Bringing Free Television To Phones In America 159
ideonexus writes "South Korea, China, Brazil, parts of Europe, and Japan have been watching television on their phones for free since 2005, but American mobile carriers are struggling to offer clunky streaming video using Qualcomm's proprietary MediaFLO system for an additional monthly fee and excessive bandwidth demands. Now, with America having gone digital in June, if Mobile carriers were to have ATSC M/H (advanced television systems committee — mobile/handheld) television-tuner chips built into their handsets it sounds like we could enjoy free TV on our cell phones too; however, these companies have already invested a great deal of money adapting their networks to Qualcomm's format and Qualcomm is considering becoming a mobile television distributor itself."
Dollars and nonsense. (Score:3, Informative)
Let's see... as non-cellphone devices, FLO TV costs $250 for the 7-inch LCD TV at Best Buy, and then you get 6 months free after which you pay about $15/month.
An ATSC-based portable LCD of the same size costs $100 at Best Buy, and of course has no monthly fees because ATSC is broadcast in the clear.
Now, the FLO TV product has an advantage because what you're paying for isn't just the broadcast networks, but also a few "basic cable" channels such as ESPN, CNN, CNBC, Nick, and Comedy Central. It's a case of you get what you pay for.
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The article claims it costs US carriers $240/hour to stream live TV to a user, per user! And yet they charge $15/month ... SOMEBODY is lying
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Yes, and that somebody is you, because the article makes no mention of that (despite other lies it contains).
Other lies:
http://mobile.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1498728&cid=30661924 [slashdot.org]
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The article claims it costs US carriers $240/hour to stream live TV to a user, per user! And yet they charge $15/month ... SOMEBODY is lying
They make up the difference in volume...
Dedicated devices do it better. (Score:2)
Re:Dedicated devices do it better. (Score:5, Insightful)
Only because apple does not want to add it. Nokia phones have had FM radio WITH RDS forever.
Honestly, just because the iPhone does not have it does not mean that others dont have it, or have had it a long time already.
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Only because apple does not want to add it. Nokia phones have had FM radio WITH RDS forever.
Honestly, just because the iPhone does not have it does not mean that others dont have it, or have had it a long time already.
My thoughts exactly. I was shocked to learn just now that iPhone doesn't have FM radio. Certainly though it must have some system built into it to receive off the air broadcasts so its users can keep abreast of important local news, right?
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FM Radio, there is NO App for that.....
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Yes, maybe you are shocked, but me and my wife agreed to remove TVs from our home. We found that TVs started to waste our time too much, and all we were watching were junky TV shows which had near-to-zero value on us anyway.
Instead, now we listen to FM radio. At least, we can do something more productive while listening to the radio.
And somehow, I am wasting my 'productive' time writing comments on Slashdot. Great.
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Thank you for sharing that information about not having TV. Perhaps you could meet up with this guy and do productive things together. http://www.theonion.com/content/node/28694 [theonion.com]
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NPR for me, but really aren't the benefits of such a feature in smart communication devices pretty obvious? Personally I think it should be mandatory that all radio devices should be able to tune to local public information stations in the event of an emergency.
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I'm not arguing the emergency thing...but in a non-emergency I can listen to a preposterous number of NPR stations from around the country.
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Now, as to whether it's for hardware or software reason's its not functional (or if if even exists), contact Apple.
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That's hilarious! My wife got a new LG Chocolate Touch for Christmas and IT has an FM radio built into it!
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They don't have to put it on the iPhone. They are talking about FUTURE phones, not YOUR phone.
We don't all own an iphone. Matter of fact, my HTC Touch Pro is way better than an iPhone. If we were hanging out together in person we could compare and I could show you why.
There are other phones out there, you know. I really hope the concept of the mobile pc doesn't go the way of the Kleenex --- where everyone calls a face tissue a kleenex --- where everyone calls a mobile pc phone an iphone.... eeeewww.
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They don't have to put it on the iPhone.
But it will be on your iPhone. ATSC-M/H is an IP based system, and there will be a device called Tivit [cnet.com] that will receive an ATSC-M/H IP stream, and rebroadcast it over WiFi to your iPhone, Touch, PC, etc.
Why not? (Score:2)
Why not? We already have hundreds of channels of "high def" cable TV that's usually 480p and so compressed that it looks like hammered sh**. It'll probably look better on a cell phone where fine detail can't be picked up.
