Online Video Popularity Still Climbing 59
Ant writes "Macworld reports that people in the U.S. have steadily increased the amount of time they spend watching videos online, as Google's YouTube remains by far their preferred video site, according to a study.
In July, almost 75 percent of U.S. Internet users watched videos online, up from 71.4 percent in March, according to comScore Networks. The monthly time spent watching videos went up to an average of 181 minutes per viewer in July from 145 minutes per viewer in March, according to comScore. In July, the average user watched 68 clips, up from 55 clips in March. Overall, almost 134 million U.S. Internet users watched a little over 9 billion video clips in July, up from 126.6 million people and a little over 7 billion clips in March."
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For Example... (Score:2, Funny)
Who doesn't (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who doesn't (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Who doesn't (Score:4, Insightful)
Not really true. MTV killed videos itself about 10 years ago when it decided to stop airing them,... replacing real music content with Beavis and Butt-Head, and crap pop culture reality shows,... The good news is, at least YouTube seems to have somewhat resurrected music videos! ;-)
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I am not sure exactly how meaningful that is. I have a friend who does not have an especially large personal music collection... and instead just searches YouTube for a music video of whatever song she wants to listen to and leaves it playing in the background.
Beavis and Butthead died 11 years ago... (Score:1)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Rick Astley Rocks (Score:2)
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Demand will be met (Score:5, Interesting)
How much simpler could it be?
I want to watch what I want to watch, when I want to watch it, and I'll pay up to a couple bucks a day to get it. I don't want to wait, and I don't want alot of hassle. What we're seeing is the end of an era - the era of broadcast television. Broadcast television will wane, and the quality of online video developed under alternative business models will improve. (We hope - most of the YouTube content is either pirate or just awful to watch)
But the ability is there, and the public networks aren't (so far) willing to adapt. So they'll die.
How much simpler could it be?
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Any clue if the comedy central motherload thing makes money?
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Advertising will pay, and things are better. (Score:2)
I want to watch what I want to watch, when I want to watch it, and I'll pay up to a couple bucks a day to get it.
You'll pay that couple of bucks a day, but not directly. Advertising budgets that used to go to broadcasters and printed material are now going to their online equivalents. You get to watch when you want and how you want and the actual artist gets their cut of advertising revenue the way Google does it. Others will do things the same way and everyone will win as things move closer to actual f
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I also like to download the content so it can't be taken away tomorrow because someone reported a copyright violation or thought the content wasn't appropiate or whatever. If I have a copy on my computer then I'm not subject to the whims of others.
When those problems are fixed I think the i
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Re:Demand will be met (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, now. Don't be so quick. I agree we're in the early stages of transition, and in the next years we'll see lots of channels broadcast on the internet, but don't kill classic TV just yet.
You know they killed radio and cinema when TV was introduced, and killed cinema yet again with VHS. Then with DVD again (but ok.. VHS died
There are currently a billion or more folks world wide at 30+ who prefer the passive experience of cable/air TV (I'm not saying it's a bad thing either), and the market will continue to deliver to this market, if even for the sheer amount of investment in broadcast equipment they already have.
For the longest time I see content being broadcast on both classical TV and on demand. While in the next 5 years I expect the Internet on-demand/live streaming business will boom, I expect it won't be before 20-30 years that we see classic broadcast TV become a niche and disappear, if ever.
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But whose demands will be met?
There is a constant battle between the demands of the viewer and the demands of the provider. Switching the venue doesn't change a thing.
Sure, there is the brief period when the provider is wooing the viewer away from a rival. But once the transition is complete, things are subject to change in favor of the provider, who has the upper hand. There's no doubt that disruptive technologies deliver new benefits, but we've seen this before. I remember when cable was introduced i
If you want to see how Internet can replace TV, (Score:2)
http://getmiro.org/ [getmiro.org]
I'll describe this FOSS program in terms Slashdotters will grok:
* RSS feed reader - video feeds
* with built-in video player (multi-format, based on the excellent VLC)
* can do various protocols incl. bittorrent
* The Guide has a catalog of tons of free feeds, organized by topic
* You can add feeds without the Guide
* Can handle subscriptions representing keyword search on sites like Youtube
So, as iTunes podcast is a kind of
Online video site business model. (Score:5, Insightful)
2. Declare the site beta.
3. Allow people to upload videos as high as 18 megabits per second. [divx.com]
4. Wonder where all the venture capital went.
Someone is going to make money at this. (Score:2)
Eyeballs == Advertising $
You can slip the product placement in wherever you like, just like they do now. You can put on banner ads, just like you do now. All of the conventional forms of advertising work. The biggest difference is that bandwith is much much cheaper than broadcast and physical media. If you P2P it out, your cost will be that much lower. If that does not add up to profit, I'm not sure what will.
Maybe no one is making money (Score:1)
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6. Profit
(oh wait)
You gotta see Tourette's Guy! (Score:2)
"I hope this is the Puff Daddy version and not that Sting piece of SHIT!!!..." pause.. "AWWW FUCK!!!"
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R.I.P. Tourettes Guy
Broadband (Score:4, Interesting)
Upload vs. Download stats (Score:4, Informative)
I'd like to see some statistics on how many people upload videos vs. how many download/watch them.
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I might be alone here, but I watch jack shit on youtube that's not someone else's copyrighted content that someone else has uploaded (except for the extremely rare uploaded home video of some idiot hurting themselves, which probably accounts for less than 2% of my youtube time).
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I'd like to see some statistics on how many people upload videos vs. how many download/watch them.
I appreciate someone recognizing how serious this is becoming. While not a problem such as world hunger or wars, it's not like this is a non issu
Like the study that showed men like hot women... (Score:2, Funny)
This was news, several years ago... (Score:3, Insightful)
Looking at websites? Check.
Downloading music? Check.
Social networks online? Check.
Watching videos? Check.
Can we just presume that more people are doing whatever next comes along, and not keep reporting on it?
Welcome to Slashdot (Score:1)
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Greatest fun is ahead of us (Score:4, Interesting)
Only weeks ago was Flash with MPEG4+AAC beta announced. And only days ago was Silverlight 1.0 with WMV support announced.
I expect in the next 5 years we'll see a huge surge in online video as video content producers scramble to take a foot in this brand new market.
And I actually expect online video will outdo bittorrent traffic, since a large part of bittorent traffic now is actually various TV series and movies, things that will be legally available for streaming in the near future.
The big question mark is: what do ISP-s do about it. They can filter and slow down bittorrent traffic since the popular opinion is it consists mostly of illegal content (and it's mostly, though not entirely correct). They'll have a quite unique problem doing so with streaming media (and you can wrap streaming in HTTP traffic on port 80 too) when official distributors start streaming DVD or HD quality content as the rule, rather than the exception.
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ISP-level BitTorrent proxy (Score:2)
Yes, but.... (Score:2)
http://www.clutterme.com/internetpeople [clutterme.com]
(not really a shameless plug since that page has nothing to do with my site)
75 (Score:1)