Stuck In A Broadcast Mindset
from the two-way-is-the-way-to-go dept
History repeats itself over and over again. When the telephone was first created, many people looked at it as a broadcast medium. It could be used to deliver weather, news, and other content to end users. It was only later that people realized the real benefit was in letting people communicate. If you own a pipe, it seems the biggest "empty room" fear is that no one will use it unless you provide the content. Thus, all the recent efforts from wireless carriers seem to be to look at themselves as broadcasters and
view their pipes as a one-directional road. However, providing content is a very different business than providing connectivity - and providing connectivity is much more valuable. Most people already have access to the content they want in other places. To make wireless really valuable, the carriers shouldn't be looking at moving content into a "wireless web", but in taking advantage of the
differences that being mobile provides the user. They should be looking at
services that are only possible when a person is mobile, and provide real value that way. It's not about the broadcast model any more. The next generation of wireless is about letting anyone connect to each other from anywhere.
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Broadcast phones survived for a long time
The net is encouraging the formation of an atomized society in which people are balkanized into hyperspecialized social groups. Such groups could very well find broadcast messages useful when coordinating activities. So, it may stay with us another 50 or 80 years.
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In a Thousand Years
http://hca.gilead.org.il/thousand.html
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Stuck in a Broadcast Mindset
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