apple is the only one currently offering "The Future of TV"
with it's iTunes Music Store and episodes of ABC's Lost and
Desperate Housewives. Did I miss something?
the new iPod with video capabilities as an example and I was
surprsied to see absolutely no mention of them.
thanks
your profile and watch anytime, anywhere), but service similar to
cable is already available over the internet here in Japan.
I have access to thousands of Videos on Demand (about $2.50/
view) plus about 30 channels of TV from my DSL provider,
Yahoo! BB.
Info in English here:
http://bbapply.com
Japanese here:
http://kikaku.tvguide.or.jp/movie/index.html
J.P.L.
http://www.channelchanger.typepad.com/
Likewise, the phone companies and cable companies have tried to get through to the FCC and Congress that letting all these experimental technologies access homes through their lines has technical limits and their business models must be considered if these infrastructures are to be maintained (or built in the first place).
No, there's no free lunch. Monopolies have the virtue of ensuring that the playing field will be there, level or not...
Note that the writer (correctly) made no mention of delivering high-quality video from the Net to portable viewers (iPods and the like). This is important. The cable, satellite and music companies know that access to Movie, Television and Music programming is changing; this is the result of a technological process referred to as ?Convergence?. I?d refer you to the 21Jun04 issue of Business Week for more information on that process:
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_25/b3888601.htm
?Apple Computer, which has changed the music industry with its iPod music players and iTunes music store, is trying to do the same thing in the video market.?
And Apple will succeed as long as they realize that the future success of such an endeavor is allowing consumers to transfer such video content to their TV sets rather than their souped up iPods.
?It's easy to see how the old model for TV might evolve and adapt to distribution on the Net as the necessary technology makes its way into the home.?
There is no question about how the old model for TV ?might evolve?; it absolutely will. The change is already taking place. There is no turning back. The companies that recognize that this old model has gone the way of vinyl records will prosper.
?And companies such as Microsoft and Cisco Systems' Linksys home division are developing products that enable Internet video to be viewed on TV sets instead of only on PC screens.?
Some companies are way ahead of the curve in taking advantage of this ?Convergence? process. Brightbox, for one, has the technology (today) to view Internet TV on your TV,
plus a whole lot more. For up to the minute details on how this Convergence phenomenon relates to Brightbox, see my video blog:
http://www.my-video-blog.com/
?Internet search companies like Google are also getting into the Internet TV business. In June, Google launched a new Web-based video search service, which allows people to use keywords to search the company's indexed database of video from content providers that have uploaded video since April.?
Google is perhaps the best known company that is developing the technology to allow consumers to find and access video that is specific to their interests. But there are others, like: BlinkxTV, Yahoo Video, ComFM and MSN Video. These companies can be viewed as the nails that are being driven into the ?old model for TV delivery? coffin.
?Comcast says that its video-on-demand programming is extremely popular. The company has already surpassed one billion total on-demand program views for the year, eclipsing last year's total of 567 million views.?
Yes, but the Comcasts of the world are praying that consumers don?t realize that there is no need to use such cable companies to access video-on-demand (VOD) content. The Internet will provide such content; the video search service companies will make the content available to the consumer, and companies, like Brightbox, will allow the video to be watched most comfortably: on their TV sets in their living rooms.
Where are all those trail blazing media companies?
Lynne Markan
www.realtimemoms.com
broadband. The ideal case is to access same content
everywhere, from livingroom TV to PC, from cell phone to TV.
That is the future of TV. This is hard for a pure networking
company to work with operators, content providers, and also
provide technology. And, yes, US needs to catch-up with other
countries.
- SWANsat to Turn Earth into Wi-Fi Hotspot
- by swansat_kaching August 30, 2006 11:39 PM PDT
- Imagine a series of at least three geosynchronous orbital satellites providing wireless Internet (& HDTV) access to the entire world. That?s exactly what a project called SWANsat or Super-Wide Area Network Satellite plans to do by the year 2011. They intend to be a global broadband Internet service provider that can facilitate up to 600 million connections per satellite. All you need is a handheld mobile device to connect to the system.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(14 Comments)Read more: HYPERLINK "http://www.gizmocafe.com/blogs/gizmo_waydes_blog/archive/2006/08/21/96546.aspx
IOSTAR, SANDIA LABS, ORBITAL. The pioneers of GPS & Teledesic ? together with directors such as 4 Star General Tony McPeak & former secretary of US Air Force (Roche) and former Branch Chief of guided missiles & CEO of Western Digital ? are coming together for intriguing development called SWANsat.
The Teledesic Chief Architect (now President of IOSTAR) recently made this presentation:
HYPERLINK "http://csmarts.colorado.edu/presentationpages/34_future_of_space/page_01.htm"
http://csmarts.colorado.edu/presentationpages/34_future_of_space/page_01.htm (intro-nav page)