Tivo To Also Offer Ads Your Way 158
FangVT writes "InfoWorld is reporting that in mid-2006 Tivo will begin allowing subscribers use keyword searches to look for information on specific products or services. The article does not contain much information but ultimately says 'Throwing in lots of hedge words to soften the idea of advertising once again mingling with TV content, TiVo described the service as non-intrusive, relevant, interactive advertising on an opt-in basis.' Tivo's own press release says, 'For the first time, advertisers will have the ability to deliver television advertising, on demand and targeted to consumers, without the limitations of traditional television media placement.'"
odd (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:odd (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I doubt very many consumers will use this very often.
Re:odd (Score:2)
Perhaps TiVo should let customers work off their subscription fee by watching some ads and taking a survey each month (all through their remote control). That would be a pretty cheap feedback channel for advertisers.
Re:odd (Score:2, Informative)
With TiVo, I can pick shows and pick when I want to watch them. The result is that I watch more TV, perhaps about 10 hours a week. (It's somewhat lower because both Buffy and Angel are off the air now.)
So, while watching about 5 times more TV, I see
Re:odd - TiVo Illegal Behavior ??? !!! (Score:2)
Does this qualify as subliminal advertising, which is highly illegal? Since TiVo has removed the 30 second skip they are forcing you to view commercials in this manner. Has anyone investigated this?
Overall TiVo just keeps giving me more reasons to hate them.
Re:odd - TiVo Illegal Behavior ??? !!! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:odd - TiVo Illegal Behavior ??? !!! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:odd - TiVo Illegal Behavior ??? !!! (Score:2)
Re:odd - TiVo Illegal Behavior ??? !!! (Score:2, Funny)
I am going to opt in (Score:2)
Re:I am going to opt in (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I am going to opt in (Score:2)
Opt In Choices (Score:4, Funny)
[Program] is about to start!
[Watch it now with adverts] [Do Not Watch it now]
Re:Opt In Choices (Score:2)
Great more features! (Score:2, Interesting)
I like my Tivo the way it is now. Does anyone know if there is a way to not get any more software updates from the Tivo service?
'Silence is Golden, but Duct tape is Silver' - Stolen sig.
Re:Great more features! (Score:3, Informative)
Undermining their business model? (Score:5, Insightful)
1) The ad service will be opt-in, but how much do they plan on nagging customers to do so? And who wants to be nagged about having ads, anyway, especially if you bought the thing to avoid them?
2) Targeted ads are certainly more effective, as Google has shown, but it's still advertising in a space buyers have come to expect no ads or ad-skipping.
3) TiVo built the entire model of PVR around the ability to skip ads and record shows more simply than on a VCR. They could do serious damage to their brand image if they embrace advertising after professing to help people avoid it.
While I'm glad they plan to make it opt-in and targeted, I'm still skeptical that they'll find profit at the end of the advertising rainbow by alienating their customers.
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:4, Interesting)
Watching ads, of any kind, does not further that goal.
Not only can I can watch Queer Eye at my convenience, but equally importantly, in only 37 minutes.
Towards this end, may I suggest a new TiVo feature: The ability to play back a program at a higher speed, with the audio pitch remaining unchanged. Hey, Kaffeine (in KDE) does it for me all the time, which I find very useful when watching non-pr0n, such as a physics lecture where the speaker talks v e r y - s l o w l y.
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
MythTV can do this. It also does a pretty good job of finding and skipping commercials. You can adjust the speed from 0.5x to 2.0x in increments of 0.05x. I do this when I'm watching document
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
It works better with the tivovbi patch applied outputting text, and you could even feed it into a text-to-speech program set to read it fast enough to nearly keep up. (I still wish it included timecodes for remastering for DVD as subtitles and/or line21 data.)
Some cable boxes
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
The *AAs are not TiVo's meal ticket, so far as I know. The customer is.
Remember what happened with mp3 players [wikipedia.org]?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't get people who seem to find advertising on television and in magazines to be morally reprehensible and an affront to their constitutional rights.
