Contributors   |   Messages   |   Polls   |   Resources   |  
Comments
Oldest First | Newest First | Threaded View
<<   <   Page 2 / 2
dcawrey
dcawrey
12/20/2016 7:31:43 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: SlovakTelekom
Local is one of the reasons why I think Netflix's plan for world domination may be problematic. The company can't possibly spend what it does in the US on original content all over the world. Small players like this are going to reap the benefits of following the Netflix OTT model with local flavor. 

50%
50%
Ariella
Ariella
12/20/2016 7:51:00 PM
User Rank
Author
Re: SlovakTelekom
@dcawrey that's true, but perhaps it will  be content just to be able to sell some programming abroad and not necessarily to displace local sources altogether.

50%
50%
JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
12/21/2016 10:35:05 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: SlovakTelekom
Ariella,

Out in the Big Square States, for a couple of generations many small towns and cities had independent NPR stations (down in the reserved low-FM band because they had to be priced below market), which would produce at least some local programming (things like local government meetings, maybe live local musicians, high school sports, etc.). Beginning in the 1990s, the large-city classical stations began a program of hostile takeovers, aided and abetted by NPR policies, in which the community stations were shut down and replaced by translators, i.e. robot FM stations, usually linked by microwave towers or landlines, that simply repeated the signal from the classical station in the big city. Most of the financing for doing this, often over the strenuous objection of local communities, was from fundraising efforts that described translatorization as "bringing classical music to the whole state."

Big bitter fight out here; there's a historic pattern in which Republicans try to shut down as much of public cultural stuff as they can, whereas Democrats fund it but direct the funding to distributing national material and suppress local production. So returning to Slovak OTT, one thing I think we may be seeing there is deployment of the new tech to create a niche where the local can grow and function. I can't imagine that Brussels will be any friendlier in the long run to local culture, though, than Washington/New York have been.

50%
50%
JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
12/21/2016 10:42:39 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: SlovakTelekom
mhhf1ve,

The problem with getting revenue streams out of virtual sports, I suspect, is that the supply is way too elastic. There aren't very many Beckhams and therefore people pay a lot to see someone bend it like Beckham; a handful of people can throw a baseball pitch at 100 mph or sink a dozen 3-pointers in a row, or keep a Formula 1 car on the road in a high speed turn, so you can charge people for the access to seeing those rare stars.

But virtual sports can have virtual players (in fact many already do) whose ability is just a matter of dialing it up or down, or enhancer packages (some sports will surely rely on them). To keep the prices up to an economically viable level, you need something that plays the role of rare talent and/or obsessive training, so that it remains amazing that a person can do the thing you're paying to see.

50%
50%
dlr5288
dlr5288
12/30/2016 1:55:04 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: SlovakTelekom
I agree. I think Netflix in the US will remain popular and continue to grow, but the rest of the world...I just don't see it working.

50%
50%
mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
1/4/2017 8:48:39 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: SlovakTelekom
> "But virtual sports can have virtual players (in fact many already do) whose ability is just a matter of dialing it up or down.."

Hmm. I'm not so sure that the supply of talented gamers is as plentiful as you might think. There are tournaments that pit human players against other teams of human players, and AI bots would just get destroyed in that game because the skill necessary is so high. Sure, AI is catching up -- as evidenced by Google's AlphaGo that just beat a human expert at Go. But playing some strategy games isn't going to be a thing for AI for a while.

And by your argument, maybe F1 and Nascar's days are numbered if self-driving cars can make it around a track with other cars....?

50%
50%
<<   <   Page 2 / 2


Latest Articles
Italy's 5G auction could exceed a government target of raising €2.5 billion ($2.9 billion) after attracting interest from companies outside the mobile market.
The emerging-markets operator is focusing on the humdrum business of connectivity and keeping quiet about some of its ill-fated 'digitalization' efforts.
Three UK has picked Huawei over existing radio access network suppliers Nokia and Samsung to build its 5G network.
Vendor says that it's its biggest 5G deal to date.
Verizon skates where the puck is going by waiting for standards-based 5G devices to launch its mobile service in 2019.
On-the-Air Thursdays Digital Audio
Orange has been one of the leading proponents of SDN and NFV. In this Telco Transformation radio show, Orange's John Isch provides some perspective on his company's NFV/SDN journey.
Special Huawei Video
10/16/2017
Huawei Network Transformation Seminar
The adoption of virtualization technology and cloud architectures by telecom network operators is now well underway but there is still a long way to go before the transition to an era of Network Functions Cloudification (NFC) is complete.
Video
The Small Cell Forum's CEO Sue Monahan says that small cells will be crucial for indoor 5G coverage, but challenges around business models, siting ...
People, strategy, a strong technology roadmap and new business processes are the key underpinnings of Telstra's digital transformation, COO Robyn ...
Eric Bozich, vice president of products and marketing at CenturyLink, talks about the challenges and opportunities of integrating Level 3 into ...
Epsilon's Mark Daley, director of digital strategy and business development, talks about digital transformation from a wholesale service provider ...
Bill Walker, CenturyLink's director of network architecture, shares his insights on why training isn't enough for IT employees and traditional ...
All Videos
Telco Transformation
About Us     Contact Us     Help     Register     Twitter     Facebook     RSS
Copyright © 2024 Light Reading, part of Informa Tech,
a division of Informa PLC. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Terms of Use
in partnership with