It's written plain as day in the article, on the SNEP chart.
For every 9.99€ monthly subscription:
Spotify or other streaming platforms ("Plateformes") get 2.08€ Labels ("Producteurs") get 4.56€ Performers (or artists) ("Artistes interprètes") get 0.68€ Composers and writers ("Auteurs compositeurs éditeurs") get 1€ And VAT is 1.67€
Profit, pre-tax, is as follows: Composers and writers ("Auteurs compositeurs éditeurs"): 0.6€ Performer (or artists) ("Artistes interprètes"): 0.68€
Labels ("Producteurs"): 0.26€* Platforms: 0.1€*
*Net profit margin estimated at 5% of revenue.
But if you read the rest of the study, you'll see streaming represents 55% of digital music revenue in France in 2014 (16% total revenue for the industry).
The music industry market is tanking a bit says the study, but the royalty payouts are stable.
In Germany (and probably other countries) maybe. In France, none of the OTA channels are free-to-air on DVB-S.
The OTA channels ARE on satellite, they just need a cheap, no subscription CAM to unscramble them. I believe it is to block reception by other countries than France. You can probably just get the CAM in France though, there is no check or subscription; just a €39 box to hook up.
My $79 9" TV (it is a spare one, mind you) can do timeshifting and recording, provided I connect a USB stick or hard drive. I cannot understand why higher-end TVs cannot offer that.
With my cable provider, Numericable (and I believe they are the only one in France nowadays), the only channels I get unscrambled are the free over-the-air channels. And they are sent as DVB-T/COFDM over the wire, as the must-carry law requires.
So DVB-C would not be too useful there, except if I want to watch that promo trailer channel they have which is unscrambled. Unless Microsoft has planned for it and allows adding a CAM card for my particular provider!
Free does offer LTE, actually. Their speed is among the highest among all carriers - at least on speed tests, but you would have to find one of their antennas, they are very sparse. My point still holds: Free cannot deploy their LTE network any faster due to their lack of investment power. They DID snatch 11% of the marketshare but it is also dwindling, since pretty much all French mobile plans are no contract, now. I jumped through all 4 carriers myself, porting my number on each of them. Free cannot hold a candle to Orange or even Bouygues (who used to be the underdog, but their network is top-notch now. The best two are Orange and Bouygues).
SFR is deploying their LTE network at a snail-like pace, because their pockets are empty. Bouygues kind of had to if they wanted to still be relevant on the market. Look where it brought them - to near-bankruptcy.
Plus I don't really understand Iliad's strategy. Buying Monaco Telecom, and now T-Mo USA?
French here. Iliad's strategy might be good in the short term for consumers, but in the long run, this might just have catastrophic consequences. Let me explain.
They have the same strategy as Easyjet when they entered the air travel market - low prices and agressive marketing. Indeed, people sometimes didn't need all the "options" other airlines made them get, like assigned seats, meals. It makes sense on short trips : Nice-Geneva is a 45 minute flight, and you sure don't need food, beverages, or a specific seat on the plane for short-haul flights.
This worked well, too - many local airlines crashed and burn when they couldn't compete with their prices. The perverse effect, now, is that Easyjet is the only option for many routes, and they hiked up the prices when they didn't have anybody left as concurrence.
The telecom market in France is currently tanking - you need a license to operate on GSM airwaves. The government opened up for a fourth carrier, Free took the shot and announced their aggressive pricing. The others had to follow suit, and that was before deploying 4G, a huge infrastructure cost for carriers. They signed a roaming deal with Orange in order to provide service everywhere, but terms were not really well set, and Orange's network was sometimes overloaded by Free's subscribers.
Now all the carriers in France offer the same deal as Free. Sure, the customer is happy with that, but carriers now have less and less cash to improve infrastructure, and it has desastrous effect on quality of service. Recently SFR, once the second biggest carrier, got sold to a Dutch company. Bouygues Telecom, the third biggest carrier, is for sale. Free is breathing in their neck, offering to buy it for less than what it's worth. Orange offered to buy them but withdrew their offer.
