I agree with this...
"You need Windows XP, or Media Player 10, or Flash 6, or IE, or
Quicktime, or to stand on your head and chant the namshub of Enki. Good
grief, it doesn't need to be that hard.
Add to this the insane geographical restrictions. It only works in the
U.S., or it only works in the U.K. What the hell is that? It's a brave
new world. We can send information to the other side of the globe and
back in a flash. Move into the future with the rest of us. And here's a
tip. If a bunch of people are actively seeking out your content, and
trying to get it from you, as opposed to more nefarious means, that's a
good thing. That's a potential customer knocking on your door. They
might be knocking with a long digital arm, from across an ocean, but
they are still knocking. Answer the freaking door. Those Euros look a
little funny at first, but they still spend just like American dollars.
And we can't forget the infrastructure. If you must stream, and won't
embrace things like bit torrent for distribution, please do some math
and figure out what kind of hardware and connection you will require. A
choppy video that has to run in fits and starts because it is
constantly buffering ruins the experience. The goal should be giving
your customers the same kind of experience over the web that they get
when they watch a traditional broadcast.
At the end of the day, all I'm looking for is simplicity. When you say, "Watch the premier of Veronica Mars
online!", I want to click a button and see some video. Not a page of
hoops to jump through to get to the video. And I want that to happen
whether I'm on a Mac or a Linux machine. Even if, for some odd reason,
I'm on a Windows machine. Is that really asking too much?"

Best Internet Variety Show (and Good Luck Getting Anything Done, Ever) in 2005! 


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