NBC ran commercials during Olympic completion, shrinking the competition into the corner and they also ran 2-3 second ads during the program, too fast for you to skip.
Hockey is placing continual advertising with rotating animations on the dasherboards and the ice surface.
Youtube is placing much longer non-skippable ads into content displayed on smart tvs versus mobile or web browser.
HGTV has raised the art of the in program ad popup to a whole new level in terms of frequency and size, even shrinking the current program while placing ads on the left and bottom border.
A display that only you can watch will become rare and extra valuable.
I wonder what percentage of internet traffic is already "defunct" analytics, send home data for manufacturers that moved on, devices spying for masters that no longer listen.
> devices spying for masters that no longer listen.
An excellent way to represent a problem that is spreading like fungus.
I do not have this worked out yet, but ...
The problem is significantly larger than just TV. I think the root problem is around software. Not necessarily software herself, but the notion that a good enough code can be deployed since the ease of updating is present.
GM's response to Bill Gates criticism has come around ("If General Motors had developed technology like Microsoft, we would all be driving cars with..."), and now vehicles are built, and many other things including TVs the same as "software".
I despise regulations, but here I think we would need something.
If company is selling a product, it must be able to function without internet, it must be able to function without continuous updates.
I just do not know how we can prevent companies switching to leasing, instead of selling.
Then back into the box it would immediately go, and back from whence it came for a refund. What do they expect me to do with such a TV at my remote country cabin?
Our new LG OLED purchased just weeks ago, BTW, works just fine without a network connection. Thanks to HDMI CEC, I’ve seen the TV’s home screen maybe twice.
Sort of annoying that really good LG sets have really not good sound.
The remedy is to get an LG soundbar, which sounds great.
...but you can't use it without wifi. Even if you don't connect the soundbar to your wifi, the soundbar will create a visible wifi AP for the subwoofer to connect to.
fwiw you should connect it to the internet if you haven't, and do a firmware update. they released some serious quality related stuff and also wear leveling improvements
and then immediately disconnect it after. you might also be able to do the update with a thumbdrive, idk
> Roku has also tested a feature that "would force viewers to sit through effectively a mid-roll ad when clicking from the Roku City screensaver to return to home screen,"
This is absolutely horrible and I assume it's only a matter of time before I decide to hook up my PC straight to my TV so as to obviate the Roku/Plex combo which until now I've considered the least bad option.
TVs have joined newish cars, anything IoT, and so forth on my list of things that aren't worth buying. They're all intended to be surveillance platforms and none of them offer enough value to be worth going to the effort to defang them.