Intel's Attempt At A-La-Carte Television Hits Delays 102
bill_mcgonigle writes "Updating the previous story, Forbes and Gigaom are now reporting that Intel is running an internal startup aimed at offering an internet-connected set top box with a-la-carte 'cable' channel subscriptions. They also apparently plan to record everything and offer all content on-demand. While some are skeptical that content providers will give up their cable cash cow and they've run into licensing problems already, perhaps the economic effects of cord-cutters will finally make this business model viable."
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Roku CAN do it. You just might have to PAY FOR IT. Not that Netflix is totally free on it's own. It is merely cheap.
Of course you are going to have few options if you are only willing things that are free and ad supported (Hulu) or have a pittance monthly fee (Netflix).
Depending on your use case, the PAY FOR IT option might even be a lot less than what you would pay for cable. Ala Carte is already here. It's just done by the show rather than by the channel.
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Like that's gonna work with all of the greedy content providers* licensing agreements. Just the other day I was at a woman's house and we were deciding what to watch on her Roku box. Hey, let's watch this on Netflix! Oh, we can't, that's DVD-only. Let's watch it on Amazon! Oh, premium membership (or whatever the fuck the problem was) only. It seemed that wanting to watch every movie that was a cult classic or otherwise worth watching held us hostage from some kind of restriction,
What kind of restriction are you talking about? You said the movie was available on Amazon streaming (but you'd have to pay for it), and Amazon streaming runs fine on Linux.
Is it paying for the content that you object to?
which is inexcusable beacuse outfits like Netflix have had quite awhile to get their shit together and still have no native Linux client.
Why would they? It would gain them a tiny number of users but incur large support costs - MS has 3 mainstream operating systems to support: XP, 7 and now 8. Linux has dozens of distributions they'd have to support... and that's after they've spent the money to train their support staff on L
$1,000 per year for one show (Score:2)
Is it paying for the content that you object to?
No, it's HBO demanding that people pay $1,000 per year just for Game of Thrones [theoatmeal.com] that I object to. Instead, I have chosen to do without. It's also the fact that certain decades-old movies and TV series aren't available to the public for any price that I object to (such as Song of the South and Spartakus and the Sun Beneath the Sea).
Just give up pay TV content (Score:5, Insightful)
We don't miss it. Between XBMC, free content or ad-supported streaming content via our network-connected Blu-ray player, and free content via web browser, there's no reason to pay for content that still comes with ads anymore.
Cut the cord permanently.
yep (Score:2)
Originally $150/mo going towards various TV things, now down to $35/mo myself as well. $0 soon enough.
Roku + torrents + spotify + netflix + pandora + amazon prime -> no use for TV whatsoever.
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At one point during the "digital transition" my TV connection stopped working for month. Eventually it got fixed but I realized I didn't really miss it. Now I pay $24/mo instead of $70 and I can watch the occasional sports program, which is pretty much all I care for. Still not ready to cut it off completely but the cost is now pretty minimal.
Re:yep (Score:5, Informative)
Sickbeard [sickbeard.com] is the "DVR" app that cable companies should have released. I would have even paid for it. Web accessable. I log in. I type in a show. Say I want it. Tada. Shows magically appear on my hard drive.
I can put them on my phone, my tablet my laptop. XBMC indexes them they're available on my TV and projector.
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Sickbeard [sickbeard.com] is the "DVR" app that cable companies should have released. I would have even paid for it. Web accessable. I log in. I type in a show. Say I want it. Tada. Shows magically appear on my hard drive.
I can put them on my phone, my tablet my laptop. XBMC indexes them they're available on my TV and projector.
Sweet, i got usenet, i will try it out. someone mod this nice person up.
Subliminal DIstractions (Score:3, Funny)
Sickbeard is the "DVR" app that cable companies should have released.
I would use it, but the front page of shows is sending me a powerful message to stay away:
Breaking Bad
Criminal Minds
Destroyed in Seconds
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Your aversion to that particular content doesn't justify your aversion to the software.
That's almost like saying "I don't like google.com, so I'm not going to use Firefox, since it can access that website."
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There have been ads on TV for companies to install antennas on houses. This makes me laugh, given the fade that industry saw for many years.