SFR's network is dwindling fast, Bouygues no longer has the economic power to improve, Orange is still afloat because it's the spin-off of France Telecom, the old public phone company, and Free is still there, working on their network at the slowest pace ever because they don't have the cash to build up,
Everyone is slowly crashing. As soon as Bouygues is out of the picture and SFR will no longer be competitive, Free will be able to hike the prices, just like they did on their ADSL offer.
You might want to add for the US readership that those 60 minutes you have on your mobile plan are outgoing; incoming calls and texts are free.
I just subcscribed to Bouygues' "Bbox Sensation Fibre": 37.90 EUR/month for a FTTLA bundle with TV, unlimited international & mobile phone, 30 (effective in my case) Mbps down and 1 Mbps up. I have catch-up TV, a media center with USB and SD inputs, DVR, modem, Wi-Fi router and video games all in one box. It's not the cheapest but I didn't have a landline (and no will to get one), and cable works beautifully where I live.
since Windows for x86 is apparently cheaper, simply cut a bloody swath through ARM devices and lead Intel to sell a bunch of Atoms...
Especially considering Intel now has their Medfield Atom processor going head-to-head with ARM smartphones. This single-core chip is faster than a lot of dual-core ARM SoCs, if not most, and sips just as much juice.
This actually looks nice for a prototype! The data is well laid out. This is probably the first app that convinced me that Metro might work out in the end.
NATO aircrafts have OTAN printed on it because the two official languages used in NATO are English and French. OTAN means Organisation du Traité de l'Atlantique Nord.
Facebook would be a good example of this. In IE, rendering time allows the full page with images to be loaded before displaying it. I used to have up to 70% of my CPU eaten by IE7 trying to display the page (just to resituate, this was on an Eee PC 701). Chrome on the other hand displays the page much faster, and images are still loading after the page render. CPU utilization was also lower, hovering around 20%.
I did not time both browsers and I don't have my Eee anymore. But I think it is (or was) a good example of a Javascript heavy website.
Gmail is also a good example of a Javascript-loaded website.
I don't know about elsewhere, but this exists in France already. It's called e-Carte Bleue. You have a program on your computer, you enter an amount of money, you press generate. It calls back your bank, asks for authorization and responds back with a one-time CC number. While it doesn't work absolutely everywhere, it's damn useful to test out stuff. It costs not much IIRC, I don't use it that much these days (I only buy from trusted sources)...
Of course, you cannot book tickets you have to retrieve at the station/airport with this, but it's the most convenient system I found yet.
We have DVRs, Bittorrent is working quite well with our massive bandwidth - up too 100 Mbps/15 Mbps for 49/mo - and I didn't see an unshaved girl since 1990... What's your point again?;-)
I use something like this: I have a subdomain which redirects all mail to my address. Then whenever I need to give my mail address to some unknown and untrusted entity, I use a new one. If I start to get spammed on that address, I just go to my cPanel, and redirect that address to:blackhole:
But, the almost only fun part of the game is the online part... Unless you can block selectively stuff. And we have to hope they don't put the ads and the server browser on the same IP/Port.
Problem solved. There's almost no way someone can remove all the epoxy on a board to change anything on it. But then if it's fried, it's fried : throw it away. Or if you want to keep some form of cooling, just isolate them on a daugher board.
In France, but in Europe globally, transmission of HDTV is made in H.264. And it's mandatory. So Free is streaming MPEG-4 HDTV content over Wi-Fi, at something like 5 or 6 Mbps. And the quality is just... wow.
They're not my numbers! I just happen to speak French, I translated the graphs as they were created by SNEP.
It's written plain as day in the article, on the SNEP chart.
For every 9.99€ monthly subscription:
Spotify or other streaming platforms ("Plateformes") get 2.08€
Labels ("Producteurs") get 4.56€
Performers (or artists) ("Artistes interprètes") get 0.68€
Composers and writers ("Auteurs compositeurs éditeurs") get 1€
And VAT is 1.67€
Profit, pre-tax, is as follows:
Composers and writers ("Auteurs compositeurs éditeurs"): 0.6€
Performer (or artists) ("Artistes interprètes"): 0.68€
Labels ("Producteurs"): 0.26€*
Platforms: 0.1€*
*Net profit margin estimated at 5% of revenue.
