SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Impristine who wrote (52293)4/22/1999 10:37:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Broadcast.com chairman sees upside in DTV
By Brendan Intindola
LAS VEGAS, April 21 (Reuters) -- Broadcast.com Inc.'s
<BCST.O> chairman said Wednesday Wall Street sees value in
Internet companies, particularly in Broadcast.com and its
merger partner Yahoo!, partly because pervasive, online PCs can
easily handle the growing number of digital television signals.
Broadcast.com, which pulls together audio and video
programming from many sources and transmits over the World Wide
Web, and leading Internet portal Yahoo! <YHOO.O> announced
three weeks ago a stock-swap merger worth over $5 billion.
"You put all these pieces together and you start to
understand why, when you look at the value proposition from the
Internet, ... we think Wall Street starts to see some of these
values," Mark Cuban, Broadcast.com chairman, president and co-
founder, told an audience assembled here for the National
Association of Broadcasters annual meeting.
He said the "conventional wisdom" that it will take years
for digital television to rise to meaningful viewer penetration
is wrong.
"It is not going to be three, five, 10, 20 years before DTV
starts to take hold. It is going to start to take hold this
year, but it won't be on your TV set" it will be on the
household or office PC equipped to handle the digital formats,
he said.
As early as the second half of this year, Cuban predicted,
the home PC will evolved into a device akin to audio-visual
equipment rather than office gear, speeding the PC-TV
convergence and giving rise to new revenue models for Internet
and media companies, such as quickly growing electronic
commerce.
"Well everyone says, 'Who is going to watch TV on their
PC?.' The reality is the only reason you wouldn't watch DTV on
your PC is because it looks like a PC," Cuban said.
"Imagine if that PC, which now has a card capable of
reading DTV signals, looked like a DVD (digital video disk)
player," he said "Now it looks like it belongs in your living
room."
He said such a "box" would cost about $1,600, and possess
all the functions of a PC, DVD, traditional analog TV tuner,
DTV receiver, while hooked to the Internet with a high-speed
cable modem for two-way multimedia flow.
By the second half of 1999, he said consumers will have
access to these PCs, looking like DVDs or VCRs, and by summer
2000 Cuban said expects DTV decoder cards will be just another
prepackaged PC feature. "You won't ask for it, you won't think
you are buying DTV capability, it will just be there," he said.
Cuban also said he expects an explosion in user-generated
content on the Internet. "We think that over the next two
years, one of the biggest phenomenons will be user-generated
content" like home movies.
For traditional broadcasters, the cost of digital-video
creation is "dropping like a rock, and it is happening on the
consumer side as well."