TV Home Forum

BBC iPlayer given go ahead by BBC Trust

(April 2007)

This site closed in March 2021 and is now a read-only archive
AJ
AJ
From BBC News Online:

Quote:
BBC shows such as Doctor Who and EastEnders are to be made available on-demand after the BBC's iPlayer service was given the green light.
The service - which will launch later this year - allows viewers to watch programmes online for seven days after their first TV broadcast.

Episodes can also be downloaded and stored for up to 30 days.

The BBC Trust gave the iPlayer the go-ahead after consultations with members of the public.

About 10,500 individuals and organisations responded to the public value test after the trust gave its provisional approval in January.

'Catch-up' episode

As a result, the trust amended two conditions it had earlier imposed on the BBC's plans.

It had earlier called on the corporation to scale back plans to let downloaded "catch-up" episodes remain on users' hard drives beyond seven days.

Now all episodes of some series will be made available until a week after transmission of the final instalment. But this will only apply to 15% of all content offered by the service.

And the storage window for TV catch-up over the internet has been set at 30 days from the day of download.

The trust also called for revised editorial guidance on the type of series which can be included.

BBC director general Mark Thompson said he was "delighted" with the decision.

But he took issue with a decision that classical music downloads could not feature in the service.

"Our research suggests that classical music audiences would wish to download classical music programmes from the BBC and to listen to them on their terms, free at the point of use," he said.

Deadline

The iPlayer computer application will only be initially available to those with Windows PCs.

But the trust has asked the BBC to ensure that the iPlayer computer application can run on different systems - such as Apple Macs - within "a reasonable time frame".

Earlier this month BBC Future Media boss Ashley Highfield said the corporation was committed to rolling out the iPlayer on Windows PCs first of all, and then cable TV services, Apple Macs, and eventually Freeview boxes.

But the BBC said it could not commit to a two-year deadline to achieve this goal, saying it was up to the third parties concerned.

However, the BBC Trust said it would audit the BBC's progress against this objective every six months to ensure that members of the public not using Windows PCs would not be disadvantaged.

BBC trustee Diane Coyle said: "We are delighted so many people responded to the consultation and thank everyone who participated for their contribution.

"The consultation has demonstrated considerable public support for the on-demand proposals.

"Thanks to the thorough assessment through the public value test, and with the modifications which resulted from the test and the consultation, the trust is satisfied that the BBC's new on-demand services will create significant public value with limited market impact."
GI
gilsta
Quote:
Earlier this month BBC Future Media boss Ashley Highfield said the corporation was committed to rolling out the iPlayer on Windows PCs first of all, and then cable TV services, Apple Macs, and eventually Freeview boxes.


How would this work on Freeview?
BR
Brekkie
gilsta posted:
Quote:
Earlier this month BBC Future Media boss Ashley Highfield said the corporation was committed to rolling out the iPlayer on Windows PCs first of all, and then cable TV services, Apple Macs, and eventually Freeview boxes.


How would this work on Freeview?



Combined with IPTV, ala BT Vision.


Did anyone ever do a "public service test" on the BBC Trust - all they seem to do is approve things which are pretty obviously a public service anyway!
DV
DVB Cornwall
Brekkie Boy posted:


Did anyone ever do a "public service test" on the BBC Trust - all they seem to do is approve things which are pretty obviously a public service anyway!


Yes, The Government did last year. Exclamation
MI
Mich Founding member
DVB Cornwall posted:
Brekkie Boy posted:


Did anyone ever do a "public service test" on the BBC Trust - all they seem to do is approve things which are pretty obviously a public service anyway!


Yes, The Government did last year. Exclamation


I believe that Brekkie Boy was asking whether any TVF users were part of the 10,000 individuals/organisations that took part in the PVT.

I didn't, but surely someone here did?
PE
Pete Founding member
BTW who else has been invited to the strange new beta of the iPlayer?

I hope this current thing is just a network test as the interface is bizzare.
RS
Reg Shaw
Mich posted:
DVB Cornwall posted:
Brekkie Boy posted:


Did anyone ever do a "public service test" on the BBC Trust - all they seem to do is approve things which are pretty obviously a public service anyway!


Yes, The Government did last year. Exclamation


I believe that Brekkie Boy was asking whether any TVF users were part of the 10,000 individuals/organisations that took part in the PVT.

I didn't, but surely someone here did?


I did. It was open to anybody who took the time to visit the Trust's website. I was one of the many who demanded Linux/Mac versions.
AN
antroi
Hymagumba posted:
BTW who else has been invited to the strange new beta of the iPlayer?

I hope this current thing is just a network test as the interface is bizzare.


The audience councils around the country also took part in the PVT and were given several different options of different ways the iplayer may be produced.
BB
BBC LDN
Hymagumba posted:
BTW who else has been invited to the strange new beta of the iPlayer?

I hope this current thing is just a network test as the interface is bizzare.


You mean the "BBC TV Test"? Yes indeed, and I'm finding it horrible to use so far. Having been part of the iMP trial a couple of years ago, this is just a horrible let-down across the board.

There's no real capacity for 'browsing' in the same way as iMP allowed you to do; where iMP offered suggestions for different genres, along with picks of the week etc, the TV Test interface relies solely on you picking programming from the linear BBC schedules, and then going through a fairly clunky proprietary P2P interface program.

I'm finding every aspect of this current trial to be disappointing so far, which is a great shame, as I'd been looking forward to it for some time.
RE
Reboot
Mich posted:
I didn't, but surely someone here did?
I did after the provisional findings, demanding they allow proper series stacking and saying they should have non-WMP versions (for both Windows and non-Windows systems).
PE
Pete Founding member
BBC LDN posted:
There's no real capacity for 'browsing' in the same way as iMP allowed you to do; where iMP offered suggestions for different genres, along with picks of the week etc, the TV Test interface relies solely on you picking programming from the linear BBC schedules, and then going through a fairly clunky proprietary P2P interface program.


I find it especially odd when you compare it to 4OD which is essentially the iMP in a clunkier fashion.

I'm really confused about what exactly TV Test is for, especially as you currently can't even search by programme title.

58 days later

FR
Freeview
The launch date has been released as July 27th for the BBC iplayer. More info here - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6245062.stm Laughing

Newer posts