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Will TV Soon Disappear?
12 June 2009
According
to several internet ratings agencies more and more people are viewing
television programs on the internet.
Some of them may be bypassing broadcast television altogether to watch
their favorite shows.
This trend was highlighted in a poll last year by Integrated Media
Measurements, Inc. that indicated 20 percent of those surveyed said they
watched at least some television programming on line.
Some television networks, eager not to miss the trend, are putting their
own programs on the web and offering them to internet viewers.
One such provider is Hulu, whose name means “holder of precious things”
in Mandarin. An American television network was instrumental in setting
up the website. It provides programming from more than a hundred
different sources.
Will the Web Replace TV?
Research figures differ on the exact number of Hulu viewers, but there
is broad agreement that its audience measures in the multiple millions
and is growing rapidly.
Will the internet eventually supplant regular TV?
Technology columnist Mark Kellner says there is no way to know, but that
the death of regular TV is at least a possibility. “More and more,”
Kellner says, “folks are turning to the internet and alternatives such
as Hulu.com to watch programs on their schedule as opposed to the
broadcaster’s schedule.”
Another
advantage, he adds, is the amount of advertising. Internet viewers are
forced to watch fewer commercials on the web than those watching regular
TV.
That leads to the question of how internet TV programming will be funded
if regular TV with its massive commercial revenue disappears.
“If regular TV goes away,” Kellner says, “nature abhors a vacuum and
something will come up to replace it and replace the funding model.”
Television did not kill off movies as a profitable medium of
entertainment as had once been feared, he says. Television will probably
survive and “be with us for quite some time,” he predicts. |