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'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
2Bdecided wrote:
On 26 Apr, 11:15, Adrian C wrote: 2Bdecided wrote: I guess the BBC should have kept out of colour TV and HD for the same reason? No, because that was an improvement to their _live_ broadcasting, and covered under the license (extended as in the case of colour TV). So you _don't_ object to the BBC promoting and delivering services that (some) people can't afford (at that time)? No I don't. You merely object to them delivering a non-live service? Yup. The iPlayer is "extras". Outside the remit of the license. Do/did you object to their other pre-iPlayer on-demand programming, e.g. listen again, the catch-up VOD provided via HomeChoice/Tiscali, NTL etc ? No. Those services are properly funded by the users (or advertising), and there surely must be a commercial agreement between Tiscali/Virgin and the BBC for doing it. I'm not having a go at you - your argument has some merit - I'm just not convinced it's 100% rational. s'OK, I'm spinning on a roundabout :-) I think my point is clear in this thread. It's to do with the BBC wasting money collected from license payers, doing risky things that the majority never quite gave them the permission to do. Also, I'm fairly sure that making such services outside of the core remit of the BBC will not help the BBC one bit. Agreed. The iplayer service should be commercially operated because of that, and then some money should make it back ... Or, included in an extended license. -- Adrian C |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
In article , Adrian C
writes The current 'well heeled' are in an ample position to add funds to this. Like buying a PVR, or installing a computer and signing up to broadband, or taking up a contract on a capable mobile phone. It's the people who can not sort this _now_ that are disadvantaged, and are reminded of it every time the BBC self-promotes "catch it on iPlayer" knowing that they are paying for this and for various reasons it's beyond them. So what's new? When the BBC was founded only a few "well heeled" people could afford radios. I wasn't around at the time, but I recall my grandmother telling me about having to go to a neighbour's house to listen to the BBC news. When the BBC started broadcasting TV only a few "well healed" people could afford TV sets. Again, I wasn't around, but I recall my mother telling me about the party at a neighbour's house to view the coronation on TV. When the BBC went colour, only a few "well heeled" could afford a colour TV. I recall my father telling me not to mention we had one to anyone at school, lest the message reached my uncle before he came to visit. (This uncle had been going on for several months about how fantastic the rather de-tuned colour was on his new set, so my dad intended some low key one-upmanship) You are clearly from the cheap Nicam update, digital decoder box generation, where the costs to upgrade to the latest BBC offerings are negligible, without any clue as to what restriction to "well heeled" people actually means. However, I do not believe for an instant that the BBC's iPlayer services are beyond the resources of any but the "well heeled". Compared to any previous improvement in services, the iPlayer and related technology must rate as one of the lowest access costs in the BBC's history, not least because all that is required is a facility that many considerably less than "well healed" households already possess, and which only narrowly missed being included in the list of essential items in the latest definition of the poverty line. -- Kennedy Yes, Socrates himself is particularly missed; A lovely little thinker, but a bugger when he's ****ed. Python Philosophers (replace 'nospam' with 'kennedym' when replying) |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
You are clearly from the cheap Nicam update, digital decoder box
generation, where the costs to upgrade to the latest BBC offerings are negligible, without any clue as to what restriction to "well heeled" people actually means. However, I do not believe for an instant that the BBC's iPlayer services are beyond the resources of any but the "well heeled". Compared to any previous improvement in services, the iPlayer and related technology must rate as one of the lowest access costs in the BBC's history, not least because all that is required is a facility that many considerably less than "well healed" households already possess, and which only narrowly missed being included in the list of essential items in the latest definition of the poverty line. Yeabut the problem now is not with the BBC its the net infrastructure which is now the transmission medium .. not the TV transmitter.... -- Tony Sayer |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
Mike Henry wrote:
You made the effort not to use the American spelling of "colour" above; please could you try not to use the American spelling of "licence" too? :-) So the "listen again" service which had every radio programme from the previous week available on the website which you didn't object to, is different to the iPlayer... how? Only the UI is different. OK, tripped up on the "listen again" mentioned there, which is of course is another BBC funded service. Indeed in the past questions have been asked about how much the BBC funds it's entire presence on the internet in terms of website hosted and specially commisioned material - and there is an answer here for that. For those that access Auntie's pages from outside the UK, there are advertisments to view. For those, inside the UK, it's paid out the licence fee. A bit of money here, a bit of money there. I'm OK with that. iPlayer is totally running from licence fee. -- Adrian C |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
