Reading this now (Keith's reply had the text of this truncated, for some 
reason), I'm as angry as he is. Nothing here but Big Cable screwing us all 
over, while making us think that we're getting more.

"If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in bloody 
hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik




To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
From: ravena...@yahoo.com
Date: Thu, 31 Dec 2009 03:30:55 +0000
Subject: [scifinoir2] Internet on TV might come right out of a box


















 



  


    
      
      
      
www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-tc-biz-tech-nettv-1205-1227-dec30,0,5899320.story



chicagotribune.com



Internet on TV might come right out of a box



By David Lazarus



Tribune Newspapers



December 30, 2009



Comcast Corp. Chief Executive Brian Roberts was gushing recently about his 
company's impending takeover of NBC Universal, saying the deal would give 
consumers what they want, "which is access to all different types of content on 
different platforms and different times."



That's not the half of it, but it may not be Comcast in the driver's seat. 



If federal regulators have their way, the next big thing on the tech horizon 
will be a brave new world of Internet-ready, work-with-any-network set-top 
boxes, offering consumers unprecedented multimedia options through their TVs, 
not just their computers. 



And if this plays out as the Federal Communications Commission envisions, the 
world as cable companies know it will change radically, making the potential 
synergies of the Comcast-NBC deal obsolete. 



"The consumer will be king," said Colin Crowell, senior counselor to FCC 
Chairman Julius Genachowski. "You'll be able to get your own set-top box that 
does all the whiz-bang things you want it to do, and you'll be in control."



The FCC put out the official word in early December seeking input from industry 
players and other interested parties about changes to rules governing set-top 
boxes, including a requirement that these devices work with all networks, 
whether run by cable, satellite or phone companies. 



At the same time, the FCC is pushing ahead with efforts to make sure that 
broadband Internet access is available to virtually all households. 



"Computers may be in 74 percent of American homes," Crowell said, "but 
televisions are in 99 percent of homes. Clearly, if your television offered a 
way to easily switch over to the Internet, we would be providing a way for all 
Americans to get online."



The upshot, as the FCC sees it, is that consumers should be able to buy 
multisystem, Internet-friendly set-top boxes in a newly energized marketplace 
where electronics firms vie for your business with innovative features and 
competitive prices. 



"Let's say you're in the mood to watch 'Sleepless in Seattle,' " Crowell said. 
"You could either get it as a movie on demand from your cable provider, or go 
online and see when it's going to be on Bravo and set your DVR to record it, or 
go to Netflix and download it."



Or viewers could go online via their television and watch shows and movies at 
free sites such as Hulu.com. The cable industry is aware that change is coming 
down the pike. 



"The marketplace is rapidly changing," acknowledged Brian Dietz, a spokesman 
for the National Cable and Telecommunications Association. "There are a lot of 
industries experimenting with how to bring content to consumers, including the 
cable industry."



Copyright © 2009, Chicago Tribune






    
     

    
    






                                          
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