Every
night, after we finish our daily dose of soaps and serials on TV and
after I finish my customary browsing of news channels, which mostly
show high pitched political fights to score brownie points over other
political parties, my wife and I, switch on these days, what is known
as internet TV. I am so much impressed by this new channel of
infotainment that I consider it nothing short of another TV
revolution.
TV
came to India in the seventies and colour TV in the eighties. Yet for
next decade or so, all that we had was a single, Government
controlled, channel known as Doordarshan. The channel showed, what
mandarins sitting in their offices wanted us to see and were never
really bothered about what watchers wanted to see on their screens.
To start with, there were no microwave links to connect two TV
stations located far apart, say Mumbai and Delhi, and each station
had its own programming liberties. Sometime in late eighties, they
managed to connect all TV stations by microwave links and things
became even worst. Now, instead of local mandarins, it was the turn
of the bureaucrats in Delhi to extend their control over programming
nation wide. As a result of which TV programmes became even more dull
and insipid.
Some
time in early nineties, satellite TV came to India like a fresh
breeze in otherwise stale environment of Government controlled
media. The things changed rapidly, first came the entertainment
channels followed by cinema, news, sports and documentaries. Finally
with DTH, TV got liberated as territorial limitations also were gone
and someone sitting in a far off village could see all the latest
channels by just putting up a satellite dish.
What
I have described above, is perhaps true for most of the countries of
the world, to a greater or lesser extent, perhaps except in US,
where free to air private channels with minimum Government control
came into existence much earlier. Today, in most of the countries of
the world, except for few exceptions, TV watchers can watch a wide
bouquet of channels that are specialized to the core.
Even
with all that choice, one basic lacuna remained. We could only watch,
what channels want us to see, not what a watcher might be interested
at that point of time. I would enumerate this with an example.
Yesterday, I wrote a blogpost about the ruins of Moenjo-daro in
Pakistan and my mind was occupied with that subject. I would have
liked to see a short film perhaps on this subject, but I had no
choice and could only watch what National Geographic or Discovery
wanted me to see on that day.
More
advanced countries now give you option of seeing TV on demand. Here
also, firstly the selection is mostly restricted to films for obvious
reasons and one needs to make a payment to see a film of his choice.
We are all used to see free TV, except for paying monthly charges for
the TV signals coming from cables or satellite dishes. The idea of
making a payment again to get some programme of my choice, is not
palatable to me at least.
Around
five or six years ago, Japanese and Korean TV manufacturers
introduced internet TV for the first time. These TV have their own
internet servers and can be connected to internet directly with a LAN
cable or through Wi-Fi, by using a small modem like device called a
dongle. I did buy this kind of TV, few years back but my experience
has not been a very happy one. The media servers built in these TV
are not particularly good and are unreliable. Few applications work
well and most of the time a watcher ends up seeing a geared wheel
rotating around itself, till his patience is over and he switches it
off.
Around
three or four years ago, Apple inc. brought into market a new device,
what they named as Apple TV. It is really a small black box about 5
to 6 inches square in size. All one needs to do is to connect this
box to your TV with a HDMI cable and power it up. Initial models of
Apple TV were quite flexible and net savvy people immediately jail
broke them so that other media servers like XBMC could be routed
through them. Apple inc. were not very happy about this and brought
in version 3, which is jail breaking proof and has to be used the way
Apple wants us to use it.
For
people with more independent frames of mind, there are similar black
boxes made by other companies like Western digital are available.
These would work with any other media server. Readers might be
puzzled about all these details of new hardware available and how it
really relates to a new revolution for TV watchers, but that is where
I am now coming to.
Let
us take as an example, the black box that is simplest to use;Apple
TV. There are three kinds of applications for which this little box
can be used. First is of course the way, Apple wants us to use this.
It (Apple) has built up an on line store, which it calls as App
Store. Apple wants us to make purchases in this store (it even
rents), for songs, videos and films that we want to watch; once we
buy them, Apple TV would simply show them to us on the TV screens.
The
other application for which Apple TV can be used is to run media like
songs, videos and films that are stored in our computers, which can
be linked by the local Wi-Fi network to the Apple TV. Here again the
choice is limited and we can not possibly store every other film we
want to see because of storage space limitations.
This
finally leads us to the last application, which I just adore. It is
totally free and the choice is almost unlimited. These are
applications like You Tube and Vimeo, where people around the world,
keep uploading songs and videos by thousands every day. Apple TV or
other serial media controllers provide apps for these on the home
screen. All you need to do is to select these and see a new world of
infotainment opening up before your own eyes. I have mentioned about
Moenjo-daro above. If you type these words in the search engine of
You Tube, you could be awarded with many choices. I managed to see
yesterday a film made by UNESCO on this subject.
For
seniors like me and my wife, searching You Tube is like going on a
treasure hunt. During last few nights, I have re-found hundreds of
songs from 1930-40's to 1970's. Hundreds or thousands of music
enthusiasts, who had kept the original records for all these years
with them have converted these songs to electronic formats and have
uploaded them for listening pleasures of people like me and you and
that too at no cost. You Tube and similar Apps have programming that
is really by the people and for the people.
I
no longer feel bored and constrained by the routine advertisement
filled fare offered by TV channels to us. At the end of the day and
just before bed time, half an hour on You Tube works out to be a
perfect prescription for a good night's sound sleep. This is nothing
short of a revolution, a TV revolution.
4th
February 2014
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