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Transistor kills the radio star?

Dentro de 10 anos todos os meios serão distribuídos pela net

«What is your outlook for the future of media?

STEVE BALMER: In the next 10 years, the whole world of media, communications and advertising are going to be turned upside down -- my opinion. Here are the premises I have. Number one, there will be no media consumption left in 10 years that is not delivered over an IP network. There will be no newspapers, no magazines that are delivered in paper form. Everything gets delivered in an electronic form.

10 years?

Yeah. If it's 14 or if it's 8, it's immaterial to my fundamental point. . . . If we want TV to be more interactive, you'll deliver it over an IP network. I mean, it's sort of funny today. My son will stay up all night basically playing Xbox Live with friends that are in various parts of the world, and yet I can't sit there in front of the TV and have the same kind of a social interaction around my favorite basketball game or golf match. It's just because one of these things is delivered over an IP network and the other is not. . . . Also in the world of 10 years from now, there are going to be far more producers of content than exist today. We've already started to see that certainly in the online world, but we've just scratched the surface. . . . I always take my favorite case: I grew up in Detroit. I went to a place called Detroit Country Day School. They've got a great basketball team. Why can't I sit in front of my television and watch the Country Day basketball game when I know darn well it's being video-recorded at all times? It's there. It's just not easy to navigate to.

(...) Will Internet content generally be available for free, with ad support, or will there largely be fees and subscriptions?

I think there will be some things people subscribe to on the Internet, but I think that's going be more the exception than the rule. My favorite TV program, "Lost," I watch on the Internet now. I don't DVR it, I just watch it on the Internet.

You don't buy it from iTunes to avoid the ads that come when you get it for free over the Internet? Why? Because it's free. . . . I have to admit that I'm annoyed by the four 20 seconds [of ads], but not annoyed enough to pay a buck . . . I think at the end of the day most people say, "Heck, if I can get something that's pretty good that's ad-funded and the ads don't kill me, I'll take that over the thing I gotta pay for."»

fonte: WHORISKEY, Peter, «Microsoft's Ballmer on Yahoo and the Future» Washington Post, 5/06/08;

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