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Who is unserved by OTA TV? (Score:3)
Of course you are assuming people are within range of an OTA tower.
Yes, it has become fashionable to assume people are in the vast majority. There is an implicit claim that terrestrial free-to-air TV reaches the vast majority of people in the major anglophone markets. If you dispute this, I'm willing to take a look at your evidence.
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There are two remaining reasons I have for wanting cable. Baseball and live HD news stories of things like tsunamis or other major events that can only really have full impact with a full HD stream.
That's only a matter of time. Since 2009 the BBC has offered 720p resolution streams of non-live HD content, and it's only a matter of time before that's extended to live Internet streams.
At present, most non-HD streams are 832x468, which is about the same as broadcast SD TV. (The quality of that varies by channel, and time of day/programme.)
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Well, there are sports. They are produced for TV, so they have big long pauses where there is nothing to do BUT watch ads.
Speaking of which, those of you who pay $299.95 for one season of NFL Sunday Ticket Max(!!) what do they show during all the commercial game delays?
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Christ, for $300 they'd better show nothing but stock tips from the future and Anne Hathaway wardrobe malfunctions.
What kind of moron pays $300 to watch a bunch of sweaty, overpaid, and debatably-heterosexual guys hug each other? I don't understand sports.
It's probably aimed at sports bars, who can make extra money from the fact that people will come in to see games they can't watch at home.
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"TERMS OF SERVICE AND LICENSE TERMS FOR 2012 DIRECTV NFL SUNDAY TICKET APPLICATION AND SERVICE: ...
LIMITATIONS ON USE. All Content is provided for your private non-commercial use and home viewing. You may not display, and the Content may not be viewed, in areas open to the public or in commercial establishments."
And: "commercial locations require an appropriate licensee agreement"
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Me, as in, the customer? No way. You pay what they tell you it costs based on the number of tv's, programming selected, etc.
Sorry if I somehow confused that.
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We get Dish Network's ESPN GameDay package, which is much less than that price but does give us all of the ESPN- and ABC-filmed college football games that aren't otherwise airing in our area.
During the commercial breaks, they show just the funny ESPN college commercials. They do get a little old. Of course, since we're recording, we start with at least a 45-minute delay and don't have to watch that many of them.
At halftime they cut to ESPN radio over screens showing scores and stats of all the day's game
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Commercials.
I have it because a friend pays so she can watch on her computer.
I wouldn't do it myself, as beer at a sports bar is less expensive, anyway.
hawk
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At the beginning of the economic downturn, I took a pay cut (it was that or go look for a job -- good luck with that) and as a consequence we dropped several things, including cable TV. I bought an outside antenna (not allowed by our HOA, but I dared them to try to make me take it down, and they declined) and a roku box, and that plus netflix kept wife and daughter happy. (I watch close to zero tv, so it didn't matter to me either way.) Cable at the time was full ride with two DVR set top boxes, and dump
Re:Just give up pay TV content (Score:4, Insightful)
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Hell, it can pay for new content in HD as well.
Sure you have to wait a bit, but Season 2 of Game of Thrones will be out soon, and really, one month of cable and HBO will cover both sets as blu-ray. Free and legit, easie
Sports and political talk shows (Score:2)
I have found that the cost of one month of cable can pay for one or two seasons of a show a month.
That of course depends on what kind of programming you prefer. Political talk shows don't come in "seasons", and though professional and college sports are broadcast in "seasons", there's no market for box sets because the market is so spoiler-sensitive that it has to be broadcast with less than a 60 second delay. One family in my sample keeps cable for ESPN and the other sports channels, and another keeps cable for MSNBC, Bloomberg, C-SPAN, and C-SPAN2.
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We had cable until COX took Turner Classic Movies off of analog cable and put it on digital cable, at which point we had enough. Discovery Channel, The Learning Channel, The History Channel, and Sci-Fi/SyFy were already on the way down but hadn't hit rock bottom yet. We don't miss it. Between XBMC, free content or ad-supported streaming content via our network-connected Blu-ray player, and free content via web browser, there's no reason to pay for content that still comes with ads anymore. Cut the cord permanently.