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
It is the same people who fnd it morally reprehensible and an affront to their constitutional rights to have to pay for someone else's work product, such as music or software.
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
Re:Undermining their business model? (Score:2)
Because the service IS their product. It would be like asking Willie Nelson why he doesn't follow Apple's business model and make iPODS.
Wait, this is news? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Wait, this is news? (Score:2)
Actually, it has vanished from some of my TiVos' menus at times. It also becomes inaccessible without service (I have an unsubscribed 20-hour unit in my guest room).
Lately it has been trying to record its "Teleworld Paid Programming" content from ISATE (i (Independent TV) Satellite Feed East), but when I've seen it do it, other PAX programming is there instead.
Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:4, Interesting)
As I said in a reply to a posting yesterday I don't watch commercials or listen to adverstisements. Anywhere at any time. When a show goes to commercial I'll either go to another channel or if nothing else is on hit the mute button, walk away and go do something else for 2+ minutes. I fast forward through commercials on recorded shows. I turn the volume down when there are commercials on the radio. I don't even see billboards on the road anymore my mind has blocked them out.
If I'm going out of my way to avoid advertisements and commercials what would make these folks think I would want to search for commercials?
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:2)
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:2, Informative)
Hmm.... drills....
[menu]
down down -> adverts -> [select]
down down -> tools -> [select]
down left down
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:4, Funny)
Search
Category: Advertisements
Keyword: "Super Bowl"
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:2)
I think maybe you did miss something. The purpose of Tivo is to put viewers back in control of their televisions. If the viewer doesn't want to see adds, Tivo supports that. If the viewer does want to see adds, Tivo supports that too.
This new functionality, being opt-in, is completely consistent with that philosophy.
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:5, Insightful)
Step 1 - Free, no ads
Step 2 - Free, with ads
Step 3 - Pay, no ads
Step 4 - Pay, with ads
Tivo is between steps 3 and 4 right now. As with every other service, it will soon be at step 4.
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:2)
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:3, Interesting)
Greed? Losing contact with their customer base? With reality?
The current idea of marketing is going to get more or less wiped out by context marketing ranging from google to price-checking sites, simply because marketing to consumers who are actually shopping for a that specific product is vastly more efficient.
While TiVo may have understood that, they unfortunately d
Re:Searchable ads on Tivo? (Score:2)
Uh, no. The main purpose was tape-free digital recording, recodring based on the show listing in an onscreen guide (no more "ok, start the recording at 8:30 on Monday...") and then being presented with a list of titles of things recorded. No tape rewinding. No "which of the 19 unmarked tapes has last week's Lost". No muss no fuss. The most annoying parts of VCR usage have been automated and digitized away.
T
MythTv in my future... (Score:3, Insightful)
Does this mean ... (Score:5, Funny)
Um, opt out.
TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:5, Informative)
1. Unlike, say, Microsoft, they never discouraged their users from hacking their boxes. As a result, a huge community of TiVo hackers emerged (see http://www.tivocommunity.com/ [tivocommunity.com]). I upgraded my TiVo's 30 gig hard drive to two 120's, and installed a cachecard/network card combo from 9th Tee, which means I can do fun tricks like scheduling shows and season passes from the road, or watching shows in my bedroom on my XBOX.
2. Really great support. I've only had to call TiVo a couple of times, both for channel lineup issues, but they were always extremely friendly and helpful over the phone. For example, after I moved into my new house, I realized that Adelphia had just upgraded the cable in my area, and TiVo didn't have the lineup yet. So I called support, and the next day, TiVo called me back to tell me that my lineup was added. Simply awesome.
3. Choosing Linux. When I telnet into my TiVo, I get a bash shell. I've installed an ftp server, web server (TiVoWeb), and even installed cron. How cool is that? Plus, this excellent decision has led to new software being developed exclusively for the TiVo (such as a caller id display that uses the TiVo's built-in modem, so you can see who's calling without getting up off the couch). Simply brilliant.
