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Bigger Screens Attract More Viewers, Longer Viewing

Thursday March 28, 2019. 12:33 AM , from Digital Pro Sound
Content Insider #617 – Middle World

By Miles Weston

“This
isn’t the land of waiting for back up. This is the land of you’re on your own.”
– Ben, “Wind River,” Acacia Filmed Entertainment,
2017

Just
for laughs, sometimes I bring out my old, old flip phone.

You
know, “Beam me up Scotty.”

Our
son splits a gut, our daughter is kinder. 
But what do they know…it’s going to try and make a comeback.

Still,
son can’t believe all we did with it was make/receive phone calls.

He
also gets a kick out of our old iPhone 2 and wonders how he could possibly play
Shadowgun Legends or watch HBO’s Game of Thorns on such a little screen.

Our
daughter just rolls her eyes and goes back to her new iPhone big screen texting,
IGTV (Instagram TV) videos and the latest whatever Netflix show she’s into this
week.

That’s
why we were a little surprised when the new old Palm was rolled out.  It’s even smaller than the first iPhone Jobs
showed to the faithful back in ’07.

Retro – Golden State Warrior Steph Curry shows off the
reintroduction of Palm and their new tiny phone that will help folks wean
themselves off constantly staring at their smartphone and maybe just use their
phone for person-to-person communications. 

Golden
State Warriors’ Steph Curry is an investor in the new company, is its creative
strategy director, and has a terrific fan base; but seriously?

A
little bigger than a credit card, you can read texts, respond, take some so-so
pictures and probably watch a YouTube video if it is extremely short.

In
other words, it’s the backup phone to carry if you’re trying to wean yourself
of constantly being online with yourself.

About
the only person we can think of who would take delight in it was a reviewer we
read years ago who panned the introduction of a unit that bridged the gap between
a phone and tablet.

The
reviewer rhetorically asked at the time why anyone would want a phablet
(mash-up word)?

According
to Strategy Analytics, just about everyone!

Now
folks are waiting anxiously (at least device manufacturers hope) for their foldable
screen phones but jeezz $2K?

Viewing – With the steady improvements in capabilities,
performance and screen quality of smartphones people are increasingly using
them as their main everything device including long form streaming video.  With the increased usage, people want a
screen size that’s not too big, not to small but … just right. 

A
major reason for the demand/need for a larger screen is there are more people
going online with their smartphones than with their desktop/laptop computers.

According
to the recent Ericsson Mobility report, there will be 28B connected devices in
the world by 2022–including 16B IoT devices, 9B phones, about 1B
desktop/laptop computers.

At
least 8B of these devices will have audio/video connections.

In
other words, there are connected devices and then
there are connected devices.

People
who go online exclusively via desktop or laptop computers are becoming scarce
in the US and most industrialized countries.

Always There – Gen Zers quickly found that the smartphone could meet
just about all of their communications needs and, in many countries, it is the
only device people can afford.  As a result,
people adapted. 

Smartphones added about half a billion
new devices to the market since a year ago and they now outnumber tablets by 6
to 1.

According
to eMarketer, over three-quarters of US internet users will access the internet
via both a mobile device and PC; and there were roughly 9 million new dual-device
users during the last year. 

IHS Technology notes there are an
average of four connected devices per household globally and in North America,
closer to 13 devices.

Devices with AV capabilities
globally are:

3.4 Billion—Smartphones

1.8 Billion – PCs

1.4 Billion – Audio hardware.73 Billion – Tablets.51 Billion – TV-attached devices.29 Billion – TVs

Last year,Gary Shapiro, CTA president and CEO, noted, “Connectivity — the anytime/anywhere access to information and
entertainment we now expect — is a driving trend of our time, supported by the
continued growth we’ve seen in smartphone ownership. Smartphones are our personal hubs for innovative technologies like
smart homes, connected cars and voice-recognition services. And, as more of us
recognize the ability of technology to change our lives for the better,
smartphones will continue to be one of the most pervasive technologies owned in
homes throughout the U.S.”

CTA
likes to remind us that TVs are still the most popular device in US homes with
more than 96 percent of households owning at least one.

Still,
smartphones are the most pervasive device in the world!

The
reason why more digital minutes in the US are consumed on mobile devices than
desktops (despite a greater desktop audience) is heavier usage on mobile.

As
smartphones and data plans become more affordable and the wireless
infrastructure becomes faster and more reliable; mobile-only users will
steadily increase in the years ahead. 

Mobile View – While the TV set continues to be the primary source
for visual entertainment and news, family members increasingly multi-task
watching shows on the big screen and one in their hand.  In addition, the smartphone is a fast, easy
way to catch up with the news of the day, short form videos or series segments. 

