The living room reinvented: trends, technologies and companies to watch

Table of Contents

  1. Summary
  2. Opportunities for living room application platforms – by Patrick Moorhead
    1. Current market overview
    2. Trends and technologies to watch over the next five years
    3. App-platform consolidation
    4. Companies to watch
    5. The future
  3. Future prospects for the set-top box – by Mari Silbey
    1. A brief history
    2. Snapshot: the current market Hardware
    3. How the set top stacks up
    4. Trends and technologies to watch
    5. Companies to watch
    6. Outlook
  4. Over the top: the television industry’s future? – by Larry Gerbrandt
    1. OTT’s three economic models
    2. OTT and the cord-cutting phenomenon
    3. Companies to watch (in no particular order)
    4. Where to from here?
  5. Next-generation interfaces and remotes – by Alfred Poor
    1. The current state
    2. Trends and technologies
    3. Which device gets to rule?
    4. Companies to watch
    5. The future of the user interface in brief
  6. About the authors
    1. About Larry Gerbrandt
    2. About Patrick Moorhead
    3. About Alfred Poor
    4. About Mari Silbey
    5. About Michael Wolf

1. Summary

It was almost 100 years ago that families began to gather around the “electronic hearth,” and in today’s digital world, the living room is still where many families go to be entertained.

While content in the living room has traditionally been viewed on different screens and delivered in different forms of media, recently things have changed significantly. The past couple of years have seen a large-scale disruption of the entire TV landscape and its delivery models.

The late ’90s and early 2000s saw the Internet and home networks start to proliferate, and there was talk of a new era, a “digital living room.” Much of it was met with skepticism — and with good reason. The slowness of early Wi-Fi networks, the lack of software standards and clunky initial product offerings from both hardware and service manufacturers more often than not resulted in consumer disappointment.

Over time, however, fundamental technology building blocks matured. Wireless networks became fast enough to handle video streaming. Software protocols such as DLNA and Bonjour began to ease the use of these technologies, while pioneers such as Microsoft (Xbox Live), Netflix and Apple (iOS devices) began to make products that would change consumer-usage behaviors.

As consumers began to look at new ways to shift media over networks in and outside the home over the past decade, slowly but surely distribution models for content began to adapt, eventually upending the content creation and distribution value chain. Physical distributors of content, be they music or video retail and rental, started to get hit hard as more content shifted to online distribution. Content creators saw their distribution windows collapse, and new forms of distribution enabled content creators to begin to sidestep the large studio decision makers. Aggregator players like Netflix and Hulu ascended, showing consumers entirely new ways to bundle and buy content.

All of this has added up to a vastly shifted entertainment business today, which has been reshaped in many ways to fit the new reality of the digital living room. That said, the way forward is going to see just as much, if not more, rapid change. The adoption of tablets, social media, new interfaces, and the changing nature of the TV itself mean the digital living room will continue on its disruptive path.

The goal of this report is to help readers understand the different technologies driving this shift. We asked analysts to identify key trends reshaping their market, to identify the key players driving this change, and to look down the road a bit and help us understand how the market sector will look. In the following pages:

  • Mari Silbey breaks down how the set-top box and pay-TV providers will evolve in the age of over the top.
  • Consumer tech expert Alfred Poor breaks down how new interfaces, from touchscreens on tablets and phones to the rapidly changing nature of the on-screen interface and user guides, will impact consumer behavior and media models in the future.
  • Longtime media analyst Larry Gerbrandt breaks down how the shift toward over-the-top video distribution is impacting the economics of media.
  • Patrick Moorhead looks at how different smart TV and app platforms are taking shape.

So enjoy, and learn. Also, let us know, in comments or email, what trends matter most, how you think the digital living room will change, and who will ultimately be counted among the winners.

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