When I attend industry conferences, I often spend time
asking myself if I am generating enough value by attending to justify the travel
cost, the time away from family, and the pain of the accompanying late nights
and early morning meetings. After
arriving in Boston for NCTA’s 2012 CableShow, I noticed the relatively light attendance
when compared to previous CableShows or other industry events. Now I am not complaining that the cab
lines are short or that I could get a sandwich at lunch time (vs. a few hours
before or after) without a problem, and I am certainly not complaining about
the host city—Boston is fabulous town.
But when I looked around the show and asked others what were the big
“a-ha’s”, there wasn’t an immediate reply. Everyone quickly said they caught up with tons of industry
contacts, colleagues, and of course customers, but we don’t need the show floor
expense with demos and meeting rooms to accomplish that. What were we hoping to see at a show
anchored by giant media conglomerates like Comcast (with 22m Xfinity subscribers
and NBCUniversal networks) and TimeWarner Cable? I think everyone was hoping to see some progress against the
promise of a better digital future for the consumer—and despite how much
attention the press gives all of the great digital living room start-ups and
OTT video service providers, the vast majority of consumers still get their
media from a Pay TV operator. I
guess my long-winded point is that if those new user experiences aren’t
reaching the consumer thru cable operators, they aren’t really reaching the
masses.
So with that as our lens, what did the 2012 Cableshow reveal
about our future? I would start
with a theme of incremental improvement.
Comcast launched the Xfinity X1 platform with much fanfare on Monday,
billing it as a major new platform and revolutionary break thru for the
consumer. While I agree it is a
significant improvement from the operator’s point of view (lower long term
capital requirements and lower operating expenses, faster roll-outs of UI
improvements, etc), I am not sure the consumer got much at all. He or she still uses a remote to turn
on the system, the grid guide is still the default content discovery UI, and
content is still presented to the consumer based on the way the operator deals
with the business model (linear broadcast TV, VOD, OTT services) vs. the way
people consume content (they want to watch something and the source is rather
immaterial). There are some nice
use cases buried deep in the UX (i.e. after you search for a TV series, each
episode can show multiple sources for acquiring the content from your DVR to
VOD to a scheduled showing in the guide), but all those use cases are decidedly
lean forward use cases, and the only recommendation engine is based on genre
matching with no account of your viewing history, social networks, or even
basic collaborative filtering (according the engineer I reviewed the demo with
for an hour). Seems a bit bleak if
this is the future.
There were glimmers around the show floor of TV 2.0-style
use cases making progress. Nearly
every vendor has some solution for TV Everywhere and multi-screen use cases in
and out of the home. Some vendors
were selling platforms and SDKs to launch second screen tablet experiences, and
the majority of the content creators were clearly trying to weave social
networking into their go to market strategies for their content. There were even some vendors making
progress against perhaps the most difficult problem of all, Discovery, demonstrating semantic language searching capabilities and improvements in the
UI for the delivery of recommendations. There was great demo by Samsung of an embedded SmartTV app that allowed one of their TV's to access the full Cablevision service with no set top box (the Xbox and PS3 announcements for Verizon and Comcast are VOD services only)--a sign of things to come. Ironically, the best visible progress I saw for the consumer was from a
3rd party second screen app that will re-launch itself in June—while
not in a cable provided solution, at the least the consumer will be able to use
the app in conjunction with their cable service.
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