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User: crystoball

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  1. Streaming = Solution? on The DRM Scorecard · · Score: 1

    All the controversy surrounding DRM may be obsolete in the future, according to this article. They're suggesting that the future of movie watching may lie in streaming video sites like www.reeltime.com. With streaming technology becoming more sophisticated with higher quality pictures and better content, I'd wager that streams will dominate the internet and at least downloading DRM will be a non-issue. What do you think?

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/06/business/media/0 6stream.html

    Nothing to Watch on TV? Streaming Video Appeals to Niche Audiences Michel Marriott for The New York Times Buffering ... buffering ... buffering. Seeing these words blinking at the bottom of the postage-stamp-size screen during a download of jerky video defines the annoying experience of entertainment on a computer monitor. However, the potential of new streaming video services -- fast, full screen and in sharp resolution -- is unleashing a torrent of movies and television shows, much of it aimed at narrowly defined audiences that can't find niche programming even on cable systems with 500 or more channels. The Independent Film Channel is streaming 22 short films called "Trapped in the Closet" by the R&B recording artist R. Kelly. The Jewish Television Network, a nonprofit television production and distribution company, is streaming music videos by Jewish performers, cooking shows and Israeli news programs. The network is also planning to stream religious services during the High Holy Days in September, the sort of broadcast that would be hard to find on mainstream television. "There is extreme interest in streaming because it simplifies the process of getting video to the consumer," said Ross Rubin, the director of industry analysis for the NPD Group, a market analysis company. Streaming video, unlike downloads, never resides on a viewer's computer. It usually cannot be replayed as a downloaded file can be, which is another reason that content creators like it. The growing use and popularity of streaming among consumers are closely tied to the increasing popularity of broadband Internet connections in homes. The Pew Internet & American Life Project estimated that 47 percent of American households have broadband connections that make streaming possible because it transmits data faster. "The greater adoption of broadband in the United States is really raising the ante for all kinds of content from premium Hollywood offerings to pet videos," said Mr. Rubin, who noted that NBC and ABC have begun streaming their prime-time programming to online viewers. This year, the DVD rental company Netflix began to take advantage of click-and-view streaming of full-length films and television episodes with a subscription service. "Push a tab 'Watch Now' and more than 3,000 television episodes and movies come up in 30 seconds or less," said Steve Swasey, a Netflix spokesman. "There's no downloading." Streaming high-quality video to computers and television screens is the "first step to getting what people want to see on any screen they want, from laptops to cellphones to wide-screen televisions," Mr. Swasey said. "Netflix's goal is to get movies delivered instantly to all those different screens." Companies like ReelTime, Joost, Limelight Networks and Brightcove are staking their futures on streaming video. "We're point, click and watch -- instantly," said Barry Henthorn, the chief executive and co-founder of ReelTime. "We never stop and never buffer." ReelTime, based in Seattle, digitally distributes thousands of movies and television shows to customers who either rent titles for 99 cents each or subscribe to the service for $4.99 a month to $19.99 for six months. While ReelTime content can easily be watched on desktop and notebook computers, Mr. Henthorn urges customers to connect the computer to the television's larger screen for viewing because, he said, "the quality is that good."