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Re:Why not? (Score:5, Informative)
decoding the broadcast ATSC signal takes a rather beefy CPU, so I wonder if decoding it (even in hardware) might not consume a lot of power for a cellphone.
Mobile reception of ATSC signals is difficult because of the larger antenna size required and because phase shifting of the signal and such can corrupt it, even at vehicle speeds. The only solution that makes sense is multicast OTA by the mobile provider. 288x352 @ 25 FPS, with a mono 22Khz audio can be reproduced at a decent quality at maybe 100KB/s, so 20 channels of broadcast TV on a mobile link would consume maybe 2MB/s, which is relatively low.
I see... (Score:3, Funny)
South Korea, China, [...] and Japan
So all the countries that have excess Anime... Makes sense! Smaller file size and faster streaming after compressing the video to use only an 8 bit colour-stream, which hardly ruins the cartoon!
I'm kidding. Of course. Calm down.
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Not to mention the low framecount making the compression even better! Heck, they probably use an animated gif with some kind of synchronized audio.
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Come on, I've watched DBZ: Why would you need an animated gif? And a straight audio loop would do just fine.
Careful what you ask for (Score:2)
Who cares? (Score:4, Insightful)
There's nothing worth watching.
Just because it's Qualcomm... (Score:5, Informative)
MediaFLO isn't "clunky." The FLO part stands for "Forward Link Only." That means it uses a broadcast channel downstream, so it is bandwidth-efficient for one-way content delivery. It is a Qualcomm proprietary technology, but it is not inherently less good than other DTV technologies applicable to mobile devices. MediaFLO was designed for mobile devices, so it might have advantages over some DTV standards that were not designed with mobile devices in mind.
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Whatever happened to IP multicast? Quite well suited for TV streaming across any number of platforms, and as a transport layer it doesn't get much more universally standardized and accepted than that.
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IP multicast would not help the last-mile issue in using mobile data for TV. MediaFLO has dedicated bandwidth for nearly all the downstream payload.
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Using IP multicast only the streams that have subscribers in a given cell get streamed to that cell, and then within the cell get distributed to subscribers. QoS should be fairly trivial as the multicast stream is obviously streaming TV content. If reserved bandwidth is needed, policing can be done preventing excess users from subscribing to a stream. Trying to mimic circuit-switched reserved bandwidth chunks over a natively packet based media always strikes me as silly.
Canada, eh? (Score:2)
The only thing more saddening about the US being so far behind on this stuff is the fact that here in Canada, we'll be even one or two years behind them. Probably thanks to CRTC bureaucracy and bilingual nonsense. And once we get it, there will be nothing on except CBC, because the US programming that we all want to see will be roadblocked by licensing restrictions in Canada. Just like hulu, pandora, etc...
Bottom line: in 4 years we'll be lucky enough to watch low-res, DRM'd "Beachcomber" reruns on our
mobile carriers won't like this (Score:2)
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Oh the US providers would LOVE it provided that they could lock it out and charge extra to use it.
antenna strength? in some area you need good signa (Score:2)
antenna strength? in some area you need good signal to get tv and channel 2 HD use to be real bad with that in the past.
Not the American way (Score:2)
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In America, boradband providers only offer additional services if they can charge you for it. This "free" word you speak of will not be recognized by the American cell providers.
But it's not their call. If I buy a nokia ATSC enabled phone, and I tune to a local HD channel, I'll get television. Unless I buy the phone from a cell company who removes that functionality and renables it for a monthly fee, there's nothing they can do about it.
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Too bad about 999 out of 1000 Americans who have cell phones bought theirs from a cellphone company, and most of the carriers do cripple their handsets (especially ones that rhyme with Blurizon).
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Too bad about 999 out of 1000 Americans who have cell phones bought theirs from a cellphone company, and most of the carriers do cripple their handsets (especially ones that rhyme with Blurizon).
All it takes are a few geeks to show the benefits of buying direct from manufacturer "Look, I get TV, but you don't!" and people will clamor. On my local TV news this morning, they had a spot for google's new phone, and the one thing they kept talking about was this strange concept of "unlocked" and what it meant. The anchors chatted amongst themselves afterward about how innovative the idea of freely moving your phone from one cell company to another was. Regular folk are waking up on the cell phone fro
Do we need another distraction? (Score:3, Insightful)
"South Korea, China, Brazil, parts of Europe, and Japan have been watching television on their phones for free since 2005...
