Tom Young
Member
- Location
- Illinois/Florida
I believe that we are on the edge of a revolution involving TV, Video, Cable, Satellite, Broadcast TV, Movies, Internet, Cell phones, Tablets, Desktops, Laptops, LAN's, Media Players, Content Providers, Broadcast networks, CD's, DVD's, Retail Media Content, Theaters, Advertising, News, Sports and Inter/intra personal communication in general.
Without going into detail, my thinking is that we are in a transition that will dwarf any technilogical or industrial revolutionary period in history... Furthermore, that the diversity represented by the factors listed above, will merge, in relatively short time, to a single encompassing means of tranmitting visual and audio information.
The technology is outrunning the frameworks that currently exist, and the profit models that exist today will also shortly implode, as new means of avoiding "pay as you go" emerge.
One has only to look at the mergers and acquisitions that are forming to see the power struggle to capture the pocketbook of the people. The mass confusion that exists today between smart phones, internet, cable and satellite is gradually filtering down to the individual, who is looking for a magic formula to reduce expense. Laws about exclusivity, copyright, royalties are no longer enforceable, and are being broken every day by startups, working with legal impunity. Virtually every movie that has been made, is available within hours of release to any 12 year old with acces to the internet... for free.
The subject is so broad that a comprehensive explanation is vitually impossible and the whole of this impending revolution is greater than the sum of its' parts.
One place to start is with the general subject of media players which come under many names. Built in to newer TV's, Apple TV, Roku, Sony and Western Digital media plaayers, RCA, Chromecast, XBox, dlink and diamond media players, and many more, on the way.
The media Player is just a start. We all know about the content providers... Hulu, Netflix, Amazon, and the major network providers, but those of you who have a Roku, now see many dozens of "TV Channels" ... Channels... not indiviual shows. Specialty channels that provide access to everything from local highschool football, to "women's makeup" channels.. and with a few developer tweaks... access to all of YouTube.
For those who are willing to break an unenforecable law, Googling "Free_____________ (name of any new release movie) will bring up an offshore or a pirate website that will allow free downloading.
The upcoming AreoTV will allow the dropping of cable or satellite TV by providing over the air TV major network programmming through a small antenna, and controlled over the internet.
Google is looking at spreading wifi through the use of balloons... stationary over a service area... inlieu of expensive satellite broadcasting, and there are many other experimental transmission means udergoing development.
I don't pretend to be an authority on this, but have been watching bits and pieces falling together, and accellerating to the point that what's new today is already old. Tech savvy people are scrambling to find ways of cutting the cable, eliminating commercials, and going 100% to on demand services. The FCC has lost control of the most simple rules and regulation, and chaos is raising its head as the commercial interests try to stay ahead of the tech savvy and the pirates.
Just out of curiosity, I wonder how many seniors are into this digital revolution. Would like to see input of any type here, because it's happening now. To start off, anything about media players?
Without going into detail, my thinking is that we are in a transition that will dwarf any technilogical or industrial revolutionary period in history... Furthermore, that the diversity represented by the factors listed above, will merge, in relatively short time, to a single encompassing means of tranmitting visual and audio information.
The technology is outrunning the frameworks that currently exist, and the profit models that exist today will also shortly implode, as new means of avoiding "pay as you go" emerge.
One has only to look at the mergers and acquisitions that are forming to see the power struggle to capture the pocketbook of the people. The mass confusion that exists today between smart phones, internet, cable and satellite is gradually filtering down to the individual, who is looking for a magic formula to reduce expense. Laws about exclusivity, copyright, royalties are no longer enforceable, and are being broken every day by startups, working with legal impunity. Virtually every movie that has been made, is available within hours of release to any 12 year old with acces to the internet... for free.
The subject is so broad that a comprehensive explanation is vitually impossible and the whole of this impending revolution is greater than the sum of its' parts.
One place to start is with the general subject of media players which come under many names. Built in to newer TV's, Apple TV, Roku, Sony and Western Digital media plaayers, RCA, Chromecast, XBox, dlink and diamond media players, and many more, on the way.
The media Player is just a start. We all know about the content providers... Hulu, Netflix, Amazon, and the major network providers, but those of you who have a Roku, now see many dozens of "TV Channels" ... Channels... not indiviual shows. Specialty channels that provide access to everything from local highschool football, to "women's makeup" channels.. and with a few developer tweaks... access to all of YouTube.
For those who are willing to break an unenforecable law, Googling "Free_____________ (name of any new release movie) will bring up an offshore or a pirate website that will allow free downloading.
The upcoming AreoTV will allow the dropping of cable or satellite TV by providing over the air TV major network programmming through a small antenna, and controlled over the internet.
Google is looking at spreading wifi through the use of balloons... stationary over a service area... inlieu of expensive satellite broadcasting, and there are many other experimental transmission means udergoing development.
I don't pretend to be an authority on this, but have been watching bits and pieces falling together, and accellerating to the point that what's new today is already old. Tech savvy people are scrambling to find ways of cutting the cable, eliminating commercials, and going 100% to on demand services. The FCC has lost control of the most simple rules and regulation, and chaos is raising its head as the commercial interests try to stay ahead of the tech savvy and the pirates.
Just out of curiosity, I wonder how many seniors are into this digital revolution. Would like to see input of any type here, because it's happening now. To start off, anything about media players?
