Well there are no ads on the BBC so no need to worry about that. It will be programmes that've already been shown. People outside of the UK would pay. I'll away and see if I can find the article.
Xander ,'Lessons'
Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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But then people in England who don't pay for the right to see TV, can see the shows. How does this work in their favour?
What is the model of the BBC, and how will downloadable eps fit into that?
Licence payer funded. I believe downloadable shows are only going to be available in the UK:
Some of their (non-musical) radio shows are currently available as podcasts.
eta - As for restricting access to those who've paid, I presume they'd use the TV licence number.
Hmm. Bittorrent is easy on the host, because there isn't really a host. But it's also easy on the downloader. I wonder how a single source download will compare in terms of speed and reliability.
I wonder how much TV costs. I know the copy of Tenko series 1 I just got was about fifty quid. That's five pounds an episode. How much would I pay for a download? Don't know.
But then people in England who don't pay for the right to see TV, can see the shows. How does this work in their favour?
I'm not sure what you mean here, but people in the UK who have a TV have to have a TV license or they get shot, as do their family and their dogs.
Also, what thegrommit's link said.
I wonder how a single source download will compare in terms of speed and reliability.
There is at least one comparable service I can think of. MLB.com has broadcasts of classic and recent baseball games available on their website for $3.95 a pop. They download reasonably quickly, under an hour for a 500 MB file over a cable connection, which generally faster than I can get something of similar size using BT.
I'm not sure what you mean here, but people in the UK who have a TV have to have a TV license or they get shot, as do their family and their dogs.
What if they just have a computer monitor?
but people in the UK who have a TV have to have a TV license or they get shot, as do their family and their dogs.
Right. But now people who don't have a TV can still watch the show. I'm guessing then, they're not enough to put a dent in the market.
MLB.com has broadcasts of classic and recent baseball games available on their website for $3.95 a pop
Video or audio? I wonder if the NBA has anything like that?
What if they just have a computer monitor?
Right. But now people who don't have a TV can still watch the show. I'm guessing then, they're not enough to put a dent in the market.
I'm not sure about that. I think the idea is that the programmes will be available for download once they've been shown.