Full Duplex by David Braue

A view from the trenches of Australian telecommunications. As the name implies, it’s a two-way conversation and we ask you not to pull any punches ... we won’t.

How Seven blew the internet Olympics

Posted by David Braue @ 17:14 40 comments

Like most of us, I've been watching more TV than usual for the past week, what with the Olympics on and so many interesting ads to watch. Squinting through Beijing's pervasive smog, I've even been able to see some interesting sports as well.

This is the first Olympics in the era where Web video is unremarkable, multi-channel HDTV is commonplace, and online content is actually starting to resemble TV (witness the smooth, full-screen streaming video of the ABC's iView service).

So I have to say that I was expecting just a little more from the Seven Network's coverage, which could easily have used both online and offline channels to let us choose from dozens of simultaneous events to watch.

As I write, however, Seven is broadcasting the medals ceremony for the 100m men's backstroke — and is showing the same ceremony on all four of its SD and HDTV stations. At the same time, Seven's streaming portal is showing a postcard-sized video of the men's weightlifting of such poor quality that it looks like the smog has infiltrated indoors.

The portal also offers heavily edited, two- or three-minute clips of completed events featuring Australians in all kinds of sports. The overall effect is a resounding thud on the impress-me meter.

Every Olympics offers a unique broadcasting proposition: while they're heavily watched when they're happening, they will not be shown again after the event. Live Olympics events are exciting, but pirated videos of Olympic events will not be sold feverishly through backstreet markets and dodgy online retailers; heck, post-Olympic discounting rarely even manages to clear out all the leftover merchandise.

Yes, the value of Olympics coverage is in its immediacy and accessibility, and for this reason Olympics footage would have seemed like a natural candidate for experiments in multi-casting. Just consider the online coverage in the US, where as I write NBC's Olympics site appears to be worlds ahead of what we're getting Down Under.

I say "appears to be" because the video isn't available in Australia, and the usual public Web proxies refuse to handle the volume of video coming through the site. What I'm led to understand, however, is that NBC has teamed up with Microsoft to offer an interactive Olympics portal showing up to four live events simultaneously in crisp, clear quality.

The site's live video menu tells me that, were I in the US, I could be streaming the men's basketball preliminary match between Croatia and Russia, an Egypt-Russia handball face-off, softball between Taiwan and Canada, Greco-Roman wrestling (see Roy and HG on this subject below), men's individual sabre and 17 other sporting events.



Now, I understand that Seven has millions in advertising revenues to protect, and that most people are still happy to come home from work and plop on the couch for a few hours of heavily edited highlights packages. So we cheer, and do our part for the Team Previously Known As The Green And Gold.

But Seven really could have done a lot better in developing a multi-channel strategy to help people really enjoy the Olympics — their way. Believe it or not, there may even be some interesting sporting competitions that don't involve Australia — but we can pretty much forget about seeing them, unless (a) Seven can't find another medals ceremony to show; (b) Bruce McAvaney has the day off; and (c) the network has used up its footage of reporters eating nasty Chinese "delicacies".

If there ever was an opportunity for the network to showcase the potential of internet video, this was it, and Seven has blown it. Perhaps its executives should have rung their mates at NBC in the US — from which the network already sources shows such as Heroes and Lipstick Jungle — and gotten some pointers on online coverage.

Of course, NBC teamed up with Microsoft in the US to deliver its content using Microsoft's Silverlight multimedia technology — and in Australia, Microsoft long ago sided with the Nine Network, which pretty much rules out the Yahoo-affiliated Seven from tapping into this particular revolution. Yes, the networks are that petty.

Just look at the week-long ban on Nine, supported by the IOC-reinforced culture of fear around exclusivity of broadcast rights.

Let's not forget Telstra. Its Next G Olympics offer is as cutting-edge as we're going to get when it comes to these Games, with Seven-backed broadcasting rights letting the mobile carrier offer content packs to its Next G subscribers for a flat AU$10 or AU$4 per day.

For their money, subscribers get access to highlight packs — no doubt the same ones available through Yahoo's online site — and live, streaming video of Seven's TV coverage (curiously, the service isn't available on the iPhone, the one Next G device on which watching video is actually tolerable; this is one of many examples supporting my argument that Telstra and the iPhone aren't exactly a match made in Heaven).

That deal probably put lots of money into Seven's coffers — but what about the millions of Australians that aren't Next G subscribers? Anecdotes suggest major sporting events like the Olympics are a tipping point for many people to upgrade their TVs or embrace HDTV at last, but do services like this really convince people to change mobile providers? And if you were switching providers for the video, wouldn't you want to get an iPhone?

How many people really want to watch live video-on-demand on their mobile phones, anyway? Mobiles, if anything, are ideal for the highlight packs since I don't think many people will spend hours watching an Olympics soccer match in 2-inch SquintVision.

Seven is supposedly so serious about the internet that it bought its own wireless ISP.

Last October, I argued that deal could make Seven the next Telstra.

For now, however, Seven seems quite content to let Telstra remain as the next Telstra, while it remains the same old Seven it always was — but with a patina of online video to silence people who want to watch the Games events they want, when they want them.

Perhaps the problem is just that Seven had no incentive to shake the tree, so to speak, since it knows it won't be doing the Olympics broadcast in 2012 and saw no reason to explore the online multi-casting that would have been a sensation.

Hopefully, Nine and Foxtel have bigger, better things planned in four years. Until then, I'll just sit back and watch yet another medal ceremony on Seven — or trawl YouTube for other interesting sports like this, this and this.

How are you getting your Olympics fix? Watching much on your mobile? Would you watch more if it were available online?

