NBC to Offer Free Video Download Service 229
Damocles the Elder writes "Apparently NBC realized that people on the internet do watch TV, because after breaking up with Apple over iTunes pricing schemes, they're setting up their own free service." From the article "NBC first contracted with Amazon to offer its programs for sale to downloading devices like MP3 players. Now it is establishing its own downloading service, which NBC executives say they expect to become a viable competitor to iTunes.
"With the creation of this new service, we are acknowledging that now, more than ever, viewers want to be in control of how, when and where they consume their favorite entertainment," said Vivi Zigler, the executive vice president of NBC Digital Entertainment. "Not only does this feature give them more control, but it also gives them a higher quality video experience."
Wait for comcast! (Score:5, Insightful)
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You may be right, but consider this: ISP's complain iPlayer uses too much bandwith. [iptv-watch.co.uk] I expect this to be a growing point of contention between media companies and ISPs as more and more video content moves online.
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Re:Wait for comcast! (Score:4, Funny)
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The ISPs get you coming and going and they still want more.
It's like the RIAA, bankruptcy reform and subprime mortgages. As soon as companies think they have you where they want you, they will try to take you for all they think you for. If they think you can't escape (abusive contract, natural monopoly) then they will try to stick it to you even harder.
not free (Score:5, Informative)
Nice to see... (Score:4, Funny)
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As long as your video is a red screen continuously blinking, playing it will display it on the LED.
Yeah, whatever... (Score:5, Insightful)
...
Commercials will be embedded in the programs and viewers will not be able to skip through them.
Re:Yeah, whatever... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't really care if they make money or not. I don't watch anything NBC has to offer anyway. My point was solely that they shouldn't claim to be acknowledging that the viewers should watch the way the want to watch, and then put restrictions on how those viewers can watch. It's hypocritical.
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If he'd not included the "how" I'd agree with you. But he says, "control of how, when and where".
Re:Yeah, whatever... (Score:5, Informative)
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As for 'quick access'... I typically download an episode (not from NBC yet, obviously) faster than I'd be able to drive to Blockbuster and back, even if you don't count the time it takes in the store. I don't see that they'll have a problem with 'quick access'.
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Adverts without DRM would snare the clueless. They would watch the adverts and prop up the old school television model while the rest of us would be free to fast forward through them or strip them.
The media moguls have to realize that most people aren't tech saavy
Re:Yeah, whatever... (Score:5, Informative)
Broadcast TV has a lot more competitors now than it used to. The internet is a good source of entertainment, as are rented DVDs (through the post, no hassle, no adverts). Computer games, including consoles, are starting to become a lot more mainstream too, and TV viewership figures have been dropping a corresponding amount for some years. A big reason there are more adverts in TV shows these days is that the income per viewer has remained roughly constant, but the number of viewers has dropped. This increase in adverts then drives more people away, perpetuating the spiral. It's not enough for a new service to be as good as TV, because TV is already starting to lose out. It has to be better.
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Re:Yeah, whatever... (Score:5, Insightful)
*Except in "Pat and the Armed Post Office Robbery" where Pat foils a terrorist plot to rob the Post Office and use the proceeds to blow up the viaduct, or in "Pat goes Postal" which should be self explanatory...
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Rip the DVDS. Get rid of all the extra crap. Go straight to the movie as soon as you select that movie and "hit play".
Kids movies are the worst.
I used to rip entire disk images and move slowly over time to just ripping the main feature because of all the crap in kids movies.
It's also nice to have a single interface rather than n+1 cutesy little graphical menus with their own quirks.
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And ain't it grand that 2-3 years later, I'm STILL forced to see trailers from lame movies that came and went at the box office because I can't fast forward past it.
