Google
expert says 'TV is dying'
London Telegraph | August 28, 2007
By Nicole Martin
One of the founding fathers of the
internet has predicted the end of traditional television.
Vint Cerf, who helped to build the internet while working as a
researcher in America, said that television was approaching its "iPod
moment"
In the same way that people now download their favourite music onto
their iPod, he said that viewers would soon be downloading most of
their favourite programmes onto their computers.
"85 per cent of all video we watch is pre-recorded, so you can set
your system to download it all the time," said Mr Cerf, who is now
the vice-president of the Google, the world's largest search engine.
"You're still going to need live television for certain things -
like news, sporting events and emergencies - but increasingly it is
going to be almost like the iPod, where you download content to look
at later."
Although television on demand has
not yet become a mainstream activity in the UK, the BBC, ITV and
Channel 4 have all invested vast sums of money in technology which
enables viewers to watch their favourite shows on their computers.
But some critics, including some internet service providers, have
warned that the internet will collapse under the strain of millions
of people downloading programmes at the same time.
Over the next four years, it is thought that the number of videos
watched over the internet will quadruple, with people moving from
short clips to hour-long programmes.
Broadband companies claim that the service will cause "traffic
jams", which will cost millions of pounds to sort out and that
customers will ultimately end up paying the bill.
But Mr Cerf dismissed the warnings as "scare tactics", saying that
critics had predicted 20 years ago that the net would collapse when
people all around the world started to use it en masse.
"In the intervening 30 years it's increased a million times over...
We're far from exhausting the capacity," he said. "It's an
understandable worry when they see huge amounts of information being
moved around online."
Setting out his vision for the future of the internet, he said he
wanted it to reach as many people as possible.
"I want more internet," he said. "I want every one of the six
billion people on the planet to be able to connect to the internet -
I think they will add things to it that will really benefit us."
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