The average person used five TV services in Q1 2020, 1 more than in Q1 2019. What is driving the increase? Well, it certainly is not pay TV, which accelerated its decline in Q1. So, who are the gainers and losers?
nScreenNoise – Diamond Sports deal pure gold for Amazon
nScreenNoise – Casting battle ignited at CES 2024
nScreenNoise – Change in the TV industry is far from over
nScreenNoise – Reaching individuals in a group viewing environment
nScreenNoise – Netflix engagement leader, ad revenue is “material”
nScreenNoise – Cleanup your metadata to boost TV service performance
nScreenNoise – will cord-cutters outnumber cable TV this year?
nScreenNoise – What the future holds for traditional pay TV
nScreenNoise – Disney’s strategy to reach Netflix scale
nScreenNoise – Advertising continues its streaming TV expansion
nScreenNoise – Will Local TV’s expected retrans fee bonanza materialize?
nScreenNoise – Play-Fi wireless surround sound boosts engagement
nScreenNoise – Why satisfaction with top SVODs is falling
nScreenNoise – Impact of ATSC 3.0 and HEVC patent disputes
nScreenNoise – Generative AI dubbing unlocks content opportunity
nScreenNoise - How to launch a FAST channel
nScreenNoise – Giving independent content providers a chance
nScreenNoise – why I don’t trust Nielsen’s The Gauge
nScreenNoise – The future of FASTs and broadcasters are intertwined
nScreenNoise – Unifying authentication in a fragmented TV world
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