Archive for March 2010
23
The great untold story: Netflix is TV Everywhere!
View Comments | Posted by Chris Dorr in Technology Innovation
Something very dramatic is going on and so far I have seen no good detailed reporting about it.
Netflix is quietly becoming available on massive numbers of TV screens across the US and no one seems to be noticing.
The Netflix streaming service is now available on PS3, XBOX, and Wii, all gaming systems that are hooked up to the internet and to the TV. How many of these boxes are in the US marketplace? 20 Million, 30 million?
Sony, LG, Samsung, Vizio, all the major manufacturers of connected TVs and blu ray players in the US are now shipping these devices preloaded with internet access and Netflix. So by the end of the 2010, will this group of devices be in 15 to 20 million US homes?
Is it possible that by the end of 2010 Netflix will have a base of 50 million homes in the US able to get its streaming service on their TV? If so, this is astounding. It is even astounding at half that number.
A subscription platform with movies and TV shows in SD and HD is available for less than $10 per month. And, by the way, you can also get a DVD shipped to you in the mail, if the program is not available on the streaming service at no additional cost.
Forget HULU, forget Cable VOD–Netflix is becoming ubiquitous and no one seems to be noticing.
Talk about the success of an over the top service that is priced right for the consumer.
Pretty soon, people will be saying, “Why should I use HULU when I can get Netflix on my TV? or Why should I have cable TV if I have Netflix on my TV?
Netflix is TV Everywhere right now!
And no one is talking about it.
21
In this digital age, what is a filmmaker?
View Comments | Posted by Chris Dorr in Independent Film, Technology Innovation
Isn’t it curious in this age where more moving images get created and distributed digitally that there is this group of people who still call themselves “filmmakers”? It seems a term that is so archaic, so analogue, so yesterday’s news. But is it any of these?
I think filmmakers look for three opportunities that truly define them as filmmakers.
They are:
1. The ability to tell a visual story from beginning to end, without any interruption, as a complete, continuous experience. This is what separates them from people who create stories for TV as most TV series are produced with commercial interruptions or different viewings (episodes) in mind.
2. The chance to have an audience gather in a theater and watch this visual story together, as a shared experience in time and space. In the course of a film’s distribution it may be seen in a lot of different settings, public or private, but the filmmaker is making the film with this key audience in mind. This is the primary target of all his/her imaginings.
3. The opportunity to see his/her film with an audience. Filmmakers want to physically experience the film with an audience. The filmmaker wants to see if they laugh or cry when he/she intended, if the audience got the point–to see if their film really succeeded at reaching another human being. As every filmmaker knows who has done this–a genuinely scary moment.
So each of these opportunities really goes to the heart of what is most essential about calling yourself a filmmaker.
Think of them as a set of principles about the relationship between the creator of a film and the audience for which it is intended.
And here is what is most surprising as we move from the analogue past to the digital future.
These opportunities are not disappearing into the analogue past.
In fact, they are just beginning to open up.
Today in the Wall Street Journal I saw that Sony has announced that it will soon be launching a new media platform called Sony Online Service. This service will offer TV shows, movies, songs and games to all its devices.
On January 2, 2001 Apple announced the launch of iTunes, the service that offers TV shows, movies, songs and games to all its devices (and to all PCs whether Apple or not). In September 2009 it announced iTunes 9, the most recent version of the service.
So let me get this straight. Apple is on version 9 of its service and Sony is just announcing the launch of its service (presumably to launch in 2010). According to my math it has taken 9 years for Sony to simply replicate what Apple created. That is right–9 years.
Is this what they call–Speed to Market?
Survival in today’s marketplace requires innovation. Innovation requires focus and speed in execution.
Perhaps there is a fundamental truth revealed in the letters of the new Sony Online Service, as Sony raises its flag and says–SOS!
3
Media and Technology–3 Headlines Say It All!
View Comments | Posted by Chris Dorr in Technology Innovation
If you wanted to know about the state of media and technology today–look no further than these three headlines in the New York Times on 3.3.10.
Disney and Cablevision Take ABC Fight Public
Apple Sues HTC, Saying It Violated Touch-Screen Patents for Phones
Viacom and Hulu Will Part Ways, Removing Comedy Central Shows From the Video Site
It is little too much coming apart, not enough coming together.
