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Latest revision as of 08:55, 10 June 2015

I Like No Ads
Number 73
Broadcast Date June 1, 2015
Episode Length 1:02:37
Hosts Brian Brushwood, Tom Merritt
Guests Roberto Villegas

HBO Now is really popular but too expensive, AT&T wants to let people pay for your data, and what made Mad Max so good.

Guest

Intro Video

Primary Target

Sandvine reported the premier of Game of Thrones impact on bandwidth April 12
Snapshot from 9:30 PM Eastern
HBO Now 0.7% HBO Go 3.4% 4x average Netflix 33.5% 3 points lower than March
Overall in March Netflix up, to 36.5% BitTorrent down to 6.3% North America (though BitTorrent adapts to congestion)
HBO surveying folks who canceled after free trial
Asked about lower price points
3 months $29.99, 6 months $59.99, year for $99.99

Signals Intelligence

Cogent, Dish, Free Press, New America's Open Technology Institute, and Public Knowledge asked the FCC to prevent exemptions to data caps.
ATT asked FCC to clarify it is allowed to provide data cap exemptions to companies for a fee
Open Internet Guidelines (not yet in force) do not prevent such exemptions
FCC instead opted to observe and “determine whether data caps are being used to harm competitors and consumers”
ATT has not struck any such deals for at home broadband. There is a deal to integrate Hulu into ATT U-verse.
ATT’s own streaming video service counts against data caps.
AT&T Sponsored Data exists.
Wireless advertising that doesn’t count against data cap
AT&T's caps are 150GB per month for DSL subscribers, 250GB per month for U-verse, 500GB or 1TB for GigaPower, with overage fees of $10 per additional 50GB.

Gear Up

New Chromecast APIs
Content queuing API more control over music and video playlists
Remote display beta lets device be control for video on screen
Game Manager allows for multiplayer games
Google SmartLock for passords
Essentially a password manager
Log in on one Gogle authenticated device. No need to log in again on others
For Cord-cutters that could mean, log into Netflix on Chrome no need to log in when stetting it up on Android TV or Tablet.
Netflix is a partner
Later this year Google expects to extend Smart Lock to other platforms besides Android.

Front Lines

Apple will not announce a new TV service at WWDC next week. But les Moonves says CBS is still in negotiations and the only holdup is money. That is all!
Nvidia launched its Shield set-top box with a Tegra X1 processor that bundles Android TV in with the ability play games from the GRID, Nvidia’s cloud service for $200 at 16GB or $300 at 500 GB. Oh and it has voice control and 4K support too.
So you may have noticed trailers before or after your Netflix shows. Netflix spokesperson Cliff Edwards told TechCrunch “We’ve had originals teasers at the end of shows for a while. Some members of seeing tests at the beginning of shows. As you know, we test many things over the year, many of which are never universally deployed.” OK. CLIFF. But does that mean Netflix is going to put ads in someday HUH? To which Cliff responds: “Our policy around ads is unchanged. We have no plans to support third-party ad units.” OK Cliff. You win this round.
Lenovo has a Chromecast-like device except it’s shaped like a hockey puck, not a dongle and costs $49. It works with any Miracast or DLNA device. Arrives this August.
Canadian fans were very excited to tell us that Shomi, the Netflix-like service owned by the Rogers and Shaw cable companies in Canada, is now available to everyone, not just Rogers, Shaw and Bell customers. This starts sometime between June and September and the price stays C$8.99.
TiVo had better than expected quarterly revenue and profit rose by 8 cents a share. Net revenue rose 7.2% Subscriptions rose 27% to 5.8 million in the 3 months ending April 30. So those of you who say we never report good news for TiVo. There you go.

Under Surveillance

Bryan Fuller did an interview with Den of Geek saying pre-production of the American Gods TV series for Starz is in full swing. Casting should begin soon and the series is slated to be released in late 2016.
HBO reportedly ordered a pilot from Funny or Die of “The Gorburger Show” starting TJ Miller as an animatronic space monster interviewing celebrities in order to understand humanity. The digital series ran for two season on funny or die.
Vashi Nedomansky has commentary from John Seale, DP for Mad Max: Fury Road describing how all the shots are center framed meaning you don’t have to shift your eyes to follow the action. Seale says “The viewer doesn’t need 3 or 4 frames to figure out where to look.“

Dispatches From The Front

I can personally attest that you absolutely can continue with the chicken challenge threat seemingly indefinitely, at least with Comcast. I have both bluffed as well as legitimately threatened to cancel service and have always been given a good enough deal to keep me on board. I have had free HBO for almost 4 years, occasionally call up and get free Showtime, and constantly keep my package rates around $100 for their fastest internet plus basic cable. I do the math every 6-12 months and it is still not financially worth cancelling cable, at least as long as they keep bribing me. Granted it is a pain to sit through the torture of Comcast customer service, but I have accepted that until we have more competition in the market.

Regarding re-opening movie rental stores and the inability to rent movies that may are only available for purchase on Amazon, Vudu, etc, I have an exciting new service for you: Netflix. If you want to watch new movies before streaming is available they are very often available through the Netflix DVD service (yes I am one of those few who still have this service). This applies even more to older movies which may be difficult to find streaming - Netflix's DVD rental service has pretty much any older movie or TV show you can possibly think of available.

-Klye




Dear killers of cords,

Last week's program contained a message from a listener/viewer who sang the praises of the Acorn channel. Please permit me to share a different view of Acorn.

My dear, sweet, gray-haired, cord-slashing mother was the recipient of a Roku box from yours truly for Christmas in 2009. She almost immediately switched to streaming-based content and hasn't looked back.

As a fan of PBS and British programming, she also became one of Acorn's early subscribers. At the end of last year, though, she concluded that most of the Acorn content she wanted was also available to her through Netflix and Amazon Prime — so she canceled the account." Suffice to say Joseph then details how the charges kept coming depite her efforts to cancel. So his point is be vigilant about charges when you cancel a service.

-Joseph




What it do Killers, I'm definitely interested in an expanded Spolierin' Time show with picks, recommendations, maybe even Spolierin Time specific guests (love to see some Film Sack or Auto Pilot crossover bits). I'd also appreciate more technical and how to stuff.

-Kenneth




One thing you might consider is separating the funding for Spoilering Time from the regular Cordkillers. I do not mind getting billed for both, but some people may not want to pay for Spoilering Time. You should give your Patreons the option to fund one or the other or both. I do know if Patreon can handle that kind of separation or if a separate Patreon page would have to be set up for Spoilering Time. It might be a gauge to measure support for spoiling.

-Mike




On keeping with shows, like them or not. Personally I think you are doing it right. Be clear why you are loving a show, or clear on why you are dumping it. Watching you make that decision, discussing it, and creating conversations with the community about it, is where the value is. Don't throw good time after bad.

-Todd




Hi guys,

I'm listening to you talk right now. Here are a few thoughts from a Patreon supporter:

I like what you're doing with the timer, but I think shouting "extension" is dumb. Just extend it. As Brian pointed out, sports TV does this. When they do, they *actually* just blow the countdown clock all the time. Watch an episode of Pardon the Interruption sometime with Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon on ESPN as an example. It's great.

Thanks for a great show.

-Dave


2015 Winter Movie Draft

  • draft.diamondclub.tv
  • 1. Amtrekker: $427,551,427
  • 2. GFQ: $416,963,546
  • 3. Frogpants: $334,997,492
  • 4. Night Attack: $105,742,219
  • 5. DTNS: $54,588,173
  • 6. Cordkillers: $37,084,164

YouTube

Links



Preceded by:
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I Like No Ads
Followed by:
"NAScar"