Digital Video – A look ahead
February 12th, 2010In our increasingly wired world of digital video has begun to make their mark on our society. It is the generation that is seeing the growth of personal computers, Commodore 64 in the eighties, the powerful machines of today, it is interesting to see how the internet, online media and especially the way we entertain ourselves for a change.
It is estimated that nearly fifty percent of the population under the age of 33 videos online at least once a week. ManyTurn to the Internet more often than their display requirements. This push towards online video is changing the way movies, watch TV, and their way of keeping up with current events. It 'also changing the way companies advertising and the media industry as a whole. It is estimated that online video advertising to 121 million dollars of the market in 2004, an area 2.9 trillion U.S. dollars in 2010, was found.
With these changes came the problems of copyrightbandwidth, even on the Internet as well as a problem for some of the threads in the world today. It is already a part of our changing society. With a change is difficult, but for the future that things began to meet.
What is the future of online video?
I think in the coming decades, we look at all forms of online video media in the world of print. Cable television will be a thing of the past, and your videosignal coming through your Internet connection. Most likely the wireless flat screen that is on your living room wall. Technology for most of it is already developed or developing.
Products such as Nintendo Wii, which, besides being a game controller that allows users to access the Internet has already begun to move forward. Instead of watching the news every night you can get the news you want to watch on TV, the Wii and devices such as the use of certainit. One of the new creations of Apple, Apple TV, which allows users to wirelessly purchase movies or TV shows to send to the TV from their collection of digital video on your computer. E 'with technology like this that we started toward the future of media consumption.
Last year, some important players in the film industry began with a digital home / sales site. The site Movielink – a joint venture, including some of the biggest names in the world of cinema – allows users to cyberspaceor purchase a wide selection of movies. It is not the first site of this kind (and probably not the best), but because of who owns it, shows how the media industry has begun to accept that traditional media delivery is no longer sufficient.
With the explosion in popularity of online video through sites like YouTube have been fed, it will be interesting to see what's there. Over the next few years, I think we'll see even more changes to what has happened withOnline video so far.
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