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Technology Stocks : IATV-ACTV Digital Convergence Software-HyperTV -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (2256)4/19/1999 10:50:00 AM
From: Steve Hausser  Respond to of 13157
 
Liberty Media Group Gets Interactive, Again

By Joshua Cho
Liberty Media Group was at it again last week, investing in interactive media company ACTV, Inc.

Liberty, a wholly-owned subsidiary of AT&T Corp., but controlled by John Malone, said that it was exercising previously existing options it had with ACTV by investing $9 million in the company. Last September, Liberty first announced a $5 million investment in the company with options to invest another $5 million plus the purchase of stock.

"I've been pushing a rock up this hill for a long time," said ACTV president/COO David Reese in a telephone interview, "and it's tremendously gratifying that a company with Liberty Media's insight believes there are synergies with ACTV."

Liberty also received new options in the company, which if exercised would push the company's investment in ACTV to over $100 million, or some 25% of the company.

Reese noted that the company believes that TV is the primary medium, rather than the Internet.

"We're strong proponents in the belief that the most impressionistic media is video," he said.

Indeed, the company's HyperTV product is designed to "push" consumers to Internet content which is directly related to television programming. The patented technology allows viewers to simultaneously watch TV while surfing Web content and interacting with other users.

Analysts saw the Liberty investment as a real-world move toward convergence, an overused buzzword that seeks to describe the melding of the Internet with more traditional media, like TV programming. The investment also comes out of necessity.

"When you look from the standpoint of what's out there with digital set-tops and what you can load in them, ACTV's technology is the only thing that fits," said Neidiger, Tucker, Bruner, Inc. analyst Michael Shronstrom. "There's not enough memory for some of the Internet-related applications or some of the competitive products that are out there."

Shronstrom also said that Liberty could use ACTV's technology to differentiate its programming from that of DBS providers.

The ACTV investment follows on Liberty's increased stakes in set-top box maker General Instrument Corp. and News Corp. becoming the second largest shareholder in each of those companies. At the same time, Liberty proposed transferring all of its interactive and Internet assets to TCI Music, Inc. in exchange for that company's newly issued shares of class B common stock.

Earlier this month, Liberty sold its half of the Fox Sports venture back to News Corp. for $1.425 billion in News Corp. stock. Ironically, ACTV has a long-term agreement with Fox Sports Net to deliver "individualized television" for the sports events shown on that channel, offering alternative camera angles.

(April 19, 1999)





To: Skywatcher who wrote (2256)4/19/1999 10:53:00 AM
From: Steve Hausser  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13157
 
Article explains the importance as well as the value of "push" and "pull" technology.

Cable, Broadcast Heavyweights See New Age For TV Ads
REUTERS

Television today is still very much a passive medium, in which programming is "pushed" on to the consumer, whereas consumers "pull" information off the Internet.
"When you mix the 'push' and 'pull' mediums in television, you can not only directly engage people, but better track the audience and move them directly to sales," Steve Guggenheimer, group product manager for digital television for Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT), told Reuters in an interview.
Some analysts predicted that online advertising will be 50 percent larger than cable television's existing advertising base withing five years. About $45 billion is currently spent annually on broadcast and cable TV advertising combined, according to analysts.

ANAHEIM, Calif., Dec. 3 — Soon just watching TV commercials won't be enough. You're going to have to interact with them, too.
As the Internet becomes available on television sets, cable operators and broadcasters are moving to make sure that advertising keeps up with the changes, industry leaders said at the Western Cable Show on Thursday.

"Internet advertising (on television) is happening, and uses of it are happening in ways that we never expected it to happen," Cox Communications Inc. COX. Chief Executive James Robbins said.
By year's end more than 2 million digital TV set-top boxes, capable of delivering Internet access, video on demand, online shopping and in-home networking on televisions, will have been shipped, analysts say. That number should double in 1999.
"We will be putting Internet on TV screens in large numbers very shortly. Programmers will be developing content that plays across each platform, but differently across each platform," John Malone, chief executive officer of Telecommunications Group Inc. (NASDAQ:TCOMA), said at the Western Cable show in Anaheim, Calif.
Television today is still very much a passive medium, in which programming is "pushed" on to the consumer, whereas consumers "pull" information off the Internet.
"When you mix the 'push' and 'pull' mediums in television, you can not only directly engage people, but better track the audience and move them directly to sales," Steve Guggenheimer, group product manager for digital television for Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT), told Reuters in an interview.
"There's lots of really creative things you can do, but now the challenge is the business models (for advertising) will change. Traditional advertising in television is all about how many eyeballs you can hit, while traditional Web advertising is based on a set way of tracking how many people click on a Web site," he said.
Industry experts said TCI plans to form a task force of leading cable operators, broadcasters and advertisers to work on issues like revenue sharing, security and pricing that will be changed as a result of more interactive advertising.
Some analysts predicted that online advertising will be 50 percent larger than cable television's existing advertising base withing five years. About $45 billion is currently spent annually on broadcast and cable TV advertising combined, according to analysts.
Industry leaders said commercials would differ from the jingle-driven ads of yesterday as companies try to appeal to the more upscale, educated TV-Internet viewer.
Scott Sassa, head of NBC Entertainment, said the consumers of its CNBC cable channel and NBC's related Web sites reflect a high-income bracket.
"They're off the map," Sassa said. "We advertised a house in Florida on the beach for sale on CNBC for $2.3 million and had 200 qualified offers from viewers," he said. "As for as our Web sites, by definition, people who can afford personal computers and Internet access are generally more upscale," he said.
"I think what's going to have to happen in the converged media is that advertisers are going to have to think about the fact that people are sick of being pushed," said Geraldine Laybourne, chief executive of Oxygen Media, which is starting a new cable channel for women with partners Oprah Winfrey and prime-time producer Marcy Carsey.
"Consumers actually like being given more information and want to go deeper into it," Laybourne said. "Advertisers have to learn to live in a more persuasive land rather than with (brand) bombardment."

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters