| |
|
| |
Jul 17, 2006 1:51 pm |
|
re: re: re: re: re: re: re: re: Video as the next "breakthrough" technology fo |
Dn Garrihy
| |
April,
I am a member of a global organization to which membership is available to rich and poor irrespective of color, creed or race and which has some 120 million current members. An estimated ten million of them have made tapes of their utterings. Approximately 50 thousand of them are recorded on video. There are not more than 50 of them showing their videos on their web sites. All of them would have a vast audience - were there a vehicle that could carry their videos to that audience (as, for example, a certain German company is doing for books – free of charge).
I can provide every one of the 50,000 who are on video with an Internet TV channel that has the capability of retrieving and playing their videos; but here is the piece de resistance: I can have them available by LIVE web conference to the 120 million members at very frequent intervals to respond to questions on their views expressed on their videos. And that prospect excites me!
I am sure that you, like most people, hold membership in some organization, be it a local or a global one. Every organization from your local chess club to the United Nations is part of a global community just begging for a sensational platform that will give them a voice on their pet subjects. Internet TV - as you have so accurately described previously - is the only game in town. Count the number of organisations, religious, political, commercial and others that provide captive audiences for Internet TV and that will give you some idea of the masive market that is out there for these TV channels from among the countless number of organisations - not to mention others I have identified.
The fact that global audiences for general interest TV can be developed will also be obvious to you. Private Reply to Dn Garrihy (new win) |
|
| |
|