But if you read the rest of the study, you'll see streaming represents 55% of digital music revenue in France in 2014 (16% total revenue for the industry).
The music industry market is tanking a bit says the study, but the royalty payouts are stable.
You'll find the full study here.
DVB-T uses some sort of MPEG2 encoding, while DVB-T2 allowed for MPEG4 encoding.
That's not true: us French get MPEG-4/AVC channels over DVB-T.
In Germany (and probably other countries) maybe. In France, none of the OTA channels are free-to-air on DVB-S.
The OTA channels ARE on satellite, they just need a cheap, no subscription CAM to unscramble them. I believe it is to block reception by other countries than France. You can probably just get the CAM in France though, there is no check or subscription; just a €39 box to hook up.
My $79 9" TV (it is a spare one, mind you) can do timeshifting and recording, provided I connect a USB stick or hard drive. I cannot understand why higher-end TVs cannot offer that.
DVB-T carries many HD channels here, scrambled and unscrambled, in H.264 and Dolby Digital+. DVB-T2 is barely on the roadmap in France.
With my cable provider, Numericable (and I believe they are the only one in France nowadays), the only channels I get unscrambled are the free over-the-air channels. And they are sent as DVB-T/COFDM over the wire, as the must-carry law requires.
So DVB-C would not be too useful there, except if I want to watch that promo trailer channel they have which is unscrambled. Unless Microsoft has planned for it and allows adding a CAM card for my particular provider!
Free does offer LTE, actually. Their speed is among the highest among all carriers - at least on speed tests, but you would have to find one of their antennas, they are very sparse. My point still holds: Free cannot deploy their LTE network any faster due to their lack of investment power. They DID snatch 11% of the marketshare but it is also dwindling, since pretty much all French mobile plans are no contract, now. I jumped through all 4 carriers myself, porting my number on each of them. Free cannot hold a candle to Orange or even Bouygues (who used to be the underdog, but their network is top-notch now. The best two are Orange and Bouygues).
SFR is deploying their LTE network at a snail-like pace, because their pockets are empty. Bouygues kind of had to if they wanted to still be relevant on the market. Look where it brought them - to near-bankruptcy.
Plus I don't really understand Iliad's strategy. Buying Monaco Telecom, and now T-Mo USA?
French here. Iliad's strategy might be good in the short term for consumers, but in the long run, this might just have catastrophic consequences. Let me explain.
They have the same strategy as Easyjet when they entered the air travel market - low prices and agressive marketing. Indeed, people sometimes didn't need all the "options" other airlines made them get, like assigned seats, meals. It makes sense on short trips : Nice-Geneva is a 45 minute flight, and you sure don't need food, beverages, or a specific seat on the plane for short-haul flights.
This worked well, too - many local airlines crashed and burn when they couldn't compete with their prices. The perverse effect, now, is that Easyjet is the only option for many routes, and they hiked up the prices when they didn't have anybody left as concurrence.
The telecom market in France is currently tanking - you need a license to operate on GSM airwaves. The government opened up for a fourth carrier, Free took the shot and announced their aggressive pricing. The others had to follow suit, and that was before deploying 4G, a huge infrastructure cost for carriers. They signed a roaming deal with Orange in order to provide service everywhere, but terms were not really well set, and Orange's network was sometimes overloaded by Free's subscribers.
Now all the carriers in France offer the same deal as Free. Sure, the customer is happy with that, but carriers now have less and less cash to improve infrastructure, and it has desastrous effect on quality of service. Recently SFR, once the second biggest carrier, got sold to a Dutch company. Bouygues Telecom, the third biggest carrier, is for sale. Free is breathing in their neck, offering to buy it for less than what it's worth. Orange offered to buy them but withdrew their offer.