Kennedy McEwen wrote:
However, I do not believe for an instant that the BBC's iPlayer services are beyond the resources of any but the "well heeled". I've no problems with the divisions of _live_ broadcasting that necessitate some folks spending extra to access those formats. The BBC at least provides an output that is accessible with considerably less costly equipment. All included in the licence. My beef is with the non live broadcast area outside of the license, where just to get on the platform to enjoy it there are some unavoidable restrictions. Gen up on digital divide. OK, "well heeled" in my rant is someone able, financially and otherwise, to have a suitable broadband connection with a usable monthly download limit, working computer or video capable mobile phone. I chose the language "well heeled" perhaps wrongly, should I have said "broadband enabled"? These folk are in a adequate position to contribute extra to the running and development costs of iPlayer if they use it. Not saddle all licence payers with it, and provide it all free so that even non-licence payers can benefit. Compared to any previous improvement in services, the iPlayer and related technology must rate as one of the lowest access costs in the BBC's history, not least because all that is required is a facility that many considerably less than "well healed" households already possess, I wish that were true for all. I know there are a few folks still on dial-up, some rely on their work PCs for internet use, and there are loads more directly not using on-line services at all... and which only narrowly missed being included in the list of essential items in the latest definition of the poverty line. The digital divide and the poverty line do have some relation, but are not the same thing. -- Adrian C |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
On 29 Apr, 12:47, Adrian C wrote:
Kennedy McEwen wrote: * *However, I do not believe for an instant that the BBC's iPlayer services are beyond the resources of any but the "well heeled". I've no problems with the divisions of _live_ broadcasting that necessitate some folks spending extra to access those formats. The BBC at least provides an output that is accessible with considerably less costly equipment. All included in the licence. My beef is with the non live broadcast area outside of the license, where just to get on the platform to enjoy it there are some unavoidable restrictions. Your obsession with "live" is bizarre. So it was OK to provide a colour service which was expensive, because poor people could still watch in black and white - but it's not OK to provide a catch up service, despite the fact that the same programmes are available live that week? There's no rationality to this argument at all. Gen up on digital divide. Actually, our main home computer was a gift - a cast-off. It does iPlayer just fine. Our plusnet internet access is £120 a year. 2GB monthly cap, £1 extra per GB after that. Yes, there are people who can't afford that - but not being able to watch iPlayer is presumably the least of their worries! OK, "well heeled" in my rant is someone able, financially and otherwise, to have a suitable broadband connection with a usable monthly download limit, working computer or video capable mobile phone. I chose the language "well heeled" perhaps wrongly, should I have said "broadband enabled"? That's the majority now, isn't it? These folk are in a adequate position to contribute extra to the running and development costs of iPlayer if they use it. They can probably afford to pay more for HD - more for the BBC itself as a subscription service. Should they? Not saddle all licence payers with it, and provide it all free so that even non-licence payers can benefit. But your argument is contradictory - you worry about the digital divide, but then demand that there should be an _extra_ change to access one of the most popular uses for broadband internet access. Surely this can only worsen the divide, if you start a trend of charging extra for popular broadband services! I wish that were true for all. I know there are a few folks still on dial-up, some rely on their work PCs for internet use, and there are loads more directly not using on-line services at all... I must be far too middle class - I know several of people without internet access, and they could all easily afford it.They choose not to. There are other things in life! Cheers, David. |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
In article , Adrian C
writes Kennedy McEwen wrote: However, I do not believe for an instant that the BBC's iPlayer services are beyond the resources of any but the "well heeled". I've no problems with the divisions of _live_ broadcasting that necessitate some folks spending extra to access those formats. The BBC at least provides an output that is accessible with considerably less costly equipment. All included in the licence. Well I think it is questionable whether the alternative equipment is less costly - especially if the cost of access broadband by computer is amortised over all of the other value opportunities that it provides, which even the cheapest TV and digital box do not. My beef is with the non live broadcast area outside of the license, where just to get on the platform to enjoy it there are some unavoidable restrictions. But the BBC have always provided services outside of the license which required additional platform costs to access. I recall as a kid listening to the likes of Johnny Walker and DLT on BBC Radio 1 being quite jealous of the people who could access their