Dish cutting AMC was the last straw for me. Now I survive on Netflix streaming, Hulu and and Redbox along with what I buy in DVDs, Blu-ray and iTunes. I save a bundle every month and I don't miss all the lame cable channels. When you have 300 to 500 channels and nothing worth watching it's time for on demand!
Product placement (Score:2)
there's no reason to pay for content that still comes with ads anymore.
Yet people pay for content that is ads. "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" by The New Seekers is a Coca-Cola commercial, "Summer Girls" by LFO is an Abercrombie commercial, and "Replay" by Iyaz is an iPod commercial. The 1989 film The Wizard is one big ad for Nintendo products that raked in $14 million at the box office.
Guaranteed success! (Score:2)
Misguided in so many ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone else read the arrogant comment attributed to some unnamed source at Intel, stating that Intel was frustrated with "everyone doing a half-assed Google TV so it's going to do it themselves and do it right." ?
So, not surprisingly, Intel has now run into "delays" in securing agreements with content providers (in this case, the word "delay" means a quantity of time as large as forever). Why on earth would Intel believe that they have the consumer electronics clout to pull this off where Apple and Google continue to fail?
And who in their right mind at Intel decided to blast the media with their arrogant claims before they actually secured the elusive content agreements? Are they this completely incompetent as to think that Internet TV has anything at all to do with their fabulous semiconductor technology, instead of realizing it has everything to do with negotiation and leverage?
The kool-aid must run strong...
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Or as little as a few days.
Well the product isn't even out and you're foretelling failure?
Re:Misguided in so many ways... (Score:5, Insightful)
The content industry wont let cable do it, and the vast majority of the operators want ala carte.
If they wont let cable do it they would never ever let an over the top provider do it. Intel has no understanding of this market.
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Exactly my thought. They technology has been around to do this for a decade or more. Every tech company with a set top box has been dreaming about and trying to work out an agreement with the content industry to no avail.
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> So, not surprisingly, Intel has now run into "delays" in securing agreements with content providers (in this case, the word "delay" means a quantity of time as large as forever). Why on earth would Intel believe that they have the consumer electronics clout to pull this off where Apple and Google continue to fail?
It doesn't really matter. Arrogance aside, it's good for us the consumers that they're trying, even if they succeed partially or not at all. It's yet another sign to the content providers th
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Yeah, I was going to say the same. It's good Intel is trying... But as stated, the content providers like NBC are going to require the cablco's to include Bravo and USA and Syfy if you want MSNBC or vice versa. We'll probably end up with all this either in court or an FCC ruling...
Package of all NBCUniversal channels perhaps (Score:2)
the content providers like NBC are going to require the cablco's to include Bravo and USA and Syfy if you want MSNBC or vice versa.
If it's a matter of bundling all of one content provider's channels, then why don't they let cable operators sell packages "all of Turner's basic channels", "all of NBCUniversal's basic channels", "all of Disney's basic channels", etc.? I can see requiring a subscriber to buy the Turner package before HBO, as Turner and HBO are both owned by Time Warner, but why should one have to buy Disney's ESPN to get Time Warner's HBO?
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Anyone else read the arrogant comment attributed to some unnamed source at Intel, stating that Intel was frustrated with "everyone doing a half-assed Google TV so it's going to do it themselves and do it right." ?
So, not surprisingly, Intel has now run into "delays" in securing agreements with content providers (in this case, the word "delay" means a quantity of time as large as forever). Why on earth would Intel believe that they have the consumer electronics clout to pull this off where Apple and Google continue to fail?
And who in their right mind at Intel decided to blast the media with their arrogant claims before they actually secured the elusive content agreements? Are they this completely incompetent as to think that Internet TV has anything at all to do with their fabulous semiconductor technology, instead of realizing it has everything to do with negotiation and leverage?
The kool-aid must run strong...
Simple. Intel will just add an instruction set to their processors that make bit torrenting easier, faster, and more reliable. That would scare the media companies into playing ball. ;)
Can this work without owning the fiber? (Score:3)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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People usually subscribe to an ISP for other reasons.
So it's not like your ISP bill is some "dedicated cable bill". It's something you're already paying for. The marginal cost of Internet transport of your video entertainment option is ZERO.