SFR's network is dwindling fast, Bouygues no longer has the economic power to improve, Orange is still afloat because it's the spin-off of France Telecom, the old public phone company, and Free is still there, working on their network at the slowest pace ever because they don't have the cash to build up,
Everyone is slowly crashing. As soon as Bouygues is out of the picture and SFR will no longer be competitive, Free will be able to hike the prices, just like they did on their ADSL offer.
Low prices is not always good for the customer.
They built Funnybot? Do we have to worry about it exterminating the human race?
You might want to add for the US readership that those 60 minutes you have on your mobile plan are outgoing; incoming calls and texts are free. I just subcscribed to Bouygues' "Bbox Sensation Fibre": 37.90 EUR/month for a FTTLA bundle with TV, unlimited international & mobile phone, 30 (effective in my case) Mbps down and 1 Mbps up. I have catch-up TV, a media center with USB and SD inputs, DVR, modem, Wi-Fi router and video games all in one box. It's not the cheapest but I didn't have a landline (and no will to get one), and cable works beautifully where I live.
Especially considering Intel now has their Medfield Atom processor going head-to-head with ARM smartphones. This single-core chip is faster than a lot of dual-core ARM SoCs, if not most, and sips just as much juice.
Intel's Medfield & Atom Z2460 Arrive for Smartphones: It's Finally Here
Lava Xolo X900 Review - The First Intel Medfield Phone - Performance
This article compares Apple, a hardware maker, with Google and Android, who provides software to hardware makers? How is that a fair comparison?
Seeing how the target demographic of that package is mostly MBAs, I think it works out pretty well.
This actually looks nice for a prototype! The data is well laid out. This is probably the first app that convinced me that Metro might work out in the end.
I think this is what they may aim for, with .NET and Silverlight.
If I got this correctly, you could just use managed .NET, an ARM CLR, and you'd be good to go, your application would run pretty much anywhere.
NATO aircrafts have OTAN printed on it because the two official languages used in NATO are English and French. OTAN means Organisation du Traité de l'Atlantique Nord.
Facebook would be a good example of this. In IE, rendering time allows the full page with images to be loaded before displaying it. I used to have up to 70% of my CPU eaten by IE7 trying to display the page (just to resituate, this was on an Eee PC 701). Chrome on the other hand displays the page much faster, and images are still loading after the page render. CPU utilization was also lower, hovering around 20%. I did not time both browsers and I don't have my Eee anymore. But I think it is (or was) a good example of a Javascript heavy website. Gmail is also a good example of a Javascript-loaded website.
How about Robogeisha? Is she safe?
I don't know about elsewhere, but this exists in France already. It's called e-Carte Bleue. You have a program on your computer, you enter an amount of money, you press generate. It calls back your bank, asks for authorization and responds back with a one-time CC number. While it doesn't work absolutely everywhere, it's damn useful to test out stuff. It costs not much IIRC, I don't use it that much these days (I only buy from trusted sources)...
Of course, you cannot book tickets you have to retrieve at the station/airport with this, but it's the most convenient system I found yet.
We have DVRs, Bittorrent is working quite well with our massive bandwidth - up too 100 Mbps/15 Mbps for 49/mo - and I didn't see an unshaved girl since 1990... What's your point again? ;-)
I use something like this: I have a subdomain which redirects all mail to my address. Then whenever I need to give my mail address to some unknown and untrusted entity, I use a new one. If I start to get spammed on that address, I just go to my cPanel, and redirect that address to :blackhole:
But, the almost only fun part of the game is the online part... Unless you can block selectively stuff. And we have to hope they don't put the ads and the server browser on the same IP/Port.
Problem solved. There's almost no way someone can remove all the epoxy on a board to change anything on it. But then if it's fried, it's fried : throw it away. Or if you want to keep some form of cooling, just isolate them on a daugher board.
In France, but in Europe globally, transmission of HDTV is made in H.264. And it's mandatory. So Free is streaming MPEG-4 HDTV content over Wi-Fi, at something like 5 or 6 Mbps. And the quality is just... wow.