Do We Need Video On Demand?
from the just-tivo-it dept
Wired has an article about HBO's latest experiment with video on demand. Apparently, it's going pretty well. However, it's costly for the company, and really, it just sounds like a specialized Tivo that only works for HBO. It seems to me that Tivo (or a Tivo-like device) is really the future of video on demand - rather than the broadcasters themselves. Why would anyone sign up for HBO-on-demand when they could just buy a Tivo and have the same functionality for every channel?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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re: model
Example: I have "breaking away" on my TiVo wishlist. I'd pay $0.99 to see it (commercial free -- interesting little twist there, huh). Say TiVo aggregates that information and determines that 1000 people would pay $3.99, 1400 would pay $2.99, 3000 would pay $1.99 and 5000 would pay $0.99. They could offer it starting at 3.99, then 2.99, then 1.99, etc. I might not get it -- given my low price -- for quite some time if at all. But the distributor gets to reap all the demand (assuming price is negligible -- which may not be a fair assumption). Perfect price discrimination?
I think TiVo starts to blur the line between always-streaming content and batched content. Now that my TiVo has both tuners active on DirecTV, it has the ability to record a minimum of twice as much TV as I am able to watch.
What I would pay to watch -- and when -- is another story. That market is only starting to get interesting thanks to technology like TiVo.
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