Find another straw to grasp at.
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I am up here in Canada - where competition for cable access to the internet is non-existent due to government failure on the part of the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications Commission. Therefore my options are to get my internet connection from Shaw Cable or over my phone lines from Telus. There are no other options worth considering. I am a Shaw customer at the moment. It costs me $54 a month to get my internet connection. That is with no TV channel services or phone services. There is (I believe) one lo
Re:They'll relent eventually (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm not a lawyer, blah, blah. However, last I checked, they can't sue you for downloading, only uploading (by default, most BitTorrent clients are going to upload).
Even if they could go after you for downloading, there are plenty of Binary USENET providers that offer bundled VPN service.
Plenty of DVR solutions have been out for years [lifehacker.com] which will automate downloading of all your favorite shows via USENET services. Game over for the media companies a long time ago for anyone with a technical clue.
Now that Co
Sued for downloading CC music on what grounds? (Score:2)
the mpaa and riaa are still suing people who download stuff online so don't get your hopes up.
I can see this for movies: a producer needs MPAA money to afford the production values that most people expect in a feature film that isn't one of a few novelty movies such as The Blair Witch Project and Paranormal Activity. But as for music, on what grounds can the labels in the RIAA sue people who choose to download recordings under a Creative Commons license or other recordings whose copyright is not owned by an RIAA member?
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Strangely enough, I kinda missed the commercials.
It's a little awkward being in a conversation where someone says "Oh yeah, like that commercial with the guy and the duck and the jetpack!" and everybody else laughs for some reason you can't fathom. You then have two choices: 1) Smug up the place with comments about how you cut the cord and it's so much better and blah blah hipsterblah 2) Fake it and chuckle along weakly in a quiet, merry lie.
Plus, some of the commercials on the tube are really amusing.
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> Strangely enough, I kinda missed the commercials.
Me too! I have a DVR to record movies and an occasional show from the cable TV. Usually I fast-forward through ads, but sometimes I watch ones that look funny.
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I think the important point is that the clock is ticking, both for the infrastructure and content providers. The ones that continue to cling to the old business model have a limited lifespan.
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What we need is for the networks to start offering channel subscriptions streaming without a cable company. Sell directly to the consumers. It would be easy for some of the local sports channels (like NESN or YES) to do this. Others would probably insist on the same package deals that they push on the cable companies (so, perhaps, Viacom would let you stream all of their channels for $9.99/month).
Now the question is whether they would get more money from people subscribing directly, or less due to the nu
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It would be easy for some of the local sports channels (like NESN or YES) to do this. Others would probably insist on the same package deals that they push on the cable companies (so, perhaps, Viacom would let you stream all of their channels for $9.99/month).
The problem is that number would likely be $19.99/month, while regional sports channels would want around $10/month, and Disney would wan't $29.99/month for all it's content (ESPN, etc.).
Even with "low" prices like $10/month for all of Viacom, you'd end up at pretty much the same prices as today if you wanted just one channel from a content owner, since you'd have Universal, Disney, Discovery networks, etc., each wanting their $10. Although you might be able to get away with $40/month or so if you wanted s
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A large part of the problem is simply overcoming inertia and a lack of awareness.
I heard a story a few months back from my parents. Around that time they had a couple in their mid-to-late 30s over for dinner, and over the course of the conversation, the wife apparently made a comment about how expensive cable TV is, asking my parents what their approach to it was. My parents informed her that they used an antenna to pick up broadcast TV, and that though the selection wasn't as good, it was entirely free and
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What about sports and their blackouts like with NBA League? :P
Yes, but (Score:2)
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And yet, any good torrent tracker with a couple thousand active users can do the same thing - for free yet. So why can't a big corporation with thousands of times as many resources as those users do the same thing, especially if they expect you to pay for it? Simple answer: they're stupid.
