Dr. Thornburg
(Laureate Education, 2014a; Laureate Education, 2014b) presents increasing
returns and Red Queens as two forces that influence the adoption and
distribution of technology. The former reference the idea that, if undisturbed,
a technology that is leading the market will increasingly lead the market,
while a technology that is losing share, will increasingly loose more share.
The later refers to the idea of two technologies existing in relative balance
“running” as fast as they can to keep up with each other’s developments and
innovations. The competition between DVDs and on-demand video can be expressed
in these forces. Increasing returns
Legal on-demand video
started small as it was constrained by the limitations of internet bandwidth.
However, as home capacities increased, the door to this technology opened wide.
Prior to that, DVDs and Blu-Ray media held the market, whether it was rentals or
purchases. Even though streaming quality started lower DVD, it was much more
convenient than driving to a rental stored to get a video.
Now, as services
like Vudu, Netflix, and Amazon Prime bring streaming to near Blu-ray quality,
renting physical media has nearly disappeared. Stores like Blockbuster
have all but closed their doors. This is a case of increasing returns.
Because, even though the quality is not quite up to the standard as the
physical media, the on-demand video is more convenient and
portable across multiple devices. Its reach continues to expand, while the
ability to rent physical media continues to decrease. I have not bought a new
DVD in years, but I have converted or purchased dozens to instant and streaming
video through Vudu and Amazon Instant Video. Red Queens
These queens are continually running as fast as possible next to each other in order to stand
still. They may leave others behind, but the two queens keep a very close pace.
There may have been a time when DVD and On-Demand video were red queens, but
that is no longer the case. DVD/BluRay media is not changing or enhancing to
keep up with Instant Video. On the other hand, the on-demand video services are
increasingly making it more convenient to receive scalable, higher quality video
libraries on multiple devices. Now, the Red Queens are the various on-demand
services. Each trying to gain an advantage over the other. Except, instead of
just video quality and library, they have now entered the production game. Both
Amazon and Netflix
have begun producing their own serial shows to increase audience interest and
drive up their market advantage.Tetrad
Several weeks ago, I made a post
about McLuhan’s tetrad. Looking at these two technologies, there are clear
similarities, but also some significant differences. DVDs brought consumers a
new way to collect and watch movies that was small, lightweight, higher
capacity, and much higher quality than its predecessors were. It quickly made
VHS obsolete except for personal recording. (Although, that disappeared with
the advent of video hard-drive based digital recording devices like TiVO.) Just
like the first radio and TV, DVDs brought back ideas from the past of being
able to share stories and entertainment with the family in the comfort of one’s
home. When taken to the extreme, you get what has replaced it: on-demand video.
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Laureate Education (Producer). (2014a). David Thornburg: Increasing returns [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author.
Laureate Education (Producer). (2014b). David Thornburg: Red queens [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author.

The idea that movies could stream into our minds based on nano technologies has me a bit nervous. I think of virtual reality and even augmented realities like the Sixth Sense Technologies, and, as much as I love new technologies and all they offer to the world around us, I also am apprehensive about how powerfully profound and scary these technologies could become.
ReplyDeleteI agree completely!
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