Originally posted by woodsmoke
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OMG, have TV commercials always been this dumb?
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Originally posted by tek_heretik View PostWHO'S PARANOID?! *spins head*...not many people get that joke, usually it whooshes right over their heads.sigpic "Let us think the unthinkable, let us do the undoable, let us prepare to grapple with the ineffable itself, and see if we may not eff it after all." -- Douglas Adams
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I am past the point of caring, if no-life government creeps want to see what I search at Home Depot or what computer parts I research, if that gives them a thrill, good for them, what the problem is, at some point online political activism will be monitored, then goons break down your door and haul you off on some bogus trumped up charge to make your life miserable, scare you and shut you up. That's my worst fear, Big Brotherism on the internet, not Hollyweird protecting the pathetic junk they are churning out.
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Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostI'm a bit unclear what your point is. Based on what you've written, it would seem that your point is the following: because Google has successfully sucked revenue dollars away from something, that they then shouldn't be criticized for...anything?
Google is deserving of criticism for certain mistakes.
they've demolished individual privacy to the extent that "customers" are actually products to be sold. Only bad things can result from this.
Perhaps in the US you'd feel your privacy less "demolished" if you had serious data protection laws.
I would be interested in more specific arguments you might make against any of the statements I've made about Google.
Regards, John LittleRegards, John Little
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
- 9524
- Seattle, WA, USA
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Originally posted by jlittle View PostThe point was your complaint about "TV commercials" being dumb, and that Google is mitigating that directly.
Originally posted by jlittle View Postit's less bad with Google's approach, there's much less wasting of my time and less brainwashing involved.
Originally posted by jlittle View PostPerhaps in the US you'd feel your privacy less "demolished" if you had serious data protection laws.
Originally posted by jlittle View PostI'm just conscious of your being down on Google, and can't help thinking that you've carried a prejudice from a former employer.
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I stopped watching broadcast television years ago...oops, caught in a lie. Actually I cannot, for the life of me kick my weekly "Antiques Roadshow" addiction. I do kinda feel TV comercials lead toward advanced gullibility. My nephew keeps spouting "facts" he heard on TV commercials at me. Once, while working in surgery, I had to listen to a doctor expound to everyone about "the other white meat".
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I still watch TV. I have Dish Network. I enjoy some of the shows and I record them, so that I can watch them commercial free. Love that fast forward button. It cuts a 1 hour show down to about 38 minutes. Dish Network also has a new DVR called the "Hopper" which lets you automatically skip the commercials. I don't have that one yet but it sounds interesting.
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Originally posted by Detonate View PostI still watch TV. I have Dish Network. I enjoy some of the shows and I record them, so that I can watch them commercial free. Love that fast forward button. It cuts a 1 hour show down to about 38 minutes. Dish Network also has a new DVR called the "Hopper" which lets you automatically skip the commercials. I don't have that one yet but it sounds interesting.
Personally I would love to just download a TV show and watch it when I wanted to... not have to worry about making sure I recorded it on time, or that I could miss the beginning or end or even the entire thing if I get the timing wrong or the hdd fills up, or have to skip through the commercials... etc...
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I have "cut the cord" from pay tv services and watch DVD movies, internet streaming services, or OTA television. I saved almost $1000 the first year. I'd rather record a show on my DVR and watch it off-schedule and FF though commercials than pay over $100 a month for the same privledge with a couple 100 channels I don't watch on stand-by. Besides, without commercials how are you supposed to refill your wine glass during a show? Three minutes seems exactly right to grab a snack, re-fill a glass, and take a quick potty break!
I wonder how long before we have a totally new idiom for TV. I suspect as the population ages bringing the younger folks into the primary advertising group the current ad models will become increasingly invalid. I had hope for the UbuntuTV project, but it doesn't seem to be getting traction.
