NYT: 14 Media & Technology Convergence Trends 100
securitas writes "The New York Times Business/Media section looks at 14 media and technology industry convergence trends and ideas to watch in 2004 (Google link). Trends range from the stampede to flat-screen TV/display business, Japan's 3G mobile phone experiment, biometrics as a global ID system for security, identification and authentication, the impact of PVRs (personal video recorders), Internet advertising and paid search engine listings, the Google IPO and venture capital technology investment, what the movie studios call piracy but what is really copyright infringement, and many other trends and ideas. It will take you a while to read through all 14 pages, but it's definitely good food for thought. Which 2004 technology and media trends and ideas did the New York Times staff miss? Discuss."
Technology convergence they missed... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Technology convergence they missed... (Score:2)
Actually, that's not redundant. It is apparent that the Beagle 2 hit Mars a little too hard. It is also apparent that the article missed that convergence. So there's no redundancy, and it's also not redundant.
Re:Technology convergence they missed... (Score:1)
One they didn't, but forgot to name. (Score:2, Insightful)
Unbelievably, after watching TV stations lower the bar, the newspapers instead of leading, have decided to follow into the darkage. The NYT, appearently being no exception. "I've got a fantastic idea, instead of researhing a story, which is hard, or just making shit up, which is almost as hard, why don't we just mention a lot of trends together and fill up th
Re:what they missed (Score:1, Interesting)
Remember, kiddies, if a grown-up asks you a question and the answer is none of their damn business, then it isn't really lying.
They want the information to work out what kind of adverts to show you {according to the following: poor
It will take you a while to read through... (Score:3, Funny)
New Dot Com Boom? (Score:2, Funny)
Worldwide media releases.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:1)
This is related to location but entirely. But either way I think you are right about the growing convergence of media release schedules.
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:1)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:1)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:2)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:2)
I have a better idea, why not just buy one for every possible region? Hmmmm?!
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:2)
Where are you getting HBO in Canada?
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:2)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:1)
Re:Not THAT huge of an issue (Score:1)
The DVD region system is one of my pet peeves. However, I don't think it will ever be a big deal in the U.S. Just about everyone here is happy as long as they can get their "Bad Boys II" and Hillary Duff movies.
Meh, there are DVD players for those of us who aren't willing to limit our selection of movies to one region. I'm using a Sampo now and regularly watch PAL encoded media from another region on my NTSC television with no problem at all.
Who's Hillary Duff?That is not region encoding (Score:2)
You are confusing two issues: the PAL vs NTSC incimpatibility, and the region coding system.
Most players can play PAL DVD's on NTSC. However, only some are region-free. The Sampo line happens to be pretty good at the region-free problem as well, but whether or not the playe
Re:That is not region encoding (Score:1)
You are confusing two issues: the PAL vs NTSC incimpatibility, and the region coding system.
Actually, I was trying to address both compatibility issues at once. My Sampo will play DVDs from any region in addition to "region-free" discs. Overriding the region codes alone isn't enough to watch content created for a different television standard.
Re:Worldwide media releases.... (Score:2)
What about choir singing of the Coldplay's "We Live In A Beautiful World" of Coldplay fans worldwide via audio-equipped instant messengers, the day the regions die?
Re:Worldwide media releases.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Worldwide media releases.... (Score:1)
Re:Worldwide media releases.... (Score:2, Insightful)
One must remember that mature sectors like these hate risks. Most of what they do now - lawsuits, technological barriers, lobbying, cartels, hyper advertising/marketing, etc. - are 'simply' means to remove uncertainty and avoid risk. The goal being to ensure a predictable, stable-or-increasing, revenue stream.
Consider the situation if most of the obstacles - artificial scarcity, et al., that we lament over today - wer
Re:Worldwide media releases.... (Score:1)
As for the semantics: hating risks doesn't mean not taking risks. Obviously, nothing is ever 100% risk free. Doing business is, to a fair extent, to take risks. Calculated risks; avoid if possible, minimize if not.
Like I said, this is especially true in mature sectors/markets, where:
Re:Worldwide media releases.... (Score:1)
new tech (Score:2, Insightful)
See previous story... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:See previous story... (Score:2, Insightful)
Barratry as a business model (Score:5, Insightful)
However, I don't see it as a long-term trend, since nature abhors a vacuum and as long as there is a want/need, there will be people trying to fulfill that need and legalities be damned.