phone-in opportunities - wow, imagine being able to win prizes, talk to celebrities and even send messages to your mates, live on national radio! It wasn't the 2d cost of the phone call that I couldn't afford. Living in a fairly remote village, the Post Office wanted to charge an arm and a leg to install a local exchange and line to the house before we could have a telephone, so we didn't and neither did anyone else in the village. It wasn't until I was a teenager when enough people in the village had requested phone installations that The Post Office deemed it to be worthwhile laying the miles of cables out to an exchange there and hence enabling home phones for all of the interested households. Gen up on digital divide. Technology divides are nothing new, as my own experience of the 60's related above demonstrates, and have little relation to wealth. Indeed, recluses with limited or no connectivity with the outside world are actually sought after by the well heeled. OK, "well heeled" in my rant is someone able, financially and otherwise, to have a suitable broadband connection with a usable monthly download limit, working computer or video capable mobile phone. I chose the language "well heeled" perhaps wrongly, should I have said "broadband enabled"? These folk are in a adequate position to contribute extra to the running and development costs of iPlayer if they use it. By your own admission, "well heeled" is irrelevant - just because someone is broadband enabled does not mean they are in any position to "contribute extra". As explained earlier, they may not be wealthy at all but have made a decision to invest in broadband connectivity as a means to access many types of facilities. Whilst chav land may have Sky dishes stuck on the front of every dwelling, it doesn't mean that any chavs are "well heeled" or that no residents of chav land have broadband connectivity. Having one or the other doesn't make any of the residents of chav land better able to "contribute extra" although they may well be in a better position to do so than some that you would consider "well heeled". Compared to any previous improvement in services, the iPlayer and related technology must rate as one of the lowest access costs in the BBC's history, not least because all that is required is a facility that many considerably less than "well healed" households already possess, I wish that were true for all. I know there are a few folks still on dial-up, some rely on their work PCs for internet use, and there are loads more directly not using on-line services at all... So basically your complaint is with the telecom companies who have failed to roll out broadband capability across 100% of the population, to every farmhouse shed in the remotest Welsh valleys or low population island in the Utter Hebrides. That argument, whilst valid in itself, has nothing to do with the BBC or their provision of iPlayer on a platform which is currently accessible by the majority and the government have made a commitment to make accessible to all. and which only narrowly missed being included in the list of essential items in the latest definition of the poverty line. The digital divide and the poverty line do have some relation, but are not the same thing. Exactly, hence your term "well heeled" was misguided as, it appears, was the subject of your complaint. It isn't the BBC's problem, who have chosen a platform that is available to the vast majority of the population to host its iPlayer services without additional cost. Your gripe is with the telecom companies who have not provided the infrastructure to 100% of the population. That is a completely different issue, and access to BBC facilities is a negligibly small part of that whole budget argument. -- Kennedy Yes, Socrates himself is particularly missed; A lovely little thinker, but a bugger when he's ****ed. Python Philosophers (replace 'nospam' with 'kennedym' when replying) |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
Kennedy McEwen wrote:
Your gripe is with the telecom companies who have not provided the infrastructure to 100% of the population. Nope, it's decisions that contribute to a person not being able to take part on the internet and receive content that they should. These decisions are not only financial, or the fact that a service suitable can't be brought to the door. There are others - technofear is, and will be in the future, a considerable problem in the society we live in. iPlayer available, even relevant, to the vast majority - er, no. That is a completely different issue, and access to BBC facilities is a negligibly small part of that whole budget argument. Never mind, my roundabout has slowed to a halt. I'm getting off... -- Adrian C |
'BBC iPlayer Improvements' - Downloads now almost unusable
In article , Adrian C
writes it's decisions that contribute to a person not being able to take part on the internet and receive content that they should. These decisions are not only financial, or the fact that a service suitable can't be brought to the door. There are others - technofear is, and will be in the future, a considerable problem in the society we live in. iPlayer available, even relevant, to the vast majority - er, no. Technofear has been an issue with every generation since the industrial revolution and the Luddite movement. That is no reason to prevent the iPlayer being available to the net equipped majority and no reason to demand additional payment from them. -- Kennedy Yes, Socrates himself is particularly missed; A lovely little thinker, but a bugger when he's ****ed. Python Philosophers (replace 'nospam' with 'kennedym' when replying) |
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