calikarim said:
Last but not least, as soon as the demand for HDTV services reaches critical mass (starting now, definitely next holiday season), D* and E* will jump into it massively with deep pockets plus large subscribers bases. D* has already announced so.
As much as I would like to see a third, quality DBS provider, it's just too late in the game. I think the days of VOOM are numbered. The only question remaining is whether Charlie will buy the VOOM business as a whole, or let it die and try to pick it up the pieces on the backside (buy the returned licenses from the FCC, the satellite construction capacity from Lockheed etc.). That will be his gamble....
Just my 2c....
Quote of bbrukx
This is a quote from earlier post, but he is wrong. D* and E* have 20 million subscribers. There are 250 million people in the US almost 90 million homes that will be the potential market in a couple of years, as HD sets become more prevelant. That means 70 million more potential open minded customers. When Google started in a garage, everyone said "How can they compete with Yahoo", they have 10's of millions of followers, Google is a startup. Yet today Google surpasses Yahoo in the number of hits everday, and the founders from $15,000 have amassed a fortune of $6 billion and have blown Yahoo away.
Starbucks too, similar story when they started. America is founded on entrepreneurship, and all it takes is a great idea and today Giants are yesterday dinasaurs. IBM was the only game in town, when Bill Gates a programmer for IBM came out with Windows, the rest in history, Microsoft is the leader and is on every desttop in the World. But if you tell GAtes, oh it is too late in the game, the game is set, you have a great idea but you are too small and have 26, 000 subscribers how will you compete with IBM, he would never have made it
Economics 101 guys, this is what capitalism is all about. You build a better mousetrap and they will rush to you. No matter not capital, ideas are capital. Good ideas attract capital. Voom would maybe cost $250 million , a drop in the bucket for so many billionaires and other multi national corporations.
Guys voom is not dead, i will bet anyone that voom will survive, and shut all you nathsayers up. HD is in its infancy, the game is just beginning. Dolan founded HBO, he is beyond the mind of all of us out here, these guys are in differnet league than us.[/QUOTE]
agree that America is all about entrepreneurship but most of the 90 million homes will stay with their current provider, computers were relatively new to the consumer when gates jumped in and we all know Voom has given the opportunity for more hd but has failed to deliver in almost every way across the board to way too many people, BAD SERVICE, OTA Antenna ISSUES, BILLING ISSUES, BAD CSR TRAINING, yes i know all of the other providers have issues but not at the % that voom has. Voom has not made a better mousetrap,