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It’s
All About Communication
There’s no denying the tremendous utility in streaming
media to deliver information faster, more efficiently,
and to a global audience.
By, Dan Rayburn
At a distance, the schizoid logic of the streaming
media industry – which from one second to the next
declares that content is king, no, make that
technology, no, maybe infrastructure – suggests a
world as serious as the people who first thought the
evaluations of the companies in this space were legit.
But peer closer, past all the hype about first-run
VHS quality movies to your desktop and a different
story emerges, one of communication, collaboration and
global exposure. Because for all of its apparent hype,
the streaming media industry is already a
billion-dollar market whose applications are crucial
to the new way of communicating on a global basis.
Today, information is a more important tool than
ever before. The Internet offers over 1.1 billion-web
pages; we each receive an average of 31 e-mails a day
and both of these figures are expected to double by
the end of this year. One newspaper alone contains
more data than the ordinary 17th century person would
have encountered in a lifetime. Let’s face it folks,
more than 70 percent of all traffic passed on the
Internet is from e-mail, i.e. communication.
Streaming media technology and the applications
built around it are widely being adopted every day,
right now, allowing corporations to communicate like
never before. Isn’t that what this is all about? The
ability to be able to deliver and receive information
faster and more efficiently? People speak of broadband
as being the “savior” of this whole industry.
Broadband will help, but people have not yet grasped
the concept that streaming media is a technology that
can be delivered to any device capable of receiving
it. And right now that device happens to be the PC.
But what happens when that device is also your phone,
your pager, your Palm etc… When we speak of streaming
applications, we are talking of communication with a
global reach. Forrester Research says that come the
2nd half of this year, more than 60 percent of all
traffic to your website will come from outside the
U.S. So how can broadband be our answer to mass-market
adoption? If we are going to talk about broadband
adoption rates, let’s talk about them worldwide.
Technology Drives Market
And even if everyone could get broadband, does that
change things for certainty? People always seem to
think that the best technology always gets adopted,
which it doesn’t. Microsoft converged the TV and
Internet accessible from one device, with WebTV, but
how many did they sell? The Beta videocassette player
is hands down better technology than the VHS player
is, but which one got adopted? Technology is not
always about what works best; it’s about what is cost
effective, easy and attractable to the mass market, be
it B2B or B2C.
There is no doubt that streaming media technology
will allow entertainment content to be accessed in a
whole set of new ways never thought possible even as
little as three years ago. But right now, until there
is enough of a user base and mass audience to access
entertainment content, we need to focus on the
communication benefits that these applications are
providing. Knowledge is power, and this technology
allows for that power to be in the hands of anyone who
can access it unlike anything we have seen before,
except perhaps the Internet itself.
Everyone seems to be in a panic state right now
thinking that this industry is going down the drain.
It isn’t. It’s like any industry that was so over
hyped and overvalued, we are seeing a correction
period. Better it happens now as opposed when this is
really adopted and we rely on this application for
everyday use. This correction period is reinforcing to
companies in this space that you need to have a real
business model of how you are using this technology.
How many companies can you think of that use to be in
the space that we’re never really providing any value
or service? Always ask yourself, what is the value of
what I’m offering? Am I showing and enabling my
clients to save money, communicate on a global scale,
provide access to real-time sensitive information or
train my employees to make them more efficient? That’s
what this is all about.
The Internet has changed the dynamics of how we
access information, and streaming media is set to
provide the next global applications that will deliver
audio and video, not just text-based info. It’s time
now to get your business models in place and be
prepared for when this is truly a mass-market
opportunity.
Until that time comes, stay focused, stay alert and
most importantly stay calm. Because those with
business models that rely on this technology becoming
as widely used as audio conferencing will continue to
flourish and grow in this space. There will be many
winners when this happens, and I’ll bet that it won’t
be the ones that have the information that win, but
rather the ones that will be able to deliver it to the
most devices.
About the author
Dan Rayburn,
an authority on interactive web technology, has seven
years' expertise in the streaming media sector. Before
starting his own consulting company, Rayburn
established the Streaming Media Division for the
Globix Corporation. Previously, in 1996 he co-founded
one of the first live webcast production companies
successfully acquired by Digital Island. His articles
on streaming media trends and technologies have been
published in major trade magazines and web portals
including Streaming Magazine, Electronic Media,
Communications Week Magazine, IT Consultant Magazine,
Ziff Davis IT Week UK and IDG Books. Contact Rayburn
at
www.danrayburn.com
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