Er, I'm wondering how many of those countries have the numbers the US does, using these devices while attempting to steer 2 tons of steel down a freeway at 60MPH with 60,000 of their closest friends riding bumper to bumper? Somehow, I think the last thing we need is another visual distraction on a cell phone.
Perhaps this is one of those features that we don't go all Lemming over. Never really understood the fascination of browsing the web or watching video on a tiny-ass screen. The "because I can" cool factor usually wears off after about 20 minutes, or when you battery prematurely dies, whichever comes first.
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Fine, it's not for you. But it amazes me that I can (as a passenger, of course) be in a car going down the freeway and still browse the web to search for something (e.g. find an answer to something we were talking about, etc.). While you definitely do do a lot of zooming & pinching on the screen, I think such "tiny-ass screens" can be amazingly useful. (Disclaimer: I have a work provided phone and I p
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Sit on a bus, subway, train, back seat for 20-60 minutes, and you'll discover just how convenient it is having mobile browsing, or video, or games, or whatever in your pocket.
Flash (Score:4, Insightful)
I thought some have suggested this was a big reason why Flash has been ported to other platforms, but isn't on the iPhone. AT&T has publicly said it, but there are theories AT&T is terrified of what would happen to data usage if you could stream video to the iPhone via Flash from any number of sites.
Not to mention it would hurt iTunes video sales to the same devices.
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Doesn't Flash fall under the no-scripting-languages-allowed rubric? Or since Apple controls the browser this doesn't matter?
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There is no flash on the iphone because Apple cant control what you do with flash. There really is no other reason, it's the same with mulit-tasking, the HW and SW are perfectly capable but are artificially locked in order to gain greater control.
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Flash kills cpu and thus battery life. It's a fact. I really doubt it's some sinister plot by Apple. They can't control what you do with a web browser either, and they don't care.
Hell, they even approved the Rhapsody app. In case you didn't notice, Rhapsody competes directly with iTunes.
Do we really need MORE TV? And in public? (Score:2)
So now we get to overhear 'lowest-common-denominator-TV' addicted assholes actually watching their shows, like "The Hills," and "Jersey Shore," in public, on the train, at the grocery store? Kill me now.
Sports fans foaming at the mouth and screaming over some perfect or missed play...
Idiots trying to watch TV and drive (I was kidding a bit before, but this is the one that really scares me).
Don't get me wrong, I love technology and can see certain times where this might be interesting, and I am all for perso
$50 TV (Score:2)
Date: Sat, 19 Dec 2009 23:26:53 +0000 (UTC)
Thank you for ordering from Target.com.
The following items were included in this shipment:
1 Digital Labs 7" Portable D $49.99 1 $49.99
Item Subtotal: $49.99
Shipping: $6.92
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Economist fail on TFA. Media FLO not streamed! (Score:2)
The article says: "the “V Cast” and “Mobile TV” television services offered by Verizon and AT&T respectively are streamed jerkily across their cellular networks."
This is false, This article is very misleading. V-Cast TV and AT&T Mobile TV are Qualcomm's MediaFLO service re-branded. These are broadcast-quality digital signals that come over what previously was the Analog TV channel 55. These are NOT streamed, and are completely separate from the Cellular network. See the Media
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They are both ip based , which is evident on the bill , if you ever screw up and use it on a phone without the data plan.
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No, they are NOT IP based. The only thing that goes over the IP network is the billing and decryption key exchange.
FLO TV / VCast TV/ AT&T Mobile TV is an encoded digital signal that goes out over UHF. I have personally toured FLO TV's headquarters, am friends with employees that work there, and know what I'm talking about. The TV signals are taken from the network feeds and encoded at FLO TV's San Diego headquarters, then transmitted out to dual satellite uplinks. The transmitters in in the local
No, ATSC won't cut it (Score:2)
TFA mentions ATSC M/H because the actual ATSC specification performs relatively poorly in the face of doppler and dynamic multipath. ATSC works just fine if you put up a proper outdoor antenna, but if you just use the whip antenna built into a portable TV, it sucks.
