[quote name=\'JakeT\' post=\'232731\' date=\'Dec 22 2009, 01:28 AM\'][quote name=\'rwalker\' post=\'232637\' date=\'Dec 21 2009, 10:09 AM\']Video on demand, especially, would be the way to go. People want to be able to access things on their own schedule and even the DVR seems to be going by the wayside imho.[/quote]
Maybe I'm missing something here (certainly not out of the question) but what would give you the impression that the DVR would seem to be "going by the wayside"? Personally, I believe that many many people (myself included) find that a DVR (TiVO or similar) has become an absolute necessary component in their everyday TV viewing. The DVR has changed the viewing habits of so many people in ways that the VCR never could. While video on-demand is a nice option to have, it account for such a tiny fraction of all the programming currently available and until that percentage of on-demand availability (and reasonable retention times) increases dramtically, I don't see video on-demand overtaking DVRs anytime soon.
Jake
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I think there's a divide here between people who think of a TV and computer as separate things, and those of us who think they're interchangeable.
The vast majority of people think of them as separate things, and the DVR isn't going anywhere anytime soon. However, for those of us who've realized that a modern TV makes a great computer monitor, Hulu and the like fill a large part of our TV needs. Those services certainly make a DVR less appealing if there's a computer hooked to your TV.
Newer TVs are going to be coming out with online abilities, and that might be what kills the DVR.