I have great hope that something more interactive and useful springs up. With giant TV's getting cheaper and cheaper and all of them having internet connections, I suspect Google will sell all that tracking info to content providers and you'll see ads targeted specifically at you on your TV. They're already marketing their own pay TV service in Kansas City, MO.
Maybe I'm nuts - but what if you gave up a few inches of screen space on your 60+" TV to targeted banner ads in exchange for no commerical breaks? Would that sell? With interactivity, you could even choose the current model or the banner model. TV Show's would no longer have a schedule. It would be replaced by release dates and might only be available for a limited time. This would remove the need for a DVR and allow the advertisers to tailor ads to the specific viewer.
Personally, I have the willpower to avoid running out and purchasing everything I see when I'm forced to sit though a commercial, so they don't bug me much. I realize this is the model that pays for the entertainment I receive via the newly installed antenna on my roof. When we do watch a commercial; we usually critique (like Steve) the content, message, and appearance of the actors and rarely remember the product when the show resumes. Often enough, the commericals are half the entertainment anyway. Our current favs are the Ford commercials where "Nick" is selling trucks/cars. The hunter that says he hunts deer and then panics when he turns and sees Santa appears to be the salesman and immediately says "Fish, I hunt fish. I don't know why I said deer." always brings a chuckle. I mean hunting fish? Now that's funny, I don't care who you are!
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Originally posted by oshunluvr View PostI have "cut the cord" from pay tv services and watch DVD movies, internet streaming services, or OTA television. I saved almost $1000 the first year. I'd rather record a show on my DVR and watch it off-schedule and FF though commercials than pay over $100 a month for the same privledge with a couple 100 channels I don't watch on stand-by. Besides, without commercials how are you supposed to refill your wine glass during a show? Three minutes seems exactly right to grab a snack, re-fill a glass, and take a quick potty break!
I suspect Google will sell all that tracking info to content providers and you'll see ads targeted specifically at you on your TV. They're already marketing their own pay TV service in Kansas City, MO.
Maybe I'm nuts - but what if you gave up a few inches of screen space on your 60+" TV to targeted banner ads in exchange for no commerical breaks?
TV Show's would no longer have a schedule. It would be replaced by release dates
and might only be available for a limited time.
Personally, I have the willpower to avoid running out and purchasing everything I see when I'm forced to sit though a commercial, so they don't bug me much. I realize this is the model that pays for the entertainment I receive via the newly installed antenna on my roof.Last edited by james147; Dec 14, 2012, 11:27 AM.
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I like the new payment models that are appearing with indie films, basically crowdsourcing the funds. You have an idea, you ask people for money to do your idea and if they like it they fund you. There are currently sites that can help you with this such as VODO. All the shows there you can download for free and watch whenever you want and donate to the shows you really like to help continue development. Unfortinually there are not many good shows on there atm. I recommend Pioneer one if you want to try one out or even Sintel (this one was done entirely in the opensource software blender to show off what it can do, it is only a very short film however).
If the crowd-sourcing idea could get shows into main-stream outlets it might take off. Sort of like Hulu and Netflix producing their own content.
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BTW, the on-line adds can usually be blocked with a good hosts file. If I recall correctly, this works with Hulu but not ABC online.
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Originally posted by oshunluvr View PostCool idea, but a long ways from being implemented in this country! It reminds me of what some new music artists are doing - selling directly to the public. Great idea in concept but more often not practical. The current model requires an investment in marketing to make a good product sell well enough to be worth the effort. I suspect movie studios / TV stations lose on more shows than they profit from, but when they have a hit the profits pay for the losers too.
If the crowd-sourcing idea could get shows into main-stream outlets it might take off. Sort of like Hulu and Netflix producing their own content.
There is also similar models for starting up businesses (based on an idea for a product), such as kickstarter. The model is sound and is being used to develop some new and interesting things.
I think what these sites currently need to make them more successful is more people to know about them. Once they hit the main populations eye then they should take off very fast. Also, I see no reason any country is excluded from this model as it is based on the internet
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