Feeling a little tired lately?
Spending less time watching TV?
Wonder how you're going to absorb it all?
WellYesYeswe'll email you on that.
If it's any consolation, you're not alone.
The beauty of today's content sources is that they are always on, always
available, always sending stuff to you.
According to a study by Yahoo! that's also the ugly underbelly of
today's rapidly changing technology. Their findings, based on responses
from people around the globe, are that we are either mastering the
demands of multitasking or we have changed the time/space continuum.
They found adult internet users:
- listen to music 1.3 hrs
- email 1.2 hrs
- use IM 1 hr
- use the old fashioned phone 1hr
- use cellphone 0.6 hr
- text message 0.6 hr
- read online stuff 0.6 hr
- use MP3 player 0.5 hr
- play online games 0.5 hr
- go to movies 0.4 hr
- play console games 0.3 hr
- use PDA 0.2 hr
In between they do a little work, eat, sleep and
These are adults who aren't even close to being multitasking masters.
Want to see someone who has technology down cold, watch a teen or tween.
They sit in their room or on the sofa. Do their homework, IM
classmates, listen to music, watch the small MySpace video window,
update their online diary and talk on their cell phone.
Tell them no more calls, they switch to texting.
Kids can really stretch their 24-hour day!
It's our own fault.
We believed the industry (and government) when they said how good it was
going to be.
How easy it was going to be.
How fun it was going to be.
- The government improved the quality of our TV image by mandating
digital tuners (we had to buy the tuner separate from the LCD
screen)
- We joined the rush to broadband connection with a cable modem
and DSL (hey if one is good). We looked at fiber or PON (Passive
Optical Network) but are still a little hesitant about giving any
provider all of our access - voice, data, video - so who cares?

- The industry promised us a new, breathtaking video coding
standard - like WMV9, MPEG 2, H.264, MPEG 4, and more.
- They forgot to tell us that all of the new connectivity was
going to put a strain on our storage budget. Three PCs, several TV
sets, an audio system, MP3 players, other devices in the house seem
to breed and grow content.

- We knew the solution was to install the "simple plug and play"
home network like everyone else.

We explained nirvana to our wife.
She was amazed.
We simply said, "Women your age love that about me."

Funny it worked so well for Harry in the movie.
We tried to explain to her how we could go from simply watching (or
missing) a show when "they" sent it over to have video on demand, to our
own "long tail" video community and to create, mix/remix and share our
content.
Gullible weren't we?
There are too many options out there. Despite beautiful presentations
at conferencesthey don't play nice together !
Like:
- Ethernet, HomePlug, HomePNA, MoCA, USB 2.0, 1394, WiFi, UWB,
Bluetooth, ZigBee networks that work if you only use one but
- Multimedia solutions including DTV, STB, DVR, VoIP, DSC, PMP,
AVR and others that were designed as solutions unto themselves
- Systems that include PCs, Macs, laptops, NAS, SAN, DAM
- The content standards - wired/wireless, home automation, DLNA,
HANA, audio/video, DRM
All of the "interested" parties that are working to enrich our lives
either have to send an engineer along with their solution or have to
realize that schmucks are people too.
Despite the fact that our kids seem to be perpetually mobile with their
phones, MP3 players, PSPs, WiFi laptops; they occasionally want to
cocoon at home.
Delivering what the industry calls our connected home entertainment
ecosystem is a helluva lot of work, frustrationmoney !

The UN simply has to stop worrying about all of the trivial issues
and pass a resolution that would unify solution for the connected home
!
You know:
- entertainment on demand
- HighDef content
- Seamless interconnection of devices around the home
- Wired/wireless content distribution
- Seamless home/travel device connectivity
- Content that comes to the house - audio, video, data - that
doesn't care about the pipe or the receiver
- Ability to move that content from one device to another, one
room to another without jumping through horrendous hoops or being
flatly denied
We even bought into the benefits of using Amazon to download a movie
rather than waiting for the NetFlix delivery.
We could have scripted, shot and produced our own HighDef movie in the
time it took to download the video. It looked ok (we squinted) on our
daughter's MP3 player. But it sucked on our big screen.
We'll stick to discs until the super super network is installed. We'll
make our own discs of our content to send to people so they can enjoy
them.
Move the content we purchased/downloaded around?
Yeah like Tellywood is going to let that happen.
Despite the fact that most of your content is yours or from
friends/family or from one of the online "heylook at my stuff" free
sites, the industry has spent an enormous amount of time and money to
protect Tellywood.

We fully agree that creative efforts - audio, video, voice, data -
should be protected from flat out copying and stealing for personal
gain.
We:
- buy (actually license) our software.
- pay to watch "long tail" shows we're interested in on IPTV. Of
course getting it seamlessly from the PC to the TV is a trick and a
half !
- buy or rent our DVD movies (there isn't that much we want to
keep and watch a second time).
The kids buy their "nearly CD quality" music downloads.
ButTellywood's content is "different" from and more valuable than other
content that is developed like creative and work processing software.
It is OK to make a backup copy of this mundane stuff. Tellywood
probably does it with the Adobe, Sonic and Avid software they use to
create their expensive creative endeavors.
But the Tellywood mindset is to ensure that they manage and control
every aspect of the conditional access (CA) and digital rights
management (DRM) lifecycle.
And, the process of CA and DRM produces money. According to iSupply, it
will be a $5 billion industry in a couple of years.
Is there a fast, easy solution?
Can I email it to ya when I figure it out?
It won't arrive until the consumer chooses one or more options:
- always rent to rent
- become comfortable with managed copy pay as you go
- buys multiple copies for multiple device targets
- relents and becomes the criminal that Tellywood already assumes
he/she is and rips a backup copy of the content
Problem is the industry - PC and CE - are doing an outstanding job of
developing AACS (Advanced Access Control System) solutions and DRM.
We're as frustrated as Harrycan't get past the damn turtleneck.

But we aren't stuck waiting for the industry to:
- deliver high speed pipes that handle all the content we
want/need
- deliver true UPnP solutions
- deliver CA and DRM that ordinary schmucks can understand/live
with
We know some teens and tweens who have a few spare minutes in their
42-hour day to solve the problems for us. |