P.s. I am one of the only /.ers who owns and operates his own ATSC transmitter [n6qqq.org]. It should be installed and operational sometime this month (yes, it's a bit late).
I remember when a cell phone was just a phone. (Score:2)
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So, apart from improving network bandwidth and availability (which I will concede is needed), in what way would you improve call quality?
In other words, are you asking for more than simply insuring that enough data flows in and out of the phone so that the caller doesn't sound like Charlie Brown's teacher?
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If you don't use many minutes, you don't need a "plan" at all. Just get a prepaid phone..
http://www.cellguru.net/prepaid_compare.htm [cellguru.net]
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Yawn (Score:2)
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And you are the only person in the universe. If you wouldn't want something then why would anyone!
Non-idiot here... (Score:3, Informative)
I've heard enough from the peanut gallery now... The non-stop bickering about trivialities is getting pretty damn old, and it doesn't make a damn bit of difference. Here's a lolipop, go away little children, and let the adults talk.
Is Europe, DVB-H had been promoted for literally decades as the thing that was going to change the world... EVERYTHING was going to have a TV on it, cell phones most of all.
Fast forward to the modern day, with cell phone manufacturers having disputes with broadcasters over DVB-H fees, one just went ahead and built a full DVB-T receiver into their cell phones. It was a stunning development. Sure, it used a bit more power, but now you could watch REAL TV programs, not just the niche "mobile" broadcasts that you were supposed to want to watch on your cell phone. Of course broadcasters were put in their place by this move, and DVB-H fees have become more reasonable, and there's an effort to get real content out there. But either way, the proverbial cat is out of the bag, and people now want "real TV" on their cell phones, and a large number of them get just that these days, for a fairly small premium...
Of course ATSC in the US is much more complex than DVB-T in Europe, but never the less, you certainly can still find a handheld TV for under $100 http://www.officedepot.com/a/products/541548/Digital-Prism-ATSC-300-3-5/ [officedepot.com]
So, it's only a question of time. Give it another year, and your smart phones will receive OTA broadcasts, for free. Sure, they might also support the premium in-network TV-like data system, but nobody will want it, and the niche audience won't be large enough to support the effort. And it'll go the way of the MPEG-1 D-Frames, and the "PDA Internet", as do all poorly thought-out kludges that are only stop-gaps for temporarily resource-starved platforms that can't yet play with the big boys.
That is all. You may now return to your endless and pointless bickering about whether or not it's worthwhile to buy a subsidized cell phone...
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The places where this has worked have high population density and less personal space. A teenager can watch TV in their room without disturbing their parents. People can watch TV on public transport. That kind of thing. It is less attractive in countries with low population densities.
A love affair with the automobile (Score:2)
The low population density argument is overblown when it comes to the United States.
But the public transport argument does. Unlike parts of Japan and the EU, the United States has a love affair with the automobile, which requires each adult commuter's full attention for the entire commute.
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an iPhone costs as much has a 42" plasma. Yes real prices. you cant count the subsidized pricing that AT&T gives out. I bought a 42" Pioneer plasma this xmas for $590.00. That is how much a iPhone costs if you buy it outright.
So a TV is as cheap as a throwaway cellphone.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
Okay, not quite a tilt, but the pinball machine is being rocked quite a bit to get that comparison.
Plasma TVs are practically having a going out of business sale lately because California set energy standards for TVs at just below what plasma can do. As usually happens, when California regulates something, national distributors want one product they can take everywhere so the regulation becomes a de facto national standard.
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So a TV is as cheap as a throwaway cellphone.
I can't say I've ever seen someone throw their iPhone away.
Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
A mobile phone is a throw away cheap device
I still don't understand this mindset. A mobile phone, bought without a contract, is often upwards of a few hundred dollars here in America. Purchased with a contract, it comes at the price of about $50 with two years worth of monthly payments that you can't get out of without paying, you guessed it, a few hundred dollars. Nowhere in my book does that price put mobile phones in the range of cheap throw away devices. Cheap throw away devices are things like paper towels and flashlights that run under the $20 mark and are trivial to find and purchase just about anywhere. Something as expensive as a mobile phone seems to me like a long term investment. I put a lot of thought into what kind of phone I am going to purchase, what kind of capability it should have, and how much I am willing to pay for that capability. Mobile phone purchases require research and awareness and sometimes even a bit of silver-tongued bartering on the buyer's part. That doesn't seem like a throw away device to me.