Re:Barratry as a business model (Score:2)
I wish I shared your optimism. Unless something drastic happens, I can see this continuing. What I'd like to see would be for the mass media to actually pick up on the RIAA's scattergun tactics, and for the negative press to cause stock prices in the various RIAA member companies to plummet. Ah, I can dream.
Re:Barratry as a business model (Score:2)
Actually your dream is coming true.
The RIAA companies are all owned by five global media corporations that are obsessed with both merging with each other for the benefit only of their chief executives, and the dumping of their music divisions onto one of the other chumps who still believe that these divisions can continue to be profitable in the future.
As a result their stock pri
Re:Parent Offtopic; MOD DOWN! (Score:2)
Piracy: Studios Fight Piracy With Education [nytimes.com]
The text actually states that the MPAA is using lawsuits as a method for protecting their interests because "few in Hollywood are confident that such [technological] approaches can stop piracy in the long run". So instead of using available technology to protects these movies and other media, they continue business as usual on the product front and step up the lawsuit front to deal with their lack of innovation.
This is entirely on-topic.
Re:Parent Offtopic; MOD DOWN! (Score:1)
You're new here, aren't you?
Re:Barratry as a business model (Score:2)
OTOH, it's possible to get a list of the RIAA members, and at least refuse to patronize them. This basicaly leads to not buying anything carried by Tower Records, but I don't anymore.
Equivalently, I will only see foreign films. Or occasionally I'll rent an old video (they get almost no profit from that...and none directly).
If you patronize those who engage in this busine
Re:Barratry as a business model (Score:2)
Trust me, I'm well aware of whom I am implicating when I use the cover-all term of RIAA or MPAA. While I have to
Re:Barratry as a business model (Score:2)
T
"Barratry" definition - links tommck! (Score:1)
barratry [reference.com], n. (pl. barratries)
idea (Score:1, Funny)
NYT: Hey guys, we need more synergy between our media and our technology. Let's put the newspaper online, and then make people register to view it. That way, we can scrape their personal information and charge more for advertising!
missed conceptions (Score:1, Funny)
Hey! >:| um Happy New Year and stuff
I believe the term is.. (Score:3, Informative)
On Projection TV's and PVR's (Score:5, Interesting)
1. I think projection TV's are going to be an interesting race between OLED and new generation "slimline" rear-projection TV's that use DLP, LCD or LCOS technologies. Plasma displays (in my humble opinion) will become a passing fad due to the fact that plasma TV's tend to lose picture quality after a few years of use.
2. PVR's will become much more common in the next few years, especially with the lowering of hardware costs and the increasing capacity of hard disk drives (TiVo PVR's with 400 GB hard drives could arrive within 24 months). Also, what we may see PVR's do fairly soon is updating programming information using data piggybacked on a broadcast signal instead of having to "call back" using a telephone line or an Ethernet connection.
Re:On Projection TV's and PVR's (Score:1)
If you're not mentioning two 200 GB hard drives, i think that's difficult to happen because data density in hard disks are near it's limits.
If the magnetic crystals that hold the data get very small they can loose their magnetic charge easily, don't being able to hold data reliably.
And also is difficult to reduce the size of the drive heads, that also need to be very small.
I bet using better compression on PVR is a better solution to incre
Re:On Projection TV's and PVR's (Score:2)
1. Replace hard drive technology as we see it today... as in not a rotating mass with magnetism being the storage transfer medium.
2. Make them a bit bigger. Why not make the ultra-high-storage drive fit in a full size 5"+ drive bay? We all have em (well, except for the tivo application possibl
Re:On Projection TV's and PVR's (Score:2)
Re:On Projection TV's and PVR's (Score:1)
The combo DirecTV/TiVo units already do this. They get the program listings over the satellite. The phone is only used for recording pay-per-view transactions, for downloading software updates, and perhaps a few other things.
Re:On Projection TV's and PVR's (Score:2)
I think it's theoretically possible to have TiVo work on a one-way data connection since what you really need is program listing updates and updates to the software, which can be transmitted as a piggyback signal to the standard broadcast signal at preset intervals. You do need two-wa
15th media and technology convergence trend (Score:4, Insightful)
How the hell did the NY Times miss that?