4. The interface. They obviously put a ton of work into it, and it really shows. It just kicks so much ass.
Now obviously, they dropped the ball in a couple of areas. The Comcast merger was just a more recent one. I think these are the two biggies:
1. I think that their biggest problem has always been slow adoption; as long as I've had the thing, I've been seeing ads pop up on TiVo Central giving me hot deals on new TiVo units, which I'm supposed to share with my friends and family. Great, I can save Dad $50 on his new unit. But if they really expect me to convince Dad that he can't live without a season pass on those Seinfeld reruns he loves so much, then they should be giving me the 50 smackers. I'd probably have 10 people signed up under me right now if I got some sort of compensation for it. (By the way, click here [freeminimacs.com] to get a free Mini Mac!):-)
2. Too expensive. The hardware and service together really do cost too much, unless you got in early like I did (back when lifetime service was $200). They should do what my damn cell phone company does: Knock the hardware down to like $99, and make me pay a very affordable $9.95 a month. If I try to cancel before 2 years are up, hit me with some obscene early termination fee. Yes, I hate it when cell phone companies do this, but that's how they stay in business. Besides, it's not like I'd be foolish enough to cancel my TiVo service anyway. TiVo is heroin. So far, I've paid $499 for TiVo and lifetime service, so TiVo won't make any more money off of me. If they were using my above plan, I would have paid in $589 so far, with more coming in every month.
I would really hate to see TiVo go. I hope they don't. But I suspect that even if the service dies, thanks to the openness of their hardware platform, someone (maybe me) will figure out how to write a script to pull show data off of Yahoo! TV or something. And with Microsoft and MythTV and several others entering the PVR market, there's no question that TiVo's invention is here to stay.
It is really great that TiVo is going to offer ads our way, thats the way it should work, and ultimately, lead to better advertising.
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:1)
They have started doing exactly that. And it will ruin them! I gave my brother an old TiVo I had lying around and when he tried to register it he was informed that he had to agree to 1 year of service with a $150 "early termination" penalty.
So he built a Myth box instead.
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:3, Insightful)
You can get the Tivo box for $50 after rebate, and $299 for lifetime service. Circuit City recently even had the Tivo free after rebate if you ordered it online (with free shipping too).
So basically, it's $350 worst case. How cheaply can you build a Myth box?
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
So maybe I am agreeing with you that TiVo is better if you don't have a castoff computer handy and don't want your PVR to do anything else
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Granted MythTV etc may offer more features from the get go, but the Tivo is *hardly* "locked down". Tons of hacks exist for it (and yes, it runs
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
No, you're just reading it wrong.
"You won't see hacks in this book that involve modifying Series 2 software"
Translation:
You won't see hacks in *this* book that involve modifying Series 2 software, but you will when you buy our next book, "Tivo Hacks, 2nd edition"
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
A Myth box is yours, and no one from the outside will mess with it.
So, yes, in $ terms the Tivo is cheaper if you have to go out and buy all the Myth parts from scratch (but most of us have parts lying around we could use) but you are getting something over which you have complete control, whereas the Tivo is controlled by Tivo.
Ob.
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
If
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2, Interesting)
It's been done several times. The Canadians have the most sophisticated system with at least three programs that will pull data with XMLTV from zap2it.com. They all work fine in the U.S. (with the exception of Simplicity that needs to defeat the Canada-IP check). The Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans and a few others have active Tivo grou
Tivo Rewards (Score:2)
They've had that for quite some time now: http://www.tivo.com/rewards [tivo.com]
Gist of it is that they give you 5000 points for every referral, and you trade those in for swag.
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad - Hack This! (Score:2)
How about hacking it to put 30 second instant skip back in? Think TiVo favors that? And
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad - Hack This! (Score:2)
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad - Hack This! (Score:2)
I'd say that TiVo keeping itself a float is a benefit they've given their customer base, unlike ReplayTV. ReplayTV has bankrupted two parent companies already by having incurred the wrath of the broadcasters association and the
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Sheesh, I've been doing that on my ReplayTV 50x0 unit for 4 years now, and the only thing I had to touch was the new hard drive I put in. I honestly don't understand why ReplayTV units haven't dominated the planet by now. Poor marketing, maybe?
