Here we have content with an old media giant trying to compete in this digital age. And distribution; a telecom and wireless company that's reinventing itself as a multi-faceted distributor of content via mobile or its new fiber network.
As Time Warner
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So Dauman, Is technology commoditizing content? (Look at reality TV, which Viacom effectively created with "The Real World"). Dauman says no, rather that technology helps reinforce brands. He used another Viacom reality property "The Hills" as an example. "Hills" content is distributed not just to your TV, but via mobile and online; fans can join related social networks and virtual worlds. Dauman says the company's goal is to understand its targeted audiences to better create content for its platforms. And with more ways to distribute than ever, they're trying to create more and more original programming to distribute through their own 340 online sites, as well as the traditional cable networks..
What about VIA
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Seidenberg was asked to justify Verizon's
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While the execs and magazine editors here chatter about the relationship between content creation and distribution Seidenberg dismissed the very construct. He says you don't have to have a connection between content and distribution to be successful, saying it makes more sense to have competition between content providers to create mobisodes or webisodes for various platforms, and competition among the distributors to get it out there in better, faster ways.
And any time you have the CEO of a wireless company open the floor to questions, you know he's going to get harassed about cell reception. Execs who travel often on business have a common complaint about the U.S. mobile system being incompatible-- and seemingly less efficient -- than the 3G system in Europe. Seidenberg said yes, the fact that we don't have interoperability is a reasonable complaint. But then he whipped out some statistics showing how much more time people in the U.S. spend talking on their mobile phones than those in Europe. (Though I wonder if people in Europe just text more.) And he reassured that as we move to 4G, the next generation of mobile infrastructure, we will have a common architecture for handsets and infrastructure.
I'll be watching to see how the FIOS launch goes in New York City--a key market to prove the viability of Viacom's investment.
(I find Verizon's service pretty good- I'm sending in these blogs via a Verizon wireless card that's working much faster than the WiFi service in the hotel).
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