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posted by CoolHand on Friday April 17 2015, @02:25AM   Printer-friendly
from the as-soon-as-my-bandwidth-increases dept.

Netflix shares rose 13% in after-hours trading after the company announced it had added 5 million subscribers in the first quarter of 2015:

That brings the total global subscribers to the service to 62.3 million.

Netflix also said revenue increased by 23% from the same period a year earlier to $1.57bn (£1.06bn).
...
Shares in Netflix have risen by nearly 40% since the start of this year.

However, the company has faced increasing threats as companies such as Hulu and HBO have sought to commission their own, original on demand content to compete with Netflix [shows] like House of Cards and Orange is the New Black.

The last couple of years have seen other companies like Hulu, HBO, and now CBS following suit. If ESPN or other sports players do the same the cable industry could end with a bang, not a whimper.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Friday April 17 2015, @07:07PM

    by frojack (1554) on Friday April 17 2015, @07:07PM (#172150) Journal

    Really, does simultaneity really matter when watching a game,

    Well said, but totally misses the point.

    Its precisely that simultaneity is not important, and simultaneity is not used in TV streamed over the internet which exacerbates the problem that cord cutting on a massive scale will engender.

    Because you don't mind being a few minutes behind, as long as you get to watch all of the action, you will require a separate stream.

    Because of this, every event, show, movie, etc, will be buffered to disk, and all those streams will be served from beginning to end individually for each viewer. It doesn't matter if it is a live event or a canned program. But on live events, with a large audience, there may be no possible upload capacity that could handle the load.

    Do the math. Bandwidth per minute per device. Your cable connection may handle the load if you pay enough. But the source can't possibly support that many streams. Every Apple announcement/event breaks the internet. It wasn't designed around infinite upload capability.

    That you are prepared to put up with the frustration is hardly germane. We all know the ball game is physically over before our TV displays the final second. Simultaneity is not the issue.
     

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 18 2015, @06:26PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 18 2015, @06:26PM (#172512)

    I think a big factor is control and copyright law.

    There can be very many streams if you had many sources - e.g. the viewers and their ISPs and CDNs[1] could also stream copies to others. P2P torrenting scales well especially if ISPs can also legally participate.

    [1] if you had the $$$$$$$ and were willing to pay for it you could buy enough capacity to stream millions of streams: https://aws.amazon.com/cloudfront/ [amazon.com]
    http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/services/media-services/?rnd=1 [microsoft.com]