They totally missed the convergence... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:They totally missed the convergence... (Score:2)
Disregard that (Score:2)
Stupid privacy advocate... (Score:1)
Impact of PVRs? Great so far (Score:2)
too many links (Score:3, Insightful)
In keeping with submitters' tendencies to link to every single page on the web in the hopes of making the front page, I propose that all slashdot articles have links on every character of every word. For example:
S [slashdot.com] l [slashdot.com] a [slashdot.com] s [slashdot.com] h [slashdot.com] d [slashdot.com] o [slashdot.com] t [slashdot.com].
Wouldn't want to miss any trivial pieces of information, after all.
Re:too many links (Score:2)
Oh, how I long for the days when you could only use "http://slashdot.org". None of that "www" crap for us nerds!
VOIP (Score:2)
We need verification - NOT identification (Score:1, Interesting)
Wired recently ran an article about the advances in verification. It's at:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.01/start.htm l?tw=wn_tophead_7 [wired.com]
Re:We need verification - NOT identification (Score:1)
I am making Free Fingerprint Imaging Software [sourceforge.net] and have added you link. I also have the gelatin Artificial Gummy Fingers [schneier.com], link. And a link to Bruce Schneier saying Biometrics are unique identifiers, but they are not keys or secrets [schneier.com] I think that biometrics by themselves can be badly misused and have things end up being worse.
I think that Bruce has said something like a false sense of security is worse then no security.
Intrinsicly fingerprints can only provide collabarating evide
Missed this media trend: (Score:5, Interesting)
For the past few years TV has been almost completely unwatchable for me. Four minutes of programming to five minutes of advertising is insulting to me.
But I have several friends who watch many hours of TV a day and have the latest plot advancements of several sitcom, drama, and unscripted (nee "reality") shows committed to memory. The last half of 2003 I began hearing comments from even them, my friends the TV junkies, that they are getting tired of so much advertising. It seems the straw that broke the camel's back was the corner adverts that come on when a program comes back on after a commercial break. They keep watching of course because they are addicted, but they are at least complaining out loud now.
Movies are almost as bad. Crowds at my local theater have taken to booing and shouting to the effect of "turn off the #$@!ing tv commercials" when non-movie-trailer ads come on. I also hear much grumbling about the excessive trailers. Six or seven five-minute plot synopses that give away the movies that they are supposed to be promoting while tacking 20 to 30 minutes onto the feature's play time are not popular. They almost ruined LotR: RotK for me by turning a 3:30 butt-number into a 4:00+ marathon endurance test.
I know there are work-arounds to these bugs in the system. But Tivo and other prepackaged DVRs are expensive and home-brew DVRs have all the same problems as desktop linux. Also, DVRs do nothing about the corner-screen adverts nor product placement. Not watching TV is like not smoking cigarettes: it's better for your long-term health but to an addict the separation is a difficult and painful thing.
Sure you can arrive late to movies, but with general admission theater seating you are gambling where you end up sitting, or even if you get a seat in the case of blockbusters. If I'd arrived late to any showing of LotR: RotK since it opened at my theater the odds are I would be stuck in a nasty corner or front row or next to an unwashed freak, or not getting a ticket at all because it sold out.
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:1)
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:2)
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:2)
I recently spent some time at home and watched some TV again. (Normally I just watch DVD's from Netflix) I also noticed this annoying "feature". What makes it even more annoying are the new adverts which have sound as well thereby not only obscuring parts of the screen, but parts of the dialogue as well. This is more than annoying - they are now in fact stealing parts o
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:2)
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:1)
It's not that they're stuffing more commercials in there, it's that they're stuffing them in the middle of the shows now. If you'll notice, broadcas
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:1)
So you arrived early. Not to see the 'commercials' but to get a seat. Then you sat. You could have stared at a blank screen...or they could put ads up on it and help keep ticket prices from going up.
Not seeing the big deal.
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:2)
Not how I see it. I arrived on time, but the movie started 30 minutes late because of all the advertising.
TV ad solution (Score:2)
2. Cancel cable
A small translucent station logo in the corner I could handle. Useful actually, for navigating the channel universe. But these popup ads, big solid animated logos... I can't take it any more.
Re:Missed this media trend: (Score:2)
Get your television off bittorrent like the rest of us do. All the commercials are (often) removed, plus you get the added benefit of being able to pause and rewind.
Real television can't compete with an MPEG
TCP over IP (Score:4, Funny)
Only half-smiley on this one.
Biometrics? (Score:1)