MediaBytes - Friday January 9, 2009 - 1 Comment
Obama Supports DTV Delay: MediaBytes with Shelly Palmer January 9, 2009
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President-elect Barack Obama has joined the Consumers Union in asking congress to delay the digital television transition. Obama noted “inadequate funding” for the program as a prime reason to delay the transition, which is scheduled to happen 28 days after he steps into office. In addition, the big four networks (ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC) support a move to delay the transition.
In a speech yesterday at George Mason University, Barack Obama noted broadband expansion as a key part of his economic recovery plan. Obama is quoted as saying there is a need to expand “broadband across America, so that a small business in a rural town can connect and compete with their counterparts anywhere in the world.” The President-elect is also confident that despite the fact that 2 milion Americans lost their job in 2008, we will be able to create 3 million new jobs during his term in office.
Sony CEO Sir Howard Stringer told a crowd at CES that 90% of Sony products will be able to connect to the Internet by 2011. Sony is moving quickly on its initiative, with a CyberShot camera capable of sending pictures online already on the market. The move is a logical step in preparing Sony for a networked world where all devices are connected to the web.
Digital Entertainment Group is reporting that DVD sales fell 9% in 2008, while the entire home video market decreased 5.5% over 2007, with total sales at $22.4 billion. The decline is the largest the group has ever recorded. However, while dvd sales fell, Blu-ray spending increased threefold to roughly $750 million.
Plus, today’s consulting question, “Is a Microsoft, Yahoo deal back on?” Shelly has the answer on today’s MediaBytes.




Comments
One Response to “Obama Supports DTV Delay: MediaBytes with Shelly Palmer January 9, 2009”Robert H. Heath January 9th, 2009 5:09 pm
Obama Supports DTV Delay.. Shelly - Always a pleasure to read your
blog. Re the analog TV cut-off date, I seem to recall that January
and March 2009 were the months under consideration. The later date
was ruled out due to March Madness, the earlier date lest it impact
the Super Bowl (on Feb 1st). Feb 16 will probably annoy devotees of
televised figure skating, but the post-Super Bowl lull in the
sports calendar is probably as good a time as any to risk
consumer/voter outrage. -rhh