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Let's see... "viewers want to be in control of how, when and where they consume their favorite entertainment," yet they keep you from skipping commercials (which I presume means you can't fast-forward at all, though that may be a reach) or watching them all in a bundle. Someone tagged this as "windowsonly." If true, that leaves out watching it on a Mac, Linux box, iPod, Archos media player, etc. If the window of availability is from the time of broadcast to fourteen days out (available for seven, expires
Re:Yeah, whatever... (Score:4, Interesting)
I.e. "Install software on your computer to do something you shouldn't need to."
I.e. "Install more software on your computer to do something you shouldn't need to, and spend at least as long as the show is futzing around with editing it."
Frankly, I'd rather just not watch the show than to go through all of this trouble. Other people will probably be downloading it illegally to avoid the trouble and still watch the show. I like my solution better, though, because 1) I get to do other more interesting things, and 2) I don't help perpetuate the popularity of shows that are made by companies that want to control when, where, and how I watch stuff that I'm willing to pay for.
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Not after a week, for a week.
FTA:
The programs,
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I'm complaining? No. I was just pointing out the error in the previous posters comment.
Commercials (Score:3, Insightful)
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From free to pay...eventually? (Score:5, Insightful)
Commercials will be embedded in the programs and viewers will not be able to skip through them...
Further into the article:
But NBC intends to transform the service into a model similar to iTunes by the middle of 2008 -- that is, consumers will pay NBC directly to download episodes of the shows. "We did this to eliminate the middleman," said Jeff Gaspin, the president of NBC's digital division.
That's fine and dandy, but will the paid version of the episode come complete with ads or is this just an interim solution until the paid model is in place, because I sure as hell wouldn't want to pay for episodes if they contained unskippable ads.
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You aren't their target market. I'm not sure what their target market is because it should have been the masses of people Apple already had attracted to the market they nearly created (BT downloaders don't count for this heh).
They only want to provide this crap t
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Commercials will be embedded in the programs and viewers will not be able to skip through them...
Thus, no one running a real OS will be able to watch this crap. Problem solved.
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Oh well, guess I'll keep paying my blood money to the cable company and downloading the improved versions from the usual places. (Improved meaning I can get it whenever I want, with no DRM, no commercials, and in a format that I like.)
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Now non-skippable ads I'd have a problem with.
pirates win (Score:4, Insightful)
make all media pirate proof 100%, make no money. the slightest crack in the system and you make no money.
simply release your media in a format everyone can enjoy for free in a quality higher then the pirates are putting out, slip in some well targeted adverts, hey presto you just won over a market you had no chance of ever having previously and your making money from it.
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Besides, stopping people from skipping through the video doesn't really correlate with "viewers want to be in control of how, when and where they consume their favorite entertainment"
--Ketil
Re:pirates win (Score:5, Funny)
Commercials you can't skip? (Score:5, Insightful)
From the article:
You can't skip through the commercials? Can't transfer them to a disk or other computer? Any bets on how long this will last?
But maybe this will help...
Right, because online payment systems are magical. Only the top wizards understand the spells that make them work. That's why nobody except Apple has secure software to allow payment by credit cards: Steve Jobs is the toppest of the top wizards.
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I suspect it'll only apply to US and maybe europe (Score:4, Insightful)
Because i was accessing it from a non-american IP address, they locked me out, citing no advertisers for my region (New Zealand)
Talking of which, they previous/already offered the ability to watch previous episodes of heroes before, what exactly has changed?
Isn't this just a rehash of what they already have, just with plans to turn it into an iTunes competitor later next year?
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iTunes causes music piracy? (Score:5, Interesting)
FTA:
Holy smokes: the most succesful legal online music distribution service on the Internet is actually a haven for piracy? Up is down, war is peace. Next up: the beef market has been terribly devastated by the popularity of McDonald's restaurants.
I think what's he's saying (Score:4, Insightful)
This is probably some sort of PR spin over the fact that NBC is most likely going to use Windows Media Player to base their options, and this is a feature that a marketing person would tout as important. And at first glance, I think Joe Average will see this as important too, since it will cut down on those dirty hackers and pirates from stealing music.
