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À partir d’avant-hierActualités numériques

Big Streamers Have Been Cutting Their Original Content Output

Par : msmash
26 juin 2024 à 18:10
An anonymous reader shares a report: If you've been mindlessly scrolling through streaming services and have been feeling even less enthused than usual, you may not be entirely to blame: almost all major US streamers have been cutting their original TV output this year, according to new analysis (paywalled) from Variety. From content monolith Netflix, which released 203 original shows in the first half of 2023 compared with 174 in H1 '24, to Disney+, which has halved its already-slim original TV library as it continues an apparent shift to quality over quantity, shrinkage has hit the streaming world hard. Indeed, of the 8 major streamers Variety studied from Luminate data, only Max and Peacock maintained their output level year over year. All told, the number of original seasons fell 19% at the 8 streamers tracked.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Streaming Execs Think TV's Future Looks a Lot Like Its Past

Par : msmash
24 juin 2024 à 16:47
An anonymous reader shares a report: We're at a transitional moment in streaming -- user growth is slowing and major players are looking to consolidate, but the long-promised dream of profitability finally seems within reach (especially if you're Netflix). The perfect time, then, for The New York Times to interview many of the industry's big names -- including Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos, Amazon's Prime Video head Mike Hopkins, and IAC chairman Barry Diller -- about what they think comes next. There seemed to be broad agreement on most of the big themes: More ads, higher prices, and fewer big swings on prestige TV. These changes are all united by the shift towards profitability, rather than growth-at-all-costs. If the initial prices of many streaming services seemed unsustainably low at launch, it turns out they were -- prices have been steadily rising, while the streamers have also introduced more affordable subscription tiers for viewers who are willing to watch ads. In fact, some execs told The Times that streamers will keep raising prices for the ad-free tiers with the aim of pushing more customers to sign up for ad-supported subscriptions instead. The growth of ad-supported streaming could also affect the kinds of movies and shows that get produced, since advertisers generally want to reach a mass audience -- think of the heyday of ad-supported network TV, with its endless shows about doctors and cops, compared to the more ambitious fare on subscription-supported HBO.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Roku TV Owners Complain That Motion Smoothing Is Stuck 'On' After an Update

Par : BeauHD
13 juin 2024 à 10:00
Roku TV owners are complaining that motion smoothing is "suddenly enabled on their TVs with no way to turn it off," reports The Verge. From the report: Contributors on Reddit and in Roku's community forum reported seeing the change on TCL TVs running on Roku OS 13, as did a few staffers on The Verge. However, for others who have access to "Expert" picture settings, the same update is in place without a change, and the settings to control it are still available. For some people experiencing the problem, they said this is the first time their TV offered Roku's motion smoothing feature at all and that there's nowhere in any menu (either the standard settings or the picture settings available while watching TV) to turn it off. The update notes for Roku OS 13 mention a new "Roku Smart Picture" feature that will optimize based on the content being watched, so there may be a bug there. However, people in older threads have reported similar issues with some Roku devices before. A Roku community moderator responded on the forum that the team is looking into the incident. Roku also offered its typical instructions for disabling the settings, which involves clicking the Star button on the remote during playback and heading to the Action Smoothing submenu under Advanced Picture Settings. [...] Naturally, a lot of people who work in film and television aren't a fan. Star Wars: The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson once went so far as to say it makes "movies look like liquid diarrhea."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

'Why You Should Use Your TV's Filmmaker Mode'

Par : msmash
31 mai 2024 à 18:00
An anonymous reader shares a CR report: Based on the name, you'd think Filmmaker Mode is strictly for watching movies. But in our labs, we find that it can get you pretty close to what we consider to be the ideal settings for all types of programming. Filmmaker Mode is the product of a joint effort by the Hollywood film community, TV manufacturers, and the UHD Alliance to help consumers easily set up their TVs and watch shows and films as they were meant to be displayed. The preset has been widely praised by a host of well-known directors, including J.J. Abrams, Paul Thomas Anderson, James Cameron, Patty Jenkins, Rian Johnson, Christopher Nolan, Jordan Peele, and Martin Scorsese, as well as actors such as Tom Cruise. Right now, you can find Filmmaker Mode on TVs from Hisense, LG, Philips, Samsung, and Vizio. And more sets may get the feature this year. Most newer TVs have fancy features that manufacturers say will improve the picture. But these features can actually have the opposite effect, degrading the fidelity of the image by altering how it was originally intended to look. To preserve the director's original intent, Filmmaker Mode shuts off all the extra processing a TV might apply to movies and shows, including both standard (SDR) and high dynamic range (HDR) content on 4K TVs. This involves preserving the TV's full contrast ratio, setting the correct aspect ratio, and maintaining the TV's color and frame rates, so films look more like what you'd see in a theater. For most of us, though, the biggest benefit of Filmmaker Mode is what the TV won't be doing. For example, it turns off motion smoothing, also referred to as motion interpolation, which can remove movies' filmlike look. (This is one of three TV features that it's best to stop using.) Motion-smoothing features were introduced because most films, and some TV shows, are shot at 24 frames per second, while most TVs display images at 60 or 120 frames per second. To deal with these mismatches, the TV adds made-up (interpolated) frames, filling in the gaps to keep the motion looking smooth. But this creates an artificial look, commonly called the soap opera effect. Think of a daytime TV show shot on video.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Comcast To Launch Peacock, Netflix and Apple TV+ Bundle

