This is the Future of TV
Rich
Greenfield, the BTIG analyst who’s something of a digital media oracle, isn’t
exaggerating when he says, “The future of television has begun” (registration
required).
The service is Time Warner Cable’s new application for
Roku set-top boxes. It allows TWC subscribers to view live and on-demand
programming on any screen with a Roku connected to it. If that didn’t exactly
blow your mind, here’s why it should:
In the future of television, the set-top box is
king. Screens
will be increasingly plentiful, and turning them into full-fledged internet and
media devices—what we used to call “computers”—is already pretty easy. Small
set-top devices like the brand-new Roku 3, which costs $99, are all you need to
get programming onto a television screen.
That’s why people increasingly think Apple’s
much-anticipated “television” will actually be two products: a high-resolution
screen and a set-top box similar to the existing Apple TV. Then the question
is simply, what is the set-top box capable of doing? And, obviously, playing
television shows is just a small part of the answer to that question.
The internet and television are converging. There’s no cable box involved in TWC’s Roku app, which may be
the most radical thing about it. It’s TV, but the signal is delivered over the
internet. TWC can do this because—like Cablevision, AT&T,
Verizon, and others—it’s both a cable television provider (an MVPD in industry
jargon) and internet service provider (ISP).
Cable TV and internet are already traveling over the same
pipes, which TWC owns and apportion as it sees fit. In fact, the signal for its apps on
Roku and other devices uses a dedicated portion of the internet, free from
other traffic, which makes the picture crystal clear. The difference between
cable TV and internet service is already blurry, and this just blurs it
further.
The next step in this evolution would be a
cable television service that dispenses with cable boxes entirely and delivers
the content entirely over the internet (a virtual MVPD). That’s what Intel says it’s working
on, and other companies likely are, as well. Most of the companies heading in
this direction are based in the US, but the convergence of TV and internet
is happening everywhere.
Bundles have resilience but not dominance. The real
future of television is supposed to break apart the bundles that force cable
subscribers to pay for MTV when they all they really want is ESPN—a la carte.
But though it’s the subject of a new lawsuit filed by Cablevision against
Viacom, bundling is not going away anytime soon, which is why the TWC app for
Roku, with all its channels bundled together, is indeed part of the future of
TV.
But only part of it! On Roku, for instance, TWC is just
one of many apps. (The same is true for the similar TWC apps for iPhones and
iPads.) Other apps you could choose, instead, include Netflix, Hulu, Amazon…
You get the picture. A bundled cable TV experience has plenty of value,
especially for sports fans, but in modern living rooms, it’s just one of many
options.
Remotes and programming guides are finally getting better.
You can see in Greenfield’s video that TWC’s app for Roku, like its apps for
iPads and iPhones, looks nothing like the channel guide on a typical cable box.
The visual interface is much easier to navigate, taking a page from other
user-friendly apps like Netflix. And on top of that, Roku now has a universal
search feature that lets you find content across all of the apps you use. Type
in “Seinfeld” to see if it’s streaming on Netflix, available for purchase on
Amazon, or airing live right now through TWC.
These improved visual interfaces, which dispense with
outdated channel numbers, also allow for much more intuitive remote controls.
These are starting to pop up all over the place. The remote for Apple TV has
just three buttons. The new Roku remote also has a Wii-like motion sensor and
headphone jack for private listening.
Cord cutting is real; it’s just not what you think it is. It’s a great irony that TWC has built an app for Roku,
which was not long ago seen as a device for cord cutters: people who ditch
their cable TV subscriptions in favor of content delivered entirely over the
internet. (Even more ironic: Before it was spun out as a separate
company, Roku was initially developed by Netflix.)
There’s much debate about how many people are actually
cutting the cord, but that kind of misses the point. Cord cutters are simply
early adopters of a future that we’re all headed toward, in which all content
is delivered over the internet and, as discussed above and in Greenfield’s
post, cable TV is just one of many apps.
Over time, with increased competition from services like
Netflix, cable companies will be forced to offer more attractive deals (either
cheaper subscriptions or, perhaps, a la carte offerings). That’s less of a
sharp break, which is what cutting the cord implies, than an organic evolution,
which is how the future is always formed.
Click play on the video above for
a brief tour of what has him so excited.- This is the future of TV [Quartz]
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