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Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future. Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1,000 vaccuum tubes and perhaps weigh 1.5 tons. Futurology rarely works out to be as accurate as “retrospectology”, but is still necessary to plan what we want to be doing when ever we get there – wherever there might be. (Want to know more? Look at your electric kettle, but don't ask me for a technical answer. The secret of digital communication is not how it works - but how you can use it.)
Here’s what we will be doing between 10 January and 11 November that year.
A Short History of Speed
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| Date | Normal Domestic Speed | Internet and Web Content |
| 1991 | 14k (slooooooow) | Text (America on Line begins) |
| 1996 | 28k moving to 56k (we think it’s faster but it’s still slooooow) |
Above + good quality audio good quality images animated images streamed audio streamed video (Navigator 2 years old – Windows 95 replacing older operating systems) |
| 2001 | 512k (+cable) | Above + High quality video High quality audio File sharing Telephony begins |
| 2006 | 2meg standard but working toward 8meg (i.e. 640 times faster than 1991) and what is becoming important is the “upload” speed | Above+ Better file sharing Downloading video and audio Full blown Telephony (Skype) Watching programmes broadcast in other countries, but not in UK. |
| 2011 | 24meg (more than 2,000 times faster than 20 years earlier) | HDTV, real time full screen interaction, download what you want now – and watch it now, Who needs TV sets Who needs a licence? Audience charged by “k” of consumption – radio and TV |
And that is just domestic PCs!!!!
In 1995 the average domestic PC had 1 gig memory. Today that amount of memory can be found on a stick
2g for £75. TV programmes (and especially HDTV programmes) require lots of storage. But memory is cheap now and cheaper in the future. Whether programmes are held on servers, or delivered to the domestic player – storage will not be a problem
What’s on TV?
Imitation is the sincerest form of television. Fred Allen (1894 – 1956)
Well – There’s Radio …
Radio -
Radio – with images –
Radio – with images – maybe moving images –
Radio – with images – maybe moving images – maybe live pictures
Radio – with images – maybe moving images – maybe live pictures - maybe from the broadcasting studio
And there’s last night’s “The Moons At Home” and “The Big Bad Brothers” http://media.guardian.co.uk/broadcast/story/0,,1705384,00.html.
You can watch it for a week, or buy it for €2.99 to keep.
Locally, “Now That’s What I Call Noel Thompson’s - Volume III” – BBC NI Makes available a selection of Noel Thompson greatest moments for you to pick and choose and make your own programme.
Oh yes – last night’s US transmission of Lost (Series 17) – you can download it now at $4.99 or buy the whole series at a knock down $89.95 – pay now and get the files immediately after the final one is shown on “YahoogleMSNBCBS” networks.
The great thing about television is that if something important happens anywhere in the world, day or night, you can always change the channel.
From "Taxi"
Who’s on the Phone?
This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.
Western Union internal memo, 1876.
Allow me to plug in my mobile phone. It’s a device that downloads music and videos and short episodes from TV programmes. Then if I unfold this paper thin flexible screen – about the size of a tabloid page - I can plug that into the phone and watch last night’s TV. In 2006 this was already technically possible news.zdnet and motorola.com
My iPod is Bigger than Your iPod
Since they were launched, iPods have got smaller and smaller – but by 2011, you will have a 60” iPod hung on your wall connected by broadband and /or cable. And that will be one of your media devices.
Watching TV and listening to Radio are passive activities – they always will be. Even now there are too many podcasts to listen to, too many DVDs to watch too many programmes to download. People will watch TV programmes and listen to radio on demand – but programmes will be “released” like CDs and books – there will always be an audience sitting there waiting for the next episode. It’s the job of the scheduler to keep them sitting there.
What is the department once known as Online be doing in 2011? Radio, television, interactive television and web will be one production department.
There will be fast delivery of a range of content which the audience will pick and choose and will be able to explore further, edit for themselves, add their own additional content and even return to the broadcaster for re-broadcast/narrowcast/download.
There will be phone-ins, but also video-ins and self videoed comments.
The strength of the BBC – especially in Northern Ireland – will be a strong relationship with the audience and a dialogue.
Communication is two way – and BBC will be part of a two-way with the audience. The technology is just “stuff”; the conversation is the brand.