Is there a way to hack T
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Maybe because they were sued into someone else's hands.
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
Not as good of a "Season Pass". The GUI is not as good as TiVo's. Being sued into oblivion twice already (bankrupting the original ReplayTV company, and then SonicBlue). No word-of-mouth except for "I own a ReplayTV" postings on any website with news about TiVo.
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:2)
I just bought a TiVo yesterday (my third). It was $50 (not $99) for the hardware (40hr). I pay $6.95 (not $9.95) a month for service.
Now it's not quite as good of a deal if you don't already have a TiVo since the one-TiVo rate is $12.95/mo. In my case, I paid for the service up-front since I hate mail-in rebates so this TiVo is usable for at least 23 months... whic
Re:TiVo, the good and the bad (Score:3, Funny)
Would you like to borrow $200?
Two Way Street... (Score:5, Insightful)
First, advertisers will need to pick a more specific market ("target").
Second, shows will have to become more a la carte. This probably means significant DRM, but there is no "right" to television, so I don't see a way around this. If you want to watch the show "real time" you can pay for it now, or you can wait for it to be released on DVD (or public domain download).
How can you pay for the show? One of three ways:
A. You can use advertising points to watch it. Advertising points are "earned" by watching targeted ads that are pre-downloaded to your Tivo/MCE. These are communicated back to the producer. Maybe a small questionnaire at the end will earn you more points.
B. You can pay for the show up front -- a la carte.
C. You can pay for a subscription to the show for the season.
I don't see any other way for advertising to work, other than product placement. If advertisers and content producers think Tivo is bad now, just wait another year when vidcasts replace the news, and amateur shows pick up another level of refinement. I've already heard from local actor's studios regarding making "free" TV shows to release to the web to advertise their abilities. All we need is one or two huge popular shows online for every city and town to have a free actor's studio making interesting television.
Advertising will be more direct -- and bidirectional.
The way it should be done (Score:2)
From InfoWorld: The opt-in technology will let TiVo subscribers use keyword searches to look for information on specific products or services.
This is a useful way of doing it. No more being bombarded by hundreds ads for things you don't want or need. Now you can search for the things you're looking for and avoid having to sit through the same repititious crap. This might even get advertisers to put as little more content in their commercials, rather than always going for the cheap laugh or worse, for the
Re:The way it should be done (Score:2)
TiVo Shopping (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:TiVo Shopping (Score:1)
Let the ranting begin ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Here come the Tivo flames.
Try to keep in mind that Tivo is in a very tough spot. They are trying to balance the wishes of their customers while keeping the greedy-money-grabbing content owners happy.
Bash them all you want but it can't be easy. Sadly I think Tivo is going to lose out to the cable and sattelite providers building their own DVRs into their set-top boxes. They will probably be inferior products but you won't have a choice.
For all you Myth fans I paraphrase and old Debian t-shirt.
"MythTV. What your mother would use if it were 20 times easier."
Myth is getting better but it is no Tivo or Replay.
Re:Let the ranting begin ... (Score:2)
Re:Let the ranting begin ... (Score:2)
I won't have to go into the pros and cons of Tivo other DVRs only because there will be plenty of it elsewhere in the topic discussion.
Do tell about the BrightHouse DVR. My parents live in a BrightHouse area.
Re:Let the ranting begin ... (Score:2)
paragraphs.
use them.
I demand advertising! (Score:2)
Expect this to last about 3 minutes, when they realise that none of their users will be "demanding" advertising.
Re:I demand advertising! (Score:2)
Yes, that's exactly what happened with Google Adsense.
Re:I demand advertising! (Score:2)
Seems to me this will just be a menu for ads instead of a link to a single ad... And people do watch them. I even find myself clicking on them now and then when they're something like a movie preview.
