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Adrian Bridgwater

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Software application development

This blog is intended to provoke discussion and exchange between like minded software application developers, engineers, architects, project managers - and keen hobbyists too.

Monday 15 December 2008, 12:11 AM

Will you tune in to “Broadcast 2.0”..?

Posted by Adrian Bridgwater

Software developers with a penchant for all things Web 2.0 related will surely be eyeing the quickly developing Internet-driven television on-demand services such as BBC iPlayer with great interest right now.

As Britain’s use of these channels mushrooms (iPlayer usage is said to take up 10 per cent of total UK bandwidth), the evolution in the way we interact with this technology will arguably now follow some logical steps.

I use the term logical for a reason; if you spend any degree of time on the web then it’s probably likely that you engage in some form of social networking. It may be as simple as group discussion via email or engaging with some form of user group – or you may go the whole way and be a Twitter, Facebook, MySpace etc. addict with an unbridled passion for virtual networking. So is social networking about to entwine with online TV viewing? Some say it is.

IMAGE DESCRIPTION'
Free image: Wikimedia Commons

Although the BBC iPlayer team have come under some criticism recently, the project may be about to take its next step towards increased proximity with each and every one of us – and if you’re a software developer who is a essentially a web developer/designer, this may just be of interest.

I heard the “social networking meets online TV” theory expounded upon by the guy that runs the whole shebang, a certain Anthony Rose, the BBC’s head of digital media technology. Rose was speaking at the Adobe MAX web developer and designer conference in Milan at the start of this month.

Here’s how Rose breaks down the evolution of broadcast now that we have online TV roaming the earth as the highly developed beast that it is:

1 – Broadcast 1.0: black and white and then eventually colour TV that was pumped into our living rooms on fewer channels that you or I have digits on our hands. Essentially, the BBC decided what we watch.

2 – Broadcast 1.5: online TV has arrived and we can view what we want when we want to. Essentially, we decide what we watch.

3 – Broadcast 2.0: social networking becomes a part of the online TV experience and you engage with your friends to build their recommended choices into your viewing programme. Essentially, we decide what we watch along with a little help from our friends.

Notably, (and again this is something for developers to embrace if they work in this arena) you’ll be able to watch the first half of the news online, then catch up on what you missed on a mobile device while you are sat on your train on the way to the office. So Broadcast 2.0 straddles devices then too.

To make all this happen, the BBC has nestled even closer to Adobe’s stack and is in the process of upgrading its systems to the cross-platform world of Adobe AIR (Adobe Integrated Runtime). Something that will provide, the BBC hopes, the public with the requisite level of compatibility across Windows and Mac OS based machines.

So is iPlayer on Adobe AIR good news? Well, yeah – what’s not to like? I’d like to suggest that it finally makes our overpriced TV license worthwhile. Will developers be drawn to the opportunities to build social networking style web apps that integrate with iPlayer? I’d like to suggest that they probably will.

But are social networking driven recommendations a good thing for my future viewing prospects? Hell no thanks. Firstly, I don’t want everyone to know that my favourite programmes are Ray Mears and Bear Grylls (oh damn! it’s out now!) and secondly, I really don’t want to hear about Strictly Come Dancing and the X-factor to be honest.

Comments on this post

thinkfeeldo

Hey Adrian,

Years ago a person would be judged on what books they had in their home library. Later it was the record collection (hide the Bay City Rollers album now!) and then more recently their CD's and iPODs. Soon, we will be judged by the kind of content we view.

It's ok to share content with a network of friends but to have everyone know what you're into is a bit too much. More importantly is the fact that the content providers themselves will be privvy to our personal interests (like they don't already have some idea).

Can't say much beyond that or i'd be giving the game away. But I'll let you in on a little secret - the real prize lies just around the corner!


;-)


TFD

Updated by thinkfeeldo on Dec 15, 2008 10:13 AM

Adrian Bridgwater

Hey TFD,

Thanks for that. Now I remember why I am conscious of putting my Penguin classics and Robert Fisk books up front on my bookshelf and why I keep my Beano annuals 1965 to 1979 down below eye level.

You're right though- it's CRM data isn't it? "Adrian watches Bear Grylls so send him offers for mail order hunting knives..." right?

The sneaky swines.

TV habits are fickle though aren't they? We go off things pretty fast. Doesn't that make the data inherently less accurate.

Sorry - gotta go, Ray Mears is doing Squirrel Risotto on Dave.

AdrianB

Posted by Adrian Bridgwater on Dec 15, 2008 11:59 AM

roger andre

Adrian, interesting post. Do you think the web can cope? At the moment I quite like that my online expierience and TV are seperate entities, exept when I choose to watch online. My biggest nightmare? The one minute add break between clicking links!

Does anyone think the BBC could help out with investing in some new web infrastructure? After all they are planning to deliver HD content over the i player and that could be crippling for web.

Posted by roger andre on Dec 15, 2008 8:30 PM

Adrian Bridgwater

Hey Rog,

Well I think you make the best point there with the "Will the BBC invest in infrastructure" question?

I fear that they will say that it's not needed as the Adobe technology they are now leveraging (ouch! yes I did use that word) allows them to deliver more fluidly.

Let's phone the director general and ask him/her.

Adrian

Posted by Adrian Bridgwater on Dec 15, 2008 9:12 PM

roger andre

I thing leveraging is very apt. Leveraging air onto all our computers. Although it's been sitting on mine now for some time.

Do you remember 4OD? It slipped in a dodgy service called the K-kontinki service. What this did was to use some of your computers bandwith to distribute channel 4 shows around the place using your computer as a server. Well the i player also kicked this service into action when you started streaming BBC programes even though I hadn't installed the beebs download manager. So basically the beeb were also using the home computer as a server by making use of 4s kontinki service!

Now channel 4 seem to be letting OD die a slow death and just allowing live streaming like the BBC always did, I wonder if this has upset any unspoken plans. I would advise any PC users to hunt down and get rid of any k service and kontinki service they find on their machines. The k-service fires up with windows unless you disable it, but if you don't get rid of it will put itself back into start up mode.

Want some irony? It was IE8 beta 1 that warned me this was going on when I was about to use the i player, after I had installed 4 OD!

Posted by roger andre on Dec 15, 2008 9:46 PM

Adrian Bridgwater

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  • Adrian Bridgwater
  • Applications Development, London, UK
  • Member since: July 2007

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