Talkback 40 comments

    Well said! Anonymous -- 13/08/08

    In 2004 I was in South Africa where they had 10 dedicated channels for the Games.
    One showed Swimming only - full coverage of every heat in the morning, highlights while there was no live action and finals at night. Another was reserved for track and field. Another showed highlights packages for every day that had so far taken place so that if you missed anything you had a chance to catch up. The remaining channels covered everything from Show Jumping and Archery to Weightlifting and Kayaking. We were spoiled for choice.

    All this and they hadn't even begun to look at the Internet as an additional medium.

    We got to see the best sports men and women the world has to offer, no matter which country they represnted. Heaven forbid there is a budding young Australian champion in a sport we don't compete in. He will never get a chance to see what great looks like.

    TV Coverage Bill -- 24/08/08 (in reply to #320109657)

    Channel 7 could learn from the BBC in making full use of the internet during the Olympics, We could watch high quality pictures pictures of every sport over and over again, 24/7. Better still, we could relive Team Great Britain winning our 19 golds. By the way congratulations to you guys on winning 15 golds, sterling effort!

    Channel 7 Anonymous -- 13/08/08

    Whilst organisations such as Gravity.com.au where given "No Thank You" to develop this mobile service for the Olympics.

    Yep, my thoughts too.. Karl Ponsonby -- 13/08/08

    You should try to watch in Rural Australia where we have the Seven affiliate Prime. Half the time the sound is missing on HD and when it is there, it's out of sync with the video. I also agree re the multi cast, I thought there would be some different coverage on the other 3 SD channels that are broadcast, but no, seems just too difficult. Just to see some other sports would be great, not just swimming, medal cerimonies, stupid panel interviews and pool side interviews. What should have been the best coverage ever is yet another Seven Ego boost turned to rubbish. THanks God for SBS

    channel 7s coverage.very,very,poor. FredaBlack -- 20/08/08 (in reply to #320109659)

    I and every one I speak to thinks it is very poor coverage of the olympics, we all agree with you sick of the repetiveness of the swimming results and hours of softball , there are so many other sports we miss out on ,we only wish SBS had the rights to it, it is the worst coverage of any olympics we have ever seen for such a cosmopolitan country,not good at all.very dissapointed all round.

    Olympics on 7? Anonymous -- 13/08/08

    the real Olympics is on SBS

    Olympics on 7 Anonymous -- 19/08/08 (in reply to #320109662)

    They actually can be bothered to show whole gaes on SBS. SBS kicks butt

    I agree too! Anonymous -- 13/08/08

    While 7 are mostly only covering the sports we compete in (and only snippets of that in some cases), they also insist on using the personalities we see on every other 7 show - Dancing with the Stars (is that 7? I get mixed up with all the copies), House and Garden etc. Which hardly gives credibility to the hosts as sports commentators and is why we have to endure so many "insightful" questions at the pool side interviews....

    As for the coverage, in my opinion it is a case of provide the least coverage for the most income. The only people getting excellent coverage seem to be the advertisers. It reeks of the apauling Winter games coverage...

    Like Karl said, thank goodness for SBS...

    SBS continues to show sport Anonymous -- 13/08/08

    It's funny that the coverage on 7 is so geared towards Australia and medal presentations, that we are deprived of some of the exiting sports that are on offer. Last night I watched Japan beat Norway 5-1 in Womens football, while 7 had some horses jumping. They didn't evevn show the game of softball that Australia was in, and it was supposed to be an exciting game. Oh well, lets hope we get to see more then just advertising at the next Olympics. One can only hope.....

    Where were you? Lord Watchdog -- 15/08/08 (in reply to #320109664)

    I watched a part of the softball game that Australia beat China in and it was on 7. You must have dozed off. :-p

    Fail Darren -- 13/08/08

    What a failure, I have HD and only 2 channels of Olympics. Why did CH7 bother buying all those extra Digital Channels and investing in Technology if they are not being going to be used. Rang CH7 to ask why, and they can only offer to pass my comments on. No "solutions", no "that's a great idea", Fail, Fail, Fail.
    Lets hope the next broadcaster learns and offers more, see you in 4.

    price check Anonymous -- 13/08/08

    1. You don't need Microsoft or Siverlight for that matter to stream video, in fact there are many better alternatives.

    2. We should not be taking a leaf from the Yank's book or encouraging yank Television Media standards - although most commercial television here try to mimic it, it is becoming impossible to swallow with all the cheese.

    3. Thanks ABC and SBS for providing content for real Australians

    7's crappy telecasts Paul Turner -- 13/08/08

    I live in Darwin and I agree with the above comments. Give up 7 you don't have what it takes or you are happy doing it on the cheap.

    Thankyou SBS and ABC well done.
    I was particularly interested in the Russia V Iran Basketball it wa excellent

    Agree! Anonymous -- 14/08/08

    Gotta love these TV execs. 7 was doing well compared to alternatives at the start of the year. They take on a major event like this and whoops, drop the ball. Poor coverage, jumping between events, at times braodcasting the same event as SBS (Mens Cycle Road Race). And not using the digital channels they already own. Are these people media executives or monkeys (and not the monkeys that could write Hamlet).

    As others have said, thank goodness for SBS.

    Channel 7 missed it by miles Anonymous -- 14/08/08

    Yep, channel 7 has done nothing to impress with both their TV (SD & HD channels) and internet offerings...in fact their internet offering for some sports is just pitiful.

    As for NBC Sports online yep it looks good AND it has footage of Australian efforts in some sports (equestrian) that Channel 7 dont have replays of... but pity outside the US we cant watch these...

    But the big paranoia hand spreads far and wide...Channel 7 does'nt have sufficient replay content available on-line - we can't see see the NBC sports content - AND if you try to bend the legality rules a little by fulfilling the lack of local (Australian) content demand with a little YouTube re-edits, etc what do you find...