Future Is Bright for IP-Network Media
Opinion: Yahoo content guru says that audiences embrace Internet-based media for its immediacy and integration.
The tale is widely told, probably with dramatic license, that tycoon David Sarnoff of RCA and NBC made his first proposal in 1915 for radio broadcasts of music and news. His associates, the story goes, pooh-poohed the idea as "messages to nobody in particular" and demanded to know who would ever pay to send them. Often invoked to illustrate myopic thinking, that (possibly apocryphal) challenge looks more farsighted as content providers shift their focus from radio and TV to IP-network media. Those who pay to send the unaddressed messages of mass-market advertising can now know much more about whos receiving themand have much more power to decide who theyll pay to reach.Were at a watershed moment in the creation of a mainstream audience for Internet streaming content, according to Scott Moore, vice president of Content Operations for Yahoo. I spoke with Moore as Yahoo was getting ready to light the fires on its coverage of the space shuttle launch originally scheduled for July 13. With an exclusive deal on the upstream side to serve NASAs official video feed and downstream arrangements for 50G bps of bandwidth, Yahoo was aiming for appreciation from the strong Internet demographic of spaceflight enthusiasts. "Were not making money from this," said Moore, but Yahoo obviously hoped to gain good associations for its brand.
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In fictional entertainment, people are clearly engaged by complex stories with multiple concurrent threads and even by high-risk experiments such as reversing the normal flow of timeas seen, for example, in various episodes of NBCs "ER."
People would rather piece together for themselves whats really happening from grainy, jerky cell phone camera images from London underground tunnels than see a re-enactment with superior video quality and better camera angles. People want to have more than one point of view and be free to compare multiple sources of information, rather than accepting any one persons choices in any one networks control room. Thats what AOL plans to offer with its own multicamera coverage of the next shuttle launch.
In return, people are giving the folks in the control room a whole new look at their audience. By logging in to a Web site, by subscribing to narrow-cast e-mail bulletins, and by leaving click trails that indicate when and what they want to see, the streaming-media audience makes itself a better-illuminated target than the invisible mass thats giving its attention (or maybe not?) to broadcast programs.
"Were still on the blade" of streaming medias hockey-stick growth curve, predicted Moore. Its time to think creatively about what to do with messages that can go to everyone in particular.
Technology Editor Peter Coffee can be reached at peter_coffee@ziffdavis.com.
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