I really wish this idea and similar ideas regarding things like computers and video game consoles would cease already. I am sick of having to save up for new multiple hundred dollar purchases every two or three new years because designers and companies refuse to design a product that lasts more than a couple years. That's not to say that I don't see value in upgrading for some new exciting feature. Sure, if a video game console provides a whole new interface or something cool like that, I won't have a problem dropping coin on it. Having to buy a new Xbox 360 every couple years just because a company won't put any money into quality engineer is frustrating though.
The same thing goes with mobile phones. If a company adds some cool new feature, like cameras, to their phone, I will drop coin on buying it if I value the feature. Paying to constantly replace a simple phone that I use primarily for texting or talking on every couple of years seems absurd however. This is especially true when I need to buy a new phone for no other reason than it has problems interfacing with a new battery or because the screen just magically 'wears out.'
I know that wasn't the point of your post, but I don't consider purchases of a few hundred dollars whimsical or cheap. I really wish tech companies would stop pushing these items on us like they were cheap throw away toilet paper to be replaced in a dozen months. I want something that lasts if I am going to buy it damn it. Hell, I am riding a 31 year old motorcycle that functions just fine today. I would be stoked if I could get mobile phone that could do the same....
On a side note, I can also use a land-line telephone that is 31 years old today. Our culture seems to have changed quite a bit when it comes to quality engineering.
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A mobile phone, bought without a contract, is often upwards of a few hundred dollars here in America.
Not with TracFone or Virgin.
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Indeed.
Virgin Mobile is currently -- in the US, at least -- selling Kyocera TNT [virginmobileusa.com] phones for about $15 on their website, and they've typically got similar deals available cash-and-carry at places like Wal-Mart. No contract, contact information, or anything else required except for a bit of cash.
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That is because mobile phones are one of the few things (along with healthcare) where Americans get a raw deal compared to the rest of the world.
Most things (rent, food, gadgets) are cheaper in the USA but it seems phones and healthcare are not.
The UK normally is an expensive country (gadgets cost twice the US price) but you can get a "pay as you go" phone (no contract) for £8.97 [tesco.com] which is $14 - inc
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It all depends on your phone, and what you use it for. My phone is a cheap, throw-away device. It cost $15. I have a list of family and friends on it, it makes calls, and it receives them. I average about 2 texts a month, so it has a normal keypad.
In short, it's the mobile version of my land-line with the important numbers scrawled on a sheet of paper and tacked to the wall above it.
Cost? About the same as my old land-line.
Not everyone wants a camera-tablet-netbook-gps-phone. I ha
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Why? It's a scam to sell more reading glasses, obviously.
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Funnily, my mobile phone costs as much as a decent sized TV and for good reason.
While you may buy cheap mobile phones, more people are opting for expensive smartphones such as the plethora of Android phones out there or an iPhone. Battery life not withstanding, I would have no problems with TV being available on my phone.
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A mobile phone is a throw away cheap device that is issed for two way communications with another person.
A five hundred dollar device used for two way communication is NOT cheap; a POTS phone is ten bucks. And my phone has email that I can send to more than one recipient at a time, so it's not two way communications ONLY (and it's a relatively cheap phone). You can buy a small TV for less than I paid for my phone.
A TV is something you watch from your recliner in the living room with a beer in your hand (or
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It seems different providers in Aus just make TV available over 3G. No stress about it here.
Thats news to me. How do you access it?
Re:No thanks. (Score:5, Funny)
But you might miss important programs, like "Who wants to marry a minimum wage construction worker 17", "Surviver 39: Let's eat some live bugs and run around naked again", "Big Brother 26: Who cares any more", "Bachelor 45: Lets have sex with Russian mail order brides", and "Bachelorette 15: Women want to have indiscriminate sex too".
How could anyone not desire to see such revolutionary important and educational television programs as these?
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Those shows were actually good (if watched a few hours a day) but we shouldn't say TV should be educational. It's not a good medium, not for important stuff. Sure, it's nice to give kids a litt
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I think it has less to do with what the masses want and more to do with what is cheap to produce. The masses know TV is crap. Most people simply don't care enough to do anything about it.
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Saying there's too much crap on TV to own a television set is like saying there are too many awful books to have a library card.
