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batye
batye
8/1/2016 12:38:05 AM
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Platinum
Re: OTT Usage Grows
@freehe  yes , but with technology nothing is perfect untill it matures 

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freehe
freehe
7/31/2016 9:18:32 AM
User Rank
Platinum
OTT Usage Grows

OTT is great for those who use it. I love Youtube. I don't use free apps like Skype or Whatsupmessenger, etc. due to security reasons.

OTT quickly growing and will continue to grow as long as cable companies refuse to change their pricing models. Consumers will continue to switch and convert to OTT in an effort to save money.

However, there are some glitches with OTT. I have watched streaming TV shows and in many instances I experienced buffering which was not a big deal since I still have cable. If I only used OTT services that experienced a lot of buffering issues I would have to find other alternatives.

Current companies that offer OTT must implement capacity management to ensure their services will effectively during peak and non-peak times.

Companies also need to ensure their services are not focused on one particular type of consumer.

 

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batye
batye
7/1/2016 3:14:11 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
@dlr5288 with phone it like a trend one year largest screen, next year it shrinks back.... for me size 4' would be perfect :)

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dlr5288
dlr5288
6/30/2016 11:51:14 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
Yes I agree! I'm happy to see that phones are starting to reduce in size again. Personally I like a smaller phone. The bigger iPhones felt like I was talking on an iPad I didn't like it. The prices however...yes still as high as ever!

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elizabethv
elizabethv
6/30/2016 9:56:41 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
@JohnBarnes - that's a great point, tablets definitely don't offer anything unique. I like the analogy of large phones you can't talk into, which is really my take on them. Heaven help us if that's ever an option, phones that big are just ridiculous. (Actually I'm glad phones started getting smaller again. They seem to have kind of tapped out at the Samsung S5 Note and now they are going back again.) Their price doesn't seem to show just how much they lack in versatility though, they still cost a pretty penny, unless you decide to go down the Amazon Fire river. :-) 

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
6/30/2016 7:37:38 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
ElizabethV,

I'm sure you're right that the demand for higher picture quality (as opposed to non-interruption which is probably universal) is  coming from a vocal minority, but is driving large areas of R&D.

And "too busy mumbling at their phones" is what our coming robot overlords/successors should put on our species's headstone, if they give us one.

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
6/29/2016 11:43:53 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
Elizabeth, so far tablets just haven't found anything they do uniquely better than anything else, other than pack flat.  My software engineer stepson cheerfully refers to them as "big phones you can't make calls on," and I think of them as "cramped laptops you can't touch type on."

One truly unique use would change everything.

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elizabethv
elizabethv
6/29/2016 11:17:50 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
@freehe - is it possible those who demand quality are simply a part of the vocal minority? If you don't demand quality, you're probably not as likely to comment about anything, other than possibly wanting more content and greater access. But if you truly want quality, that's more than likely going to be a topic you're willing to vocalize to any and everyone. So perhaps the media companies are hearing demand for more quality, it just isn't really from the majority. We're too busy mumbling at our phones......

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elizabethv
elizabethv
6/29/2016 11:15:26 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Oddly, though, quality is often a secondary feature or side-story
@dcawrey - I think the laptop vs. tablet war was lost when tablets seemed to be slower to come up with the same capabilities and vunctionality as a laptop before laptops learned to just become smaller and lighter. To be fair, my husband loves his tablet, but mostly for movie watching late night (upstairs right now) after the kids have gone to bed. (My kids will sleep through a freight train, but not someone watching TV on our television downstairs.) I still prefer my laptop, even though it's old, and heavier than newer versions. But then I'm slow to part with anything electronic, except cell phones. 

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
6/28/2016 11:31:35 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Video Quailty Bigger Issue
The big problem with a la carte is what used to happen to record stores and bookshops before the coming of the big chains (and long before Amazon): the very short tail.  In a real free market, with limited shelf space, the profits would be in reducing the list to a few consistent best-sellers.  But it's a multiplayer prisonr's dilemma: if every shop did that, they would all make the most they could at every point on the curve, but they would also occupy a much lower part of the curve than if there were a much longer tail (i.e. greater diversity).

This is the same problem faced by video channels today. True a la carte would result in most households having a movie/entertainment aggregator channel, a sports channel, a gossip channel, maybe a news channel they agreed with, traffic, and weather. Nearly everyone would want to have more available, but they wouldn't pay enough for the "more" to justify stealing bandwidth from the really popular channels.  (The law of limited supply in entertainment is Price's Law: If everybody doesn't want it, nobody gets it).

Record companies and publishers used to solve the problem by requiring stores to take mixed boxes of titles by unknowns along with the really popular stuff they wanted. The old Big 3 networks had an informal rule of programming their crappiest stuff against each other's prestige projects.  And to get ESPN nowadays, you have to accept the Giraffe Racing Channel ...

The reason not to give everyone a la carte pricing is that 1) they'd like it for themselves, 2) but they'd have almost nothing to choose from.

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