I'm at a complete loss to understand why they don't see the value of creating an outstanding online experience. With more and more people having smart TVs, Apple TVs, ROKUs, connected large screens to their computers, even smartphones and tablets -- a killer, live, online experience would be great.
I'm at a complete loss to understand why they don't see the value of creating an outstanding online experience. With more and more people having smart TVs, Apple TVs, ROKUs, connected large screens to their computers, even smartphones and tablets -- a killer, live, online experience would be great.
Think a merge of the audiocast with 1320go with NHRA Live Timing with ESPN3, and even an interactive component. Great video, excellent stats, clickable links on every stat or graphic, good announcing, all in a live format. Set up alerts so that it would call me back to the screen when my favorite classes are up, or when the frigging oil-down is over. Set up live chats and forums so people could live comment if they wanted to as the event goes on. Make it so that I can replay the run from as many angles as I want, not be forced to watch as ESPN replays the same run over and over. Really have rich statistics so that I can play my own "Louis Bloom - Stat Guy", and click on things to find out how many times these two have faced each other, or what someone's "leaves first" percentage is, or what the record for oildowns in a single year is... I'd be glued to it all weekend.
NHRA would OWN the property, completely control the experience, be able to run whatever ads they wanted to run and get all the revenue from it. They could even charge for the thing -- $99/year or $5/weekend or $3/raceday, $0.99/qualifying days. They wouldn't be at the mercy of ESPN or other sports bumping them. They would control the thing front to back.
This is all doable today, if only NHRA would get the right technical folks involved...
NHRA may have old their soul to ESPN. The contract may preclude NHRA doing items in the above posts even if they wanted to do it. Recording and presentation of video is very tight in the contract and other things may be as well. ESPN didn't ride in on a load of punkins. That's what I read between the lines of Compton's excuses in Bobby's interview.
They renew the contracts every so often. Change the terms.
The question I have is the technology that good to make it work, I have pretty good internet here with 55 download speed, but I find Smart tv (have the latest and greatest Sony Smart 3d) and apple tv has a few to many pauses and glitches unless I am running the wrong settings or something like that . watching you tude is painful on my big tv.
Must be doing something wrong
Dean
If you truly have 55mb download speeds (check at http://speedtest.net) you should be easily be able to get full-size 1080p HD television that should knock your socks off.
I would talk to your ISP (your internet provider) and complain. You probably have a flaky connection, maybe a bad cable from the distribution box on your street to your house. That's entirely their responsibility and they should fix it for free.
Yep, there can be many issues, all easily solved.
For reference, full 1080p HD video only requires just over 8mb/sec speeds. So even people with only 10mb service can get it, which is a huge percentage of the country.