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A
Six years too late (Score:2)
As it is this is all coming about because of a tiff between studios and Apple, which will culminate in differing DRM models as more media sources decide to go online, greater likelihood of a "pay-to-play" internet (at least in the US), and the certainty that commercials will be inserted into the shows *real*soon*.
Thank god USENET remains an option, as does Miro.
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Just great... (Score:2, Funny)
Here we go...
1) download
2) crack (?)
3) strip advertising/convert format
4) watch
5) share (optional)
6) delete when DVDs are released
7) repeat steps 1-5 with DVDs
8) when pay service starts change 1 to "pay & download".
Meh. As long as my PVR keeps working I'll stick with 1,3,4 & maybe 6.
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If everyone else can get it for free as well, why would you feel the need to 'share' it out?
Naturally, everyone has to do their own thing! (Score:2, Insightful)
Used Amazon Unbox (Score:3, Interesting)
Neither of these were shows I might have watched otherwise (or told the Tivo to record), but I may watch a few episodes of both now and give them a chance. Thanks NBC! Now bring back Studio 60 and all will be well with the world.
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I found that quite ironic. NBC fell upwards when Apple shut them out of iTunes. Amazon's Unbox offers better quality and more convenience for me. Being able to download shows directly to my TiVo and watch them in DVD quality had me immediately hooked on Amazon's Unbox. Plus I'm able to shop Unbox from either my TiVo or from any web browser.
Apple would never partner with TiVo because Apple suffers from NIH syndrome.
How does it work? (Score:2)
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consume????? (Score:2)
You know, you should really change 'viewers' to customers and 'consume' to view. You act as if your customers are mindless drones that gain sustenance from viewing your content.
Oh, wait...
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Brilliance (Score:2)
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That didn't take long (Score:2)
September 20 - NBC announces that they will give the shows away, with ads. Note that they could have kept their pricing with iTMS and al
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"Degrade"? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm assuming this means that your download of 30 Rock will slowly morph into an episode of Studio 60, and eventually, Saturday Night Live itself.
Greedy Fucks (Score:2)
Followed by:
The service will allow customers to download full episodes of NBC shows for seven days on Windows-based PCs. The file will
Gee, too bad no one has tried this before... (Score:5, Insightful)
Suuure. A viable competitor - but without a quarter of the video content, no music, probably crap software, lousy integrated experience, and no iPod support. It's as if they just opened a new brick and mortar NBC store which sells laser disks.
Let me know how that goes for you.
Fragmenting the market is a poor strategy (Score:3, Insightful)
Although I suspect this is more of an attempt by NBC to get people to pay to watch commercials, it's ultimately going to be bad for their business and the on-demand market in general. It's almost never a win to fragment a potential market, particularly for the consumer but who really cares about them anymore? With entertainment consolidated to a few major players, the consumer is an abstract concept with no form or value as an individual.
Ultimately this will prove to be a fruitless endeavor. You can't drive an internet market by conscription. The history of the internet is littered with the corpses of companies that thought the same thing. Imagine needing a set-top box to tune in an individual TV station. NBC and CBS use the same type box, but you need a different one for ABC and Fox. WB has their own. It seems silly in any other market context, but that's what Apple and NBC are trying to do.
Personally, I don't think the big media players are ever going to catch on. The farther down the road we go, the big media companies actually seem to be devolving. Fortunately that will open up markets for smarter players. Production companies with a leaner cost structure and the freedom of thought to consider product placement, co-branding and a host of other revenue streams rather than a strict commercial model.
I gave a keynote at a NAB convention a couple years ago about the likely impact of the internet on media distribution and the opportunities for new revenue channels. Got a lot of head nodding but when I talked to them afterwards it was pretty clear it wasn't sinking in. They were still trying to fit the internet into the revenue models they already knew.
Does anyone see the Microsoft in MS[NBC] here? (Score:2)
The iPod is *the* portable media player. period. Zune has made no traction in the market. NBC's affiliation with Microsoft is now being used to forward the Microsoft monopoly machine.
