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With the help of someone up there, I got this email from a website I never visited and they put my attention on this mobile TV. The mobile TV in itself isn't a novelty. Ten years ago you saw sporadically, really hip people(...), with this handhelds, only able to see channel 1,2,3, in a rather poor state to. Combining mobile phones, wireless digital technology and TV is a very interesting one. One could question the expected succes, but it's filosophical implications and it's technical opportunities makes it very interesting. The mobile TV never became a groundbreaking succes. Why? I can only wonder. The limited amount of channels? The not so astonishing screen quality? The price? Or is it just that people don't want to watch TV "on the road"? I have no idea? Why did CD-i failed and the CD-ROM and later the DVD did succeed? KPN is not the first one I noticed: http://www.zdnet.be/supercenter.cfm?id=28809&scid=13 and http://www.zdnet.be/news.cfm?id=36480 . For the boys, Playboy TV on a little, very tiny screen: http://www.portablegear.nl/nieuws-detail.htm?NID=1689
Although a lot of people are very sceptic the phone companies, hardware(NEC, SAMSUNG) as well as software(KPN, Telfort) are seriously pushing this new application forward. How then could this new technology be implemented in my paper? I already mentioned remediation, but I don't think I want to emphasize too much on that. How about "textual poaching", a theory I find very interesting. Digital television has the ability, like in England is already the case, to watch whatever program at a particular time that suits you best. This gives you the opportunity to determin your own tv-flow. Perhaps it will become possible to take pieces out of every program and edit your own program. Off course, this is already possible with VCR, and digitalized footage(online), but never mobile. Direct communication with images and scenes from tv. Upload a blog directly with video: a videoblog. This combined with the already existing possibility to videotape with your phone increases the vitality of communication and sharing information. What I find interesting is how they going to treat the problem of advertising. To do this, I will have to take a close look at England. I will have to find out whether it is succesfull, how they handle advertisement et cetera. http://www.technologyreview.com/purchase/pdf_dl.asp?79juh=19177&hy6f0=1176 A quick scan of this text tells me that at moment of writing(November 2001) 20% of British households subscribed to digi-tv. A quick tour on the http://www.sky.com site showed a euphorius look from the company about the company itself. http://media.corporate-ir.net/media_files/lse/bsy.uk/reports/2003AR/2003AR/skycorporate/flash.html. At the end of 2003, SKY reached up to almost 7 million subscribers out of a total population of approx 60,000,000(http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=185), which means an estimated amount of 22,000,000 households. A quick calculation tells us that about 30% of the households have been subscribed to digi-tv. Further investigation have to point out how advertising works on digital TV. This will provide a little insight how this issue will be treated with mobile (digital) TV. Unfortenately I am going to be kicked out of the library any minute, so I have to continue tomorrow morning. Hope I will have the time to finish it. Sleep well. |
| Eelco May 28, 2004 01:46 PM PDT I think there a lot of reasons why CD-I failed, but that wasn't really what I was aiming at. But maybe you're right about TV historically used as a passive medium(what about teletekst then?) and it takes some time to adjust to a more interactive switch in the mind. | ||
| Jules May 27, 2004 10:28 PM PDT Maybe CD-I never was succesful because: -Bad hardware/software -even worse content -People often show very conservative behaviour... TV is for passive, relax entertainment (as is DVD). CD-ROM for active participation... So what about game consoles? Maybe people start to get used to TV become more of an active medium... BTW... mobile TV: take a look at Sony's PSP, Nintendo's Gameboy system and the upcoming video iPod (not that I think Apple wil make a portable video player). | ||
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