‘The Great Migration’ – McCarthy’s Latest Article
McCarthy’s latest ‘System Video’ Blog article titled “The Great Migration” is reprinted here. [Read the Article]
McCarthy’s latest ‘System Video’ Blog article is reprinted here.
The Great Migration
This week, Tivo announced that its customers will be able to view video content off the web on their television sets.
Apple announced it has partnered with major airlines to let passengers power their iPods in flight and watch iPod videos in their seats.
It’s all part of the great migration… from absolute control by television programmers to absolute control by television consumers.
I don’t have cable TV.
You know the old joke about 500 channels and nothing worth watching? It’s true.
In the world of print, I can choose from thousands of options. Why in the world of video should I be satisfied with just a few dozen?
I’m not and neither is my partner Bettina. So when we moved from San Francisco to the Hudson Valley Region of New York State eight years ago, we didn’t bother to get the TV part of the cable service.
Instead we watch movies from Netflix (why hassle with the poor service, high prices and limited selection of the local video rental stores?) and for the last year I’ve been watching programs on my office TV that come straight from the Internet (mostly from Google Video and YouTube.)
I’m not watching sports and sitcoms. I guess if I found that content worth spending time on, I’d get cable. Instead I’m watching exactly what I want when I want it which for me includes programs about music, history, science, current events and business.
This is the future of television and for some people it’s already here.
The often-made argument that no one wants to sit at their desk to watch long videos on a tiny screen is ridiculous. It reminds me of the business genius who turned down the chance to buy the Alexander Graham Bell’s patent for the telephone because he couldn’t imagine the commercial potential of what he considered a “toy.” Sure the first phone was primitive, but that had nothing to do with its potential.
We’re in the very, very early stages of the video on demand revolution. The current tools are clunky and expensive as all new breakthrough tools always are. But where we are now resembles nothing like where we’re going to end up.
My prediction: When all this finally shakes out, every TV will come with a broadband connection and an easy search console that will enable users to search the Net and find the exact programming they want wihout leaving the living room sofa.
If they’re going on a trip, users will be able to insert an iPod-like device into their TV, grab the programs they want for the road and where ever they are – in a hotel room, on a plane, in an airport or train station, on a cruise, or the back seat of a car – they’ll be able to plug their video storage device into any video player and watch what they want.
What you want to watch – when you want to watch it – and the one I don’t here as often, but will be equally as important – where you want to watch it. That’s the future of video.
The great migration is well under way.
Video is the new paper. If you’re in a business where communication with prospects and customers matters (i.e. every busy), now’s the time to start making friends with video.
Ken McCarthy

Ken McCarthy organized and sponsored the first conference ever held on the subject of the commercial potential of the World Wide Web. His company Amacord Inc., formerly E-Media, was one of the first Internet-based businesses in the world.
In addition to working with small and mid-sized business clients since 1993, McCarthy was a consultant to NEC’s Biglobe, the largest online service in Japan, from 1996 to 2001. His book The Internet Business Manual was the first book on web entrepreneurship published in that country. He is also credited by Hotwired magazine with being one of the people responsible for the development and popularization of the banner ad, one of the key underpinnings of commercial Internet publishing.

A graduate of Princeton University, McCarthy came to the Internet industry with a varied background which included technical consulting for two of New York’s top investment banks, lecturing on educational psychology at MIT, Columbia, and NYU, and founding and operating a number of small businesses, including one that helped produce an Academy Award winning documentary. Ken McCarthy is associated with the following blogs: Ken McCarthy’s Blog, System Video Blog and Internet Video Marketing Letter
*IMNewswatch would like to thank Ken McCarthy for granting permission to reprint the latest blog post.
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