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Maybe I'm a luddite.
Is luddite "I know what's good for other people" in busybody-speak?
If you don't like it, don't watch it. If you don't like it and it doesn't harm you, it is none of your business if it becomes more prevalent.
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Europe, Japan... Use standards. America thinks it is better without. Americans don't want government "interfering". They claim the market will decide the best approach. It does not. It picks best short term profitability for one company (Qualcom in this case). Europe requires cellphone to be interchangable across networks, America lets cell providers each use their own scheme. You can get better cell phones and features in India then America because they follow a standard and their is a bigger market. For t
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Saying everyone has to use the same technology doesn't say which technology they have to use
Saying everyone has to use the same technology without specifying what is useless.
Company A uses one tech.
Company B uses another.
Company C uses something different.
You say "Hey! All you guys need to use the same stuff." To which all three companies respond "Great! They can switch to ours!"
If you want any realistic results you need to specify exactly which technology they're all using.
quite frankly the state of mob
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Very likely. And when they finish they'll also give the world, free of charge, the cure for cancer that they accidentally discovered while genetically engineering pigs with wings.
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quite frankly the state of mobile phones is much better in areas that enforce standards.
I'll say.
I remember the first time I travelled to the US (which was in 2001). As a business traveller I had been all over the place - SE Asia, most of Europe, Australia and NZ etc. And my standard, average (at the time) 2.5G GSM phone just worked in all those places. The plane landed, I turned it on, and within 1-2 minutes it had connected, usually followed by a "welcome to $country!" text message shortly thereafter.
Then I went to the US and there was no coverage at all. Of course back then, there was NO GS
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But here you have the situation where all the existing innovation (let alone future innovation) is disabled for the American market because the carriers don't like the consumers having more features unless they get a cut.
So far yes. I'm hoping to see a player enter the market who is willing to be just a carrier and not give a damn what your phone does. Not optimistic mind you, but hopeful.
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Americans don't want government "interfering". They claim the market will decide the best approach. It does not. It picks best short term profitability for one company (Qualcom in this case).
The ATSC is not a government organisation - it's a consortium of commercially-interested companies agreeing on a standard. The US government has never mandated a particular standard to be implemented, merely ratified, through the FCC, the most popular one for wide-spread use. This is an example of the market in action - and what the cellphone carriers do with that has also been left up to the market, though this isn't operating at peak efficiency for consumers, it is likely producing fat profits for the cel
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Just image if your TV and land line phone was like that or that houses had different electrical sockets depending on who built it.
Standards are not socialism, it's common fucking sense because as clearly proven by the mobile phone market in the US that a free market with no standards has left the US in an awful s
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What a load of shit. Americans are getting shafted on mobile phones. Your plans are expensive, you pay to receive calls most if not all instances and your phones don't work with ever provider.
right a load of shit? hahaha. and i get modded flamebait. OK then. Who determines plans are expensive? HUH??? you do? ok then don't pay for it. pretty simple, basic economics 101 stuff. I'd rather it was cheaper, but in time the prices will fall.
Just image if your TV and land line phone was like that or that hou
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Forcing someone to comply with a standard is socialism.
WTF? I think that the above electrical socket analogy is a decent one. Even in the US you have a standard electrical socket. Not to mention a standard mains voltage. And even the US has laws enforcing that (requiring builders to use that kind of socket, and power companies to supply that voltage of power). That is just common sense, not socialism. I think you keep using this word without knowing what it actually means.
Oh and incidentally, it's not "every website", but US laws already require all government
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WTF? I think that the above electrical socket analogy is a decent one. Even in the US you have a standard electrical socket. Not to mention a standard mains voltage. And even the US has laws enforcing that (requiring builders to use that kind of socket, and power companies to supply that voltage of power). That is just common sense, not socialism. I think you keep using this word without knowing what it actually means.
If it was really common sense the US comapnies wouldn't need to do it. There's really no
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my first line should read US companies would need to do it.
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See this:
http://mobile.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1498728&cid=30661924 [slashdot.org]
The whole article is horribly wrong. The TV service they're speaking about does NOT use up cellular network bandwidth.
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Had you bothered to check facts , v-cast is not powered by media flow , and niether is "mobile tv".
There is actually a tv app that uses media flow , the 2 are just video on demand type services over ip to the handset.