Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6812|132 and Bush

New Project Infinity will also allow customers to watch any content On Demand.

https://i7.tinypic.com/7xb5gl1.jpg

In addition to 1,000 live HD choices, Comcast plans to offer 3,000 high-def movies every month.


January 08, 2008 | by Rachel Cericola

The king of all cable companies is about to rule the HD roost. Comcast just announced that they will deliver more than 1,000 high-def choices for 2008.

This HD lineup will include more than 1,000 live HD movies and TV shows—many of which will end up in the company’s On Demand offerings. Aside from live content, Comcast also plans to make 3,000 HD movies available each month via its On Demand service.

On Demand is the main component of the company’s Project Infinity, an initiative that will allow Comcast customers to truly watch TV on their own time. The project will put any TV show, movie or any other user-generated content (via Fancast.com) up for On Demand.

The On Demand service currently has more than 10,000 selections available each month. Project Infinity will take advantage of the company’s “existing fiber network and national IP backbone.”


I don't get Comcast, but it looks like they set the bar high here. Hopefully my provider will follow suit.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Jenspm
penis
+1,716|6943|St. Andrews / Oslo

You would have to pay per view, right?
https://static.bf2s.com/files/user/26774/flickricon.png https://twitter.com/phoenix/favicon.ico
SEREMAKER
BABYMAKIN EXPERT √
+2,187|6779|Mountains of NC

I hope all cable providers follow this, the provider I use has 5 HD channels right now

what is funny about cable is that they now provide telephone service, becoming an all-n-one package . Phone companies have been fighting this and also fighting to provide television but I believe it might be a losing battle


what I don't like is that I got a letter stating that my cable is going to go up ......... thxs assholes
https://static.bf2s.com/files/user/17445/carhartt.jpg
topthrill05
Member
+125|6789|Rochester NY USA
Cable (Time Warner) Is a joke right now when it comes to HD. One can hope they change this soon.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6812|132 and Bush

topthrill05 wrote:

Cable (Time Warner) Is a joke right now when it comes to HD. One can hope they change this soon.
Mine used to be Time Warner. Bright House networks bought them out years ago and the service increased dramatically.   
My Package:
WEDU PBS HD    
BHN HD SPORTS 1
WFLA NBC HD    
BHN HD SPORTS 2
WTSP CBS HD    
Discovery HD Theater
WTTA MYTV HD    
Discovery Channel HD NEW
WTVT FOX HD    
The Science Channel HD NEW
WTOG HD    
Animal Planet HD NEW
WFTS ABC HD    
TLC HD NEW
WMOR HD    
TNT HD
HBO HD
TBS HD NEW
Showtime HD
National Geographic HD NEW
MOJO
Versus HD (7pm-12pm)
ESPN2 HD     
HDNET <-- HDNET Fights is awesome
Golf Channel HD (12pm-7pm)
HDNET MOVIES (included with your HD PAK subscription)    
ESPN HD    
MHD (Music HD)
UNIVERSAL HD (included with your HD PAK subscription)    
Food Network HD NEW
HD Showcase On Demand (included with your HD PAK subscription)    
HGTV HD NEW
HD Movies On Demand    
A&E HD
HD PPV Events On Demand    
The History Channel HD
Xbone Stormsurgezz
SEREMAKER
BABYMAKIN EXPERT √
+2,187|6779|Mountains of NC

Kmarion wrote:

topthrill05 wrote:

Cable (Time Warner) Is a joke right now when it comes to HD. One can hope they change this soon.
Mine used to be Time Warner. Bright House networks bought them out years ago and the service increased dramatically.   
My Package:
WEDU PBS HD
Seseme Street in HD ....... oh lawds .... lulz
https://static.bf2s.com/files/user/17445/carhartt.jpg
mikkel
Member
+383|6812
Wow, that must've taken a massive investment considering their installed base. I'm involved in a project to replace regular IPTV streams with HD streams, and while the company I work for has a relatively limited mid-five figure customer base, our on-demand services are massively expensive setups. Multicasting IPTV is relatively simple and not very bandwidth intensive, but while a normal MPEG-4 encoded stream usually sits at around 5Mbps, an HD stream is up around 25Mbps, and doing all that on demand to a customer base of many million is pretty mind-boggling.

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2024 Jeff Minard