In
fact, mobile users in the US consume about 2.5 times more minutes per month
than desktop users.

According
to comScore, mobile devices combined for 70.3 percent of all digital minutes in
the US in December, up from 66 percent in January 2016.

Two-thirds
of video views in the US were on mobile devices, about the same as in the UK
(69 percent).

Video on-the-Go – Most of the mobile data traffic in the years ahead will
be video – movies, TV series, social media content, news, etc. 

And it’s growing!

Which
means that in addition to our kids’ phones, Netflix, Amazon Prime; YouTube and yes,
even your local grocery store, address 339 million connected devices in the US or
about 32 percent of the AV hardware landscape. 

To
support the video consumption changes, SMPTE (Society of Motion Picture and
Television Engineers) have made tremendous strides in streamlining content
distribution with more efficient, more bandwidth-conservative codecs
(compresses data to enable faster transmission and decompresses received data)
and other standards to enhance the viewing of 4K and HDR content.

Of
course, the crucial part is outside of their control, the improvements of
network connectivity that can change the way we enjoy content.

Dissatisfaction – The most common complaint from people who like to
watch video content on their smartphone is buffering – the amount of time
required before the content (audio or video) begins to play.  

Despite
the development of advanced mobile technology, the average network still
struggles to meet everyone’s on-the-go viewing needs.

4G
LTE meets the HD and even 4K streaming needs of folks who live in densely
populated urban areas; and 5G, which will begin broader distribution early this
next year, will be a giant leap forward if you live in the right part of the
country/city.

And carriers – AT&T, Verizon, China
Mobil, Vodaphone, America Movil, T-Mobil, Sprint and others – are doing a great
job of spinning the dream that shortly you’ll be enjoy the breathtaking of 5G of
always-on connection to instantly and effortlessly enjoy great content. 

For
example, the UK’s BT managing director proudly stated recently, “For millions of consumers across large
parts of the UK, that is already a reality. With latency sub-50ms and average
speeds of 30Mbps – with peak speeds as high as 400Mbps – many consumers have a
great mobile video experience already.”

He
added that with his smartphone, he can download at well over 100Mb/sec with no
buffering.   

He’s
quick to qualify that noting that it isn’t always the same for many mobile
users in the UK; but they, and other carriers around the globe, are expanding
their coverage to get rid of ‘notspots’ and give folks better reception.

Not certain about you, but we
believe the phone guy even less than we believe the cable guy so we’re betting
it’s going to be a while for most folks.

And if you happen to live in a rural
area, you’d probably be happy just to get reliable 4G or even 3G coverage.

5G
though will be a game-changer when it comes to fulfilling the vision of
high-speed data access and Wi-Fi speeds when you leave home.

Expanding
on the core 4G LTE network, which is like today’s fixed broadband network, they
will deliver core capabilities closer to the individual user.   

Latency (network responsiveness)
will be important to mobile viewers and will be critical for applications like
healthcare and autonomous transportation.

It’s going to be important when my
wife is watching Steph and the Warriors on her device.

When
that’s possible, then screen size and battery life will become even more
important for her and we might be able to convince her it’s time to upgrade.

Mobile Time – While some people simultaneously watch content on the
TV and their phone, it is quickly become obvious that young and old are finding
mobile viewing is increasingly important to them. 

Until
then, she’ll probably stick with her present phone for texting and following
the stats/online commentary while watching the game on our huge screen TV.

Logical
folks like her are actually the PC/CE industry’s major target because they want
us to upgrade our devices. 

You
know, as soon as the newer, faster, better whatever is introduced, increase your
enjoyment.

Phil
Schiller, Apple’s senior VP of worldwide marketing, emphasized at their
September phone/wearable unveil (not to be confused with the October computer
event) that it was “really sad” that more than 600 million computers in use
today are more than five years old.

On
the upside for Phil, folks have squeezed about all the work/play flow out of
their computers they have and yes, CTA and IDC see an uptick in computer sales (finally)
this year. 

Check the Boxes – While mobile carriers are busy trying to figure out
the cost of their new data plans for people who want to watch on-the-go,
consumers are quickly discovering that Wi-Fi viewing can be a lot less expensive
and is often more reliable. 

As
for smartphones?

Great
cameras?  CheckGreat
screens?  CheckGreat
performance? CheckGreat
battery life?  CheckGreat
content available? CheckGreat
content delivery performance?  So/soGreat
service pricing?  Are you kidding!

Content
creators are ready, device manufacturers are ready, consumers are ready; but
it’s sorta’ like Cory Lambert said, “You
don’t catch wolves looking where they might be, you look where they’ve been.”

A
smaller phone probably won’t do it.

Everyone
is waiting on the phone guy to deliver fast, reliable and economic service … emphasis
on reliable, economic.
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