Microsoft says shut off apple and ipods and only serve Windows machines. You know the shoe will drop when the Zune becomes the *only* portable media player that will work. Just you watch.
Big companies like Windows with its DRM because it allows them to manage your pesky "fair us
And so it begins: (Score:4, Interesting)
At least we could count on Apple wanting to distribute these shows worldwide; I doubt NBC will want the trouble of allowing worldwide access (they'd rather sell the rights to the show to a national broadcaster instead).
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Ill get in on that (Score:2)
there are loads of nbc comedies i want to get on my disk.
aaah, and i wont be using no microsoft stuff for that. if thats part of the deal, forget it. id rather make a sock puppet and watch it, instead of having to buy a zune or zone or whatever.
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Late in the game, aren't they? (Score:2)
Now playing: battle of the loose verticals (Score:3, Interesting)
And in that corner you have: GE/Universal/NBC + Microsoft
The industry has learned from AOL/Time Warner. Why buy each other when you can get the same advantages from partnerships and board placements?
What are we thinking the odds are that the new NBC pay-for-download service will be based on Microsoft's DRM? Anyone?
Gloating gone too far. (Score:2)
What this sanctimonious prick would never admit is that he and his ilk are the middlemen. If Apple accomplished anything, it concealed them behind the façade of iTMS' superior user experience, one that will outlast and outperform an
What a coincidence! (Score:4, Funny)
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Anyway, I watch TV on my TV, not my PC. If I can't move it to my TV easily, no thanks.
Re:AntiTrust yet again.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Now the trouble is, companies hate competing, so ideally, Congress will ignore the whining of these big companies as they ask for laws to shield them from competition. It should also look aggressively at these companies if they try to work together to avoid competing with each other.
This should be interesting to watch.
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Re:AntiTrust yet again.... (Score:5, Insightful)
As proved by MS. Actually, Windows has improved leaps and bounds since Linux^h^h^h^h^hMac OS took off^h^h^h^h^h^h^h^hstarted eating into their market share
There you go. Fixed that for you.
Seriously... Apple is poised to become a fierce competitor once again. Look at the shares of MacBook sales. Linux? I know this is Slashdot and I know we're all pulling for Linux but honstly, "The Year of Linux" is a looooooooooooooong way off.
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You can't infer anything from it's sales anymore.
Some mac book could be running Linux, or even Vista.
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Please. The number of macbooks that are NOT running OS X is not going to be statistically significant.
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instead of buying an episode from iTunes and watching it (maybe even with out commercials) as much as you like, you will get 7 days to watch the commercial content. You can't even fast forward these things.
truely a TV executives wet dream.
this is just like the stupid lillypond thing. WMA, DRM, crap.
but I'm sure that this will stop piracy. yar.
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Re:I'm really happy to hear this (Score:5, Funny)
Of course! Time spent watching TV is billable time. I think we've found the ???? step before PROFIT!
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apple... double dip... hehe fondue... i need sleep
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On the contrary: lots of Mac, Linux and Windows users were using Bittorrent anyway, and NBC is encouraging this approach by tightening the clamps, so it actually sounds like this will result in more satisfied pirates than ever before.
The only disappointed people will be those who insist on doing things legally, but fortunately for the pirate world the industry has been trying to punish loyal customers for years. In this new punishment users are b
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True statement.
If I wanted to watch Heroes, I'd buy it on DVD. From what I've read, the terms of NBC's download service are entirely unacceptible, so I will just [continue to] ignore NBC.
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Message to content producers: I know that you make money from me watching ads, and I'm ok with that. If you want me to see ads, all you have to do is put the content up for free, in a high quality (read not streaming) format, as soon as it airs. Leave the commercials in. If I can download a mpeg from your site (or better yet, with your bit torrent client,) I'll go there rather than searching the piratebay for the same content with commercials r
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With a torrent, I can watch it anywhere I want on any device I want for as long as I want with no commercials. How does this beat that?
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