Predict the future at the risk of looking very foolish. I think FTA's raw diversity
is a preview of what's to come. Whether any of it arrives via sat is another thing altogether.
What happens if and when broadband access expands dramatically, and
bandwidth capacity of the Internet itself explodes? We don't know if (or
at least, when) the predictions for both access and capacity will come
true. Some government initiative (boondoggle?) might help to get people
near universal wireless broadband access, and an improved Internet with
the capacity to deliver HDTV in realtime without hiccups is said to be
in the works.
People are viewing network shows online right now, directly from the
network's site, with enforced commercials (can't skip past them). Is
this the future -- click on CBS to view CBS? Another idea, AppleTV, has
gotten some positive press, and we are still in the Model T phase of
Internet capacity. Jim Louderback at PC Magazine writes:
"...The Apple TV blows it all away, with a single click that lets you
watch almost any program immediately, without buffering, downloading,
stuttering, or subscribing.... An amazing universe of programming is now
even easier to find. Cable TV spent nearly 20 years trying to create
true video on demand, without much success. Apple got it right in just
18 months...."
AppleTV's movies, however, are slow as molasses to download on the
current Internet.
One thing that is predictably true about capitalism is that competition
is the enemy of profits (Forbes Magazine said, I believe it); competitors
have to innovate in order to survive, and in the end the consumer
benefits. It's why we have our standard of living, and North Korea
has theirs.
If the sat networks are past their prime now, what happens when
unbridled competition puts the squeeze on them? I predict the sat
networks will go the way of AOL, which is still around, but only as a
shell of its former self.
If any of the sat networks had offered a basic FTA package to go with
their premium pay channels from the get go, they might have sewn up
virtually the entire USA -- back in the day. I think true competition
(missing in television distribution in North America) now has a chance.
As a competitor on the vast Internet, the DBS companies will be small time operators,
their fat days are past them; I'd like to know how any of them will ever compete.
AT&T's U-verse is also a dinosaur, what were they thinking?
We don't need central command, we are central command.