Par : BeauHD
15 mai 2024 à 02:10
Later this month, Comcast will launch a three-way bundle with Peacock, Netflix and Apple TV+. It will "come at a vastly reduced price to anything in the market today," said. Comcast chief Brian Roberts. Variety reports: The goal is to "add value to consumers" and at the same time "take some of the dollars out of" other companies' streaming businesses, he added, while reinforcing Comcast's broadband service offerings. Comcast's impending launch of the StreamSaver bundle come as other media companies have been assembling similar offerings. [...] Like the other streaming bundling strategies, Comcast's forthcoming Peacock, Netflix and Apple TV+ package is an effort to reduce cancelation rates (aka "churn") and provide a more efficient means of subscriber acquisition -- coming as the traditional cable TV business continues to deteriorate. Last week, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery announced a three-way bundle comprising of Max, Disney+ and Hulu.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Streaming is Cable Now

Par : msmash
10 mai 2024 à 14:00
An anonymous reader shares a report: Disney Plus, Hulu, and Max are teaming up for a new bundle this summer, Netflix is focused on the WWE and celebrity boxing, Disney Plus is getting ESPN, and Bloomberg reported earlier this week that Max could get a price hike. A familiar refrain emerged around all this news: streaming is becoming cable TV all over again and getting crummier in the process. And it's true! When streaming first emerged, it was a beautiful alternative to piracy, which was very convenient and very illegal, and cable, which was festooned with ads and weighed down by channels you were paying for and didn't want. Streaming gave you a world of content on demand for a fraction of the cost of cable. But that experience was never sustainable. Content costs money to make, and companies are apparently obligated to "increase revenue" and "make profit." This means Netflix spending billions of dollars a year on content isn't necessarily sustainable unless it's adding new users and monetizing them through some combination of ads and increasing subscription fees for stuff that used to be free, like sharing an account or streaming in 4K.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Rejoignez le programme de testeurs pour Btv

Par : ToFoo93
6 mars 2024 à 12:28

Rejoignez le programme de testeurs pour Btv sur Android ou iOS. Bouygues Telecom recherche de nouveaux testeurs pour les futures évolutions et participer activement à l’amélioration des versions de Btv pour les devices sous iOS et Android (Smartphones et tablettes). Bouygues Telecom vous propose régulièrement de nouvelles versions de Btv, compatible iPhone et iPad sous […]

L'article Rejoignez le programme de testeurs pour Btv a été publié en premier sur Bbox-Mag

DAZN sur votre Bbox TV: un mois d’essai gratuit

Par : ToFoo93
19 octobre 2023 à 13:13

DAZN disponible depuis votre Bbox TV ! La plus grande plateforme de streaming sportif est désormais accessible aux clients Bouygues Telecom. Depuis le mardi 10 octobre, visionnez les plus grandes compétitions nationales et internationales, depuis votre décodeur TV Bbox. DAZN a pour ambition de se développer en France et d’être dans le quotidien de tous […]

L'article DAZN sur votre Bbox TV: un mois d’essai gratuit a été publié en premier sur Bbox-Mag

Le Père Noël vous offre la mise en clair du bouquet TV Bbox Divertissement

Par : ToFoo93
20 décembre 2022 à 08:00

Le Père Noël vous offre la mise en clair du bouquet TV Bbox Divertissement à partir du 20 décembre 2022 depuis les offres avec décodeur TV Bbox ou Smart TV. Pour Noël le bouquet TV Bbox Divertissement est en clair, pas de manipulation à faire pour bénéficier des 30 chaines multithématiques en live. A noter […]

L'article Le Père Noël vous offre la mise en clair du bouquet TV Bbox Divertissement a été publié en premier sur Bbox-Mag

Les chaines E !, 13ème Rue et Dreamworks arrivent sur Bbox de Bouygues Telecom

Par : ToFoo93
7 décembre 2022 à 10:00

Les chaines E !, 13ème Rue et Dreamworks arrivent sur Bbox de Bouygues Telecom. Les chaines du groupe Universal rejoignent les décodeurs TV Bbox à partir d’aujourd’hui en option dans les bouquets TV Bbox Famille, Ciné et grand Ciné. L’offre TV optionnelle se diversifie, les chaines E !, 13ème Rue et Dreamworks arrivent sur Bbox […]

L'article Les chaines E !, 13ème Rue et Dreamworks arrivent sur Bbox de Bouygues Telecom a été publié en premier sur Bbox-Mag

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