Interesting Series On The Future Of TV Viewing Choices

sholling

sholling

Audioholic Ninja
This week the Verge is doing a series of articles on the wasteland that is cable TV and the future of TV viewing Choices. The Verge is normally an online tech-toys magazine so I was surprised how interesting the first installment was. Today's article was high level discussion of what's gone wrong with every effort to improve cable TV and also touches on cord cutting. I found a bit meatier than the 50,000 foot view found in most web magazines. Anyway I thought others might find it interesting.

Over the top: the new war for TV is just beginning | The Verge
Explore the ecosystems

This week we're taking a close look at the future of TV and the living room — the great unclaimed space of the technology world. Check back each day for a close look at all the major players, along with a full range of interviews with industry players and reports on everything from the state of remote controls to the future of gaming. Check back later today for a report on smart TVs — and tune in all week for the rest. Here’s a sampling:

Tuesday: Google, Microsoft, Aereo, Boxee CEO Avner Ronen
Wednesday: Amazon, Sony, live sports, TV apps, Condé Nast’s Dawn Ostroff
Thursday: Apple, the state of remotes, Vizio CTO Matt McRae
Friday: Independents, Valve, Netflix
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
That is very interesting. However I fear the capacity of the Internet is not going to keep pace, with the exponentially added AV content. I see a log jam coming soon.

The other issue, is that we seem to be erecting a technological Tower of Babel.
 
sholling

sholling

Audioholic Ninja
Thankfully capacity is a non-issue outside of media hype and the "deregulate us so we can jack up prices" pleas from AT&T. There is no, zip, zero practical capacity limitation on backbone capacity growth and those relatively inexpensive annual growth costs are minor in the scheme of things. The deep dark secret of the industry is that bandwidth is very-very plentiful and dirt cheap for telecoms and cable companies. The only thing that can cost a lot of money is bringing that high speed capability from the local phone company central office to the home and that's a one time investment (running fiber to the home) that keeps getting cheaper and cheaper. So far only Verizon and a few municipalities and co-ops have been willing to invest in fiber to the home and Verizon is all done investing now.

The Bandwidth Hog Does Not Exist - One blogger offers an invitation for ISPs to prove otherwise | DSLReports.com, ISP Information
There's Still No Evidence That Metered Billing Is Necessary - Growth is manageable, companies are profitable, what's the problem? | DSLReports.com, ISP Information
MINTS - Minnesota Internet Traffic Studies
In spite of the widespread claims of continuing and even accelerating growth rates, Internet traffic growth appears to be decelerating. In the United States, there was a brief period of "Internet traffic doubling every 100 days" back in 1995-96, but already by 1997 growth subsided towards an approximate doubling every year CO1998, and more recently even that growth rate has declined towards 50-60% per year. South Korea, which along with Hong Kong appears to be the world champion in Internet traffic intensity, experienced its brief burst of "Internet traffic doubling every 100 days" around the year 2000, when broadband was widely deployed. It then appears to have had several years of annual traffic doubling, but currently (based on anecdotal evidence) is also growing at about 50% per year.

Traffic growth rates of 50% per year appear to only about offset technology advances, as transmission capacity available for a given price steadily increases. Thus although service providers are pushing to throttle customer traffic, an argument can be made that they should instead be encouraging more traffic and new applications, to fill the growing capacity of transmission links, Odl2008.
It's only wireless spectrum that is limited.
 
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