Forum › Forums › Miscellaneous › Broadcast, Internet, Media › Sky Q preview – heck!
- This topic has 29 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 7 months ago by
grahamlthompson.
-
AuthorPosts
-
January 26, 2016 at 3:52 pm #68584
Anonymous
InactiveJamesB – 14 minutes ago »
Thanks for the explanation. In that case they must indeed be planning to run the two services (Sky+ and Sky Q) in tandem, not just in transition but ongoing.
Sounds like a very risky experiment for a service with such a high churn.
Not sure just how much of a risk it is if you look HERE Besides, if the hardware ties you in that may reduce churn still further.
January 26, 2016 at 4:20 pm #68585Anonymous
Inactivehttp://www.digitaltveurope.net/381622/pay-tv-churn-rate-doubles-in-six-months/
Quote:…if the hardware ties you in that may reduce churn still further.That may well be the logic that led Sky down this road. It’s just that customers may be more reluctant to jump into a premium deal if it’s going to be so troublesome to leave.
January 26, 2016 at 4:44 pm #68586Anonymous
InactiveJamesB – 22 minutes ago » …It’s just that customers may be more reluctant to jump into a premium deal if it’s going to be so troublesome to leave.
How many of those customers will understand the technical lock-in? How many of them read forums like this? I think I know the answer…very few of them.
January 26, 2016 at 5:12 pm #68587Anonymous
InactiveThey’ll understand that Sky Q means a new installation.
January 26, 2016 at 5:19 pm #68588Anonymous
InactiveJamesB – 5 minutes ago »
They’ll understand that Sky Q means a new installation.
…and so they will understand that that locks them in to SKY Q will they? Because they read forums like this?
January 26, 2016 at 5:23 pm #68589Anonymous
InactivePollensa1946 – 1 minute ago »
JamesB – 5 minutes ago »
They’ll understand that Sky Q means a new installation.
…and so they will understand that that locks them in to SKY Q will they? Because they read forums like this?
Huh? They’ll understand that Sky Q means a new installation, because they’ll have to pay for it. What’s reading a forum got to do with it?
January 26, 2016 at 8:03 pm #68590Anonymous
InactiveJamesB – 2 hours ago » …Huh? They’ll understand that Sky Q means a new installation, because they’ll have to pay for it…
To repeat, and that will lead them to immediately conclude that they are locked into SKY? You clearly overestimate the technical know-how of the average SKY viewer. I still get SKY subs saying to me… “you get sat TV for nothing, how do you fiddle that? Wink!”.
January 26, 2016 at 8:38 pm #68591Anonymous
InactiveCustomers shouldn’t need to be tech-literate though, if that’s not where their interests lie.
I don’t know if Sky Q will succeed or not. It doesn’t appeal to me at all, so I likely don’t have a very objective view of its prospects.
January 26, 2016 at 10:20 pm #68592Anonymous
InactiveJamesB – 1 hour ago » …I don’t know if Sky Q will succeed or not…
Who does? Although SKY surely think so or they wouldn’t have invested in SKY Q. I don’t watch very much live TV, maybe one hour, or two hours max, some days, other days nothing. I do scan the TV schedules from the weekend papers then set recordings. I then want to watch those when it suits and where it suits on my 4 TVs. Presently I cannot fully do that in that the HDR/HB set has no Server/Client model, so I’m confined to the room where the HDR sits. A major omission in my view. I know people who watch a lot more TV than me and have exactly the same wants and SKY Q will appeal to them, and they have the money to satisfy their wants in this respect.
January 26, 2016 at 10:26 pm #68593Anonymous
InactivePollensa1946 – 2 hours ago »
JamesB – 2 hours ago » …Huh? They’ll understand that Sky Q means a new installation, because they’ll have to pay for it…
To repeat, and that will lead them to immediately conclude that they are locked into SKY? You clearly overestimate the technical know-how of the average SKY viewer. I still get SKY subs saying to me… “you get sat TV for nothing, how do you fiddle that? Wink!”.
I’m with you on this Pollensa – I find people rarely ask the right questions and do the minimum of research, if any at all. I could be unkind and say that a lot of people are quite dim when it comes to tech matters. However, I think it’s more fundamental than that – put simply they see the headline ad, the shiny new tech and that’s all they want to know. No one wants to hear bad news.
April 27, 2016 at 10:11 am #68594grahamlthompson
ParticipantJust confirmed this info. For Sky Q domestic users with legacy kit a new hybrid lnb with 6 outputs can be fitted. This lnb is smart enough to recognise what it’s connected to. Either.
1 A Sky Q Vertical polarisation wideband input
2 A Sky Q Horizontal polarisation wideband input
3 A legacy band and polarisation switching tuner.
A poster with the hybrid lnb was kind enough to connect a Sky Q input cable to a TV with a satellite tuner and confirmed the 4 possible band/polarisation options all worked.
Pretty impressive actually
April 27, 2016 at 10:50 am #68595Anonymous
Inactivegrahamlthompson – 33 minutes ago » …Pretty impressive actually…
Yes, it certainly sounds like it. Positions SKY Q as not only the next best thing in TV watching, but also a transition product towards that next best. Ref my earlier posts, I was talking to a young man at the w/e who has the money and is planning to dump BT TV and go back to SKY. The bonus being that with offers SKY is initially cheaper. Longer term he plans SKY Q.
April 27, 2016 at 10:55 am #68596grahamlthompson
ParticipantPollensa1946 – 2 minutes ago »
grahamlthompson – 33 minutes ago » …Pretty impressive actually…
Yes, it certainly sounds like it. Positions SKY Q as not only the next best thing in TV watching, but also a transition product towards that next best. Ref my earlier posts, I was talking to a young man at the w/e who has the money and is planning to dump BT TV and go back to SKY. The bonus being that with offers SKY is initially cheaper. Longer term he plans SKY Q.
It doesn’t hold any interest to me personally. I can already view content remotely recorded on my two HDR FOX T2 boxes and my Foxsat-HDR. As for Freeview I have a I streaming box connected to my router. So in fact none of it is really new.
April 27, 2016 at 11:10 am #68597Anonymous
Inactivegrahamlthompson – 11 minutes ago » …It doesn’t hold any interest to me personally…
Me too, I don’t watch enough TV to spend lots of money on it. In contrast, the same young man I conversed with regards Freesat as positively medieval because of the lack of a server/client model. This is the generation that thinks that an iPhone is mandated in the ECHR.
April 27, 2016 at 1:19 pm #68598grahamlthompson
ParticipantPollensa1946 – 2 hours ago »
grahamlthompson – 11 minutes ago » …It doesn’t hold any interest to me personally…
Me too, I don’t watch enough TV to spend lots of money on it. In contrast, the same young man I conversed with regards Freesat as positively medieval because of the lack of a server/client model. This is the generation that thinks that an iPhone is mandated in the ECHR.
Actually I agree with the young man. Freetime units do have dnla client capability. The failure to materialise of the formerly promised DTCP-IP dlna server is a matter of regret to me. Fortunately my two HDR FOX T2’s have both server and client capability. Despite my advanced years I have a advanced Android smart phone and the superb Galaxy TAB S2 8″ tablet. Quite the best tablet I have ever used.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.