The Internet Is Finally Going To Be Bigger Than TV Worldwide (qz.com) 60
According to estimates from media agency Zenith, next year, for the first time, people will spend more time using the internet than watching TV. People will spend an average of 170.6 minutes a day, or nearly three hours, using the internet in 2019. That's a tad more than the 170.3 minutes they're expected to spend watching TV. Quartz reports: Zenith measured media by how they are transmitted or distributed, such as broadcasts via TV signals and newspapers in print. Watching videos on the web through platforms like Netflix and YouTube, or reading a newspaper's website, counted as internet consumption. Nearly one-quarter of all media consumption across the globe will be through mobile this year, up from 5% in 2011. The average person will spend a total of about eight hours per day consuming media in its many forms this year, Zenith forecasts.
In some parts of the world, TV will remain on top -- for now. Zenith forecasted media consumption through 2020 and did not expect the internet to overtake TV in Europe, Latin America, and the whole of North America in that time. In the U.S., it was projected to surpass TV in the U.S. in two years.
In some parts of the world, TV will remain on top -- for now. Zenith forecasted media consumption through 2020 and did not expect the internet to overtake TV in Europe, Latin America, and the whole of North America in that time. In the U.S., it was projected to surpass TV in the U.S. in two years.
Repeat Post (Score:1)
This is already posted about 25 stories back
Re:Repeat Post (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Repeat Post (Score:4, Insightful)
The fact that internet is now being watched more than TV is just because TV is boring.
It's not even that. People want the ability to watch a current show, even one on a network they already get, at times other than the one it which it is broadcast.
Being able to time-shift is what draws most plebeians to streaming. Finding out that episodes are only available on the network's server for a short time, or not until a certain date, or only if you subscribe to the individual network, is what is drawing the plebeians to Kodi.
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This is a rerun, actually.
With reruns, the former TV watchers will feel right at home on the Internet too.
Re: Repeat Post (Score:1)
Another reason to repeal net neutrality globally. to ensure big companies can take control of the content and further their political agendas. Go big brother go, you can do it!!!
TV? Oh, the Big Screen (Score:2)
The next generation won't know what 'television' means. Sure, you will still be able to buy a Television, but broadcast/cable/satellite will refer to Internet connectivity methods. They'll think it's quaint that people set their schedule around certain shows only being watchable at certain times.
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well in asia they still do a bit.
granted, the shows tend to show like 3-6 episodes in one go and stuff..
daytime tv is also big thing, varietee crap brodcast in the day.
tv is where the official propaganda is at.
I wouldn't believe for a moment though if they said that people watch tv more than smartphones in Thailand for example. it's simply not true. if only because they browse fb in their vendor kiosks while the tv might be on in the background.. the attention isn't there as much.
anyways, my tv broadcast bo
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The next generation won't know what 'television' means.
Of course they will know what television means. They will just define it in a different way, as 'that big monitor on my streaming box.'
Re:TV? Oh, the Big Screen (Score:4, Interesting)
We've been able to time shift since the advent of VHS tapes. But people will still want to watch shows live, or as soon as they are released because there is a big social aspect to the entire thing. Talking with your friends the next day or in real time as the show is being aired is still very much a part of the TV watching experience. YouTube Live and Twitch show that watching something as it occurs is still an important part of the entertainment ecosystem. Sure we don't have a fixed number of channels like we used to with traditional TV, but I don't think a lot has changed. If anything, there is even more pressure for people to watch stuff live as the endings are so quickly spoiled on the internet.
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Statistic (Score:2, Redundant)
But...
If you measuring by "time spent" you're already onto a statistical problem.
It's SO MUCH quicker for me to watch an episode of something on Netflix than on TV that it's laughable. And I watch exactly what I want and then switch off. And I don't have ads, and intros, and recaps, etc.
I imagine that Internet is already used much more than TV for such viewing. But because the Internet is about "I want to watch X and nothing else", and TV is about "I'll wait for X to come on, and then sit through any", i
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That's where you're wrong, my friend.
My TV has a 16:10 aspect ratio.
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Welcome to the year 1999 [wikipedia.org]/2000 [wikipedia.org]. That is how long scheduled programming has been dead.
And if you pirate (and really, everyone should be pirating all their TV and movies) that's every single thing you ever watch, so that you don't have to fast-forward through ads anymore like you did back in 2000. It's all been so perfected, that..
Same Same (Score:3)
Is this that old "I don't watch TV, I only watch [insert internet-delivered TV service]" chestnut where people claim they're not one and the same?
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Gorgeous Sunrise (Score:2, Insightful)
When was the last time you enjoy the unbelievably gorgeous view of sunrise?
Stop wasting so much of your life online (and in front of the idiot tube).
Go out, live your life, as intended !!
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Intended by whom?
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I posted 17 selfies on FB/Insta/Tweeter. Thanks for a great tip!
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Re: Gorgeous Sunrise (Score:1)
Huge day by day (Score:1)
Social change (Score:5, Interesting)
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Not sure much has changed - most people are passive consumers of low-effort content.
That explains "Reality TV" and twitch streaming. Sure the players put in effort to win, but it's not a lot of effort to point a camera at themselves while they do it.
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Re: In the '90s it would have meant something (Score:1)
so thats why the revolution wont be televised (Score:2)
What about streaming TV? Counting cord-cutters? (Score:3)
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Netflix isn't TV? Bullshit. (Score:2)
If Netflix isn't considered TV but you're comparing TV with "internet" then their entire comparison is completely meaningless. Netflix is as far in the TV direction as you can get. Yes, behind the scenes it gets onto the TV by using the internet, but that has jack shit with human behavior and preferences, society or anything else. It's basically just a mundane technical de
do we not remember TOS? (Score:2)
The original TOS had terrible numbers, except among the demographic advertisers would later cherish above all others. (Advertisers are slow on the uptake.) So there it was, TOS hanging by a budgetary thread throughout its lame third season.
Ummm (Score:2)
So watching YouTube on TV counts as....
They Got The Poll Questions Wrong (Score:2)
They left off one more option in the answers:
C) I watch TV and surf the web simultaneously.
TV is not dead at all (Score:1)
Re: TV is not dead at all (Score:1)