Time to build my own Media Center (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is the business model is all wrong. I expect that when I purchase a device AND a subscription to a service that I'm compensating the company for the service which I receive. $12.99/month for TV listings is already a bit steep and I could subscribe to TV Guide cheeper than that, why should I have to pay to be advertised to as well? If they gave away the units and charged a bit for an ad supported service or if they charged for the units but supported the free TV listings with ads I could accept that but I'm feeling more and more like I bought a device that requires me to pay $12.99/month to watch 'custom tailored' ads, but I think I'll be sticking with the ads I get for free.
Re:Time to build my own Media Center (Score:3, Informative)
And no one has ever been forced to watch any ad that was downloaded to a Tivo. The "Showcases" are stored in an area of the disk that we users can't
Re:Time to build my own Media Center (Score:2)
Have you noticed what half the pages in TV Guide are? Ads. I don't think that you are thinking clearly on this matter.
My 2 scents (Score:2)
Re:My 2 scents (Score:2)
The "Best of Ads" Channel (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The "Best of Ads" Channel (Score:2)
Too bad adcritic.com decided to price themselves for the advertiser market. I guess they couldn't afford the bandwidth for their content with a general audience popularity. Though you'd think if they'd adopt bittorrent they could open their library to the public again. (I want the
Why not just get a DVR? (Score:4, Insightful)
and no more ads period?
What is the incentive to use Tivo when they are starting to incorporate ads? Why not just buy a DVR and skip the commercials?
Re:Why not just get a DVR? (Score:3, Funny)
Sheesh. (Score:1)
Why you want to watch the ads (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, most commercials are annoying and deserve to be skipped, but some are actually entertaining, interesting, and (rarely) even informative. Can't say I see a problem with providing me another way to get information, as long as it's opt-in.
Re:Why you want to watch the ads (Score:3, Informative)
Press thumbs up during FF over an ad (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, if I could push thumbs up (or thumbs down!) on an ad, this could be used to notify the advertiser of my thumbs up/down.
Even better, if I press thumbs up/down on an ad, TiVo should display a menu of options, such as...
(For thumbs up)...
In the end, this is good for me. Advertisers may be encouraged to run good ads, or at least entertaining ones. Advertisers get feedback about their ads, product, and/or company -- or at least my perception of these.
TiVo and advertisers have an opportunity here. It is easy for me the viewer, I can just Thumbs Up/Down on a commercial. Select from a menu.
It is the ultimate opt-in. If I choose not to participate, I do nothing, and nothing changes about how I benefit from using my TiVo.
Two important words about tivo'd ads: (Score:2)
It wouldn't be a horrible thing, if done right. (Score:2)
Let's do a little editing... (Score:2)
Let's try a little editing from an Internet perspective:
For the first time, advertisers will have the ability to deliver Internet advertising, on demand and targeted to consumers, without the limitations of traditional web-browsing patterns.
Sounds to me like the very same descriptions used for the Adware/Spyware
Dear Tivo (Score:2)
I am not brand loyal to your company. I enjoy my Tivo units because of the ease of use and the utility of that service. I'm not enamoured with your interface, the GUI of your guide nor the speed of such interfaces. I am not thrilled with Tivo's inability to dynamically recognize sporting events that go in to OT or the fact that LOST might be running two minutes ahead of schedual. A competitor could easily sway this consumer. One that speeds up and improves the interface and doesn't require
Tivo should do a best ads showcase (Score:2)
Usually whenever i see the Geico logo i pause my tivo, rewind and watch the commercial since they are usually quite entertaining.
If tivo were to let users rate ads (volutarily of course) then they could pull out the best ones and demonstrate to advertisers that good ads really do work and crappy ones just piss off your potential customers.
Google ads FTW! (Score:2)
Re:To be fair... (Score:2)
Yeah, I really feel sorry for them. I feel so sorry, I'm sending them a "love" note, and co
Re:To be fair... (Score:2)
Maybe they should figure out a way to make do off of the freaking $79.99 that I pay each month for cable service....
Re:Sounds like they are more concerned (Score:2)