(Disclaimer: I don't watch TV, nor do I pirate it. I buy the content I want on Blu-Ray or DVD)
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What I want to know is why BBC American can't just leave their shows at 50fps, and deliver content as 1080i50 and 720p50? Modern HDTVs, even American ones, can display 1080i50 and 720p50 just fine over HDMI. IMHO, 50-60hz temporal rate conversion is pointless when the TVs can deal with the native framerate anyway. It's like the fetish web designers had around 1996 of pre-converting images into ugly dithered web-safe colors, instead of just letting the browser deal with it when necessary. Leave 50 as 50 and
Title VI - CC, Emergency Alerts ETC. (Score:2)
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Its been done. Ive seen it work.
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You should see the stuff they can do with SMS alerts. Quite nice. I got a few for flash flooding, which came in handy.
My electric company is starting to do the same thing for power outages. You can tell it to give you a play by play, or tell it to shut up for X hours. "Your power is out. - Crew on location. Should be up in an hour or s
Intel's idea (Score:1)
Oh man I *so* hope this kinda thing takes off somehow, even if Intel's specific version of it doesn't make it... keep plugging away at it, because this is what cable TV *should* be. Without all the craptastic bundling - if a chan or a show isn't popular, then let it die. Let alone, driving a wedge between content and infrastructure.... but thats probably a job for the regulators.
Duh (Score:5, Insightful)
Intel managed to make themselves look completely clueless and oblivious to the market. If it were so easy, Apple would have done this 5 years ago with the AppleTV, that was their plan to begin with.
Ala carte over the top is the holy grail that every tech company has been chasing. Google, MS, Apple, Sony, Netflix, Tivo, Roku, Nitendo, anyone with an box with an internet connection and a tv output.
All of them have been stymied because it would be the end of big contents business model. Making people pay for content they don't want or need and running adds on it.
Re:Duh (Score:5, Interesting)
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Intel managed to make themselves look completely clueless and oblivious to the market. If it were so easy, Apple would have done this 5 years ago with the AppleTV, that was their plan to begin with. Ala carte over the top is the holy grail that every tech company has been chasing. Google, MS, Apple, Sony, Netflix, Tivo, Roku, Nitendo, anyone with an box with an internet connection and a tv output. All of them have been stymied because it would be the end of big contents business model. Making people pay for content they don't want or need and running adds on it.
Wow! No more reality TV? Where do I sign up! I gave up my cable TV in July over the Dish hissy fit with AMC and gave up on broadcast around the first of October. I have several streaming services as well as what I want to buy. Everyone else is left out in the cold including all those advertisers selling those anti fart medicines and adult diapers. My expenses went from a $120 a month to less than $20 a month not counting the $20 or $30 a month I spend to buy movies and TV series. I'm paying less than half t
at least put sports on there own and have theme pa (Score:2)
at least put sports on there own and have theme packs for the other stuff.
Never gonna happen (Score:2)
So long as the content producers make more money from linear channels (regardless of the distribution medium, be it cable, satellite, fiber, whatever) than they would make through a-la-carte content distribution (subscriptions, individual program purchases, whatever) they wont change.
Remember that for any given piece of content, there is almost certainly a non-zero number of people who are paying for the content (through their package) but who do not consume the content. The amount of money that content pro
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How do they intend to address the issue of Live Sports?
Buy a ticket to a home game and watch it in person.
Toronto Argonauts (Score:2)
Your suggestion doesn't work for me since there's no team in my vicinity. Or even country. One Buffalo Bills game a year in Toronto doesn't really cut it.
Don't you have the Argonauts [wikipedia.org] in your country's league?
It occurs to me that we are looking at this wrong (Score:2)
Instead of trying to force the content providers (networks) to allow ala carte, why don't we go directly to the content creators, the people who produce shows that may be picked up by the networks, and present them with a convenient, well-integrated outlet to consumers that bypasses the networks entirely?
I know, to a certain extent this is already being done, but I'm thinking that Intel (in this example) should be going directly to Chuck Lorre, J. J. Abrams, Tim Kring, et al, and say "how would you like to
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You have good points; it wouldn't be easy, but I still think it's doable. However:
> However, just hiring a known entertainment name to create content for your business is not enough. You also need to fund the expenses that studios have -- soundstages, cameras, sets, costumes, catering, etc. -- while producing the content. Unless you want new science fiction stories filmed through a laptop camera and recorded with headset microphones for YouTube, that is.
I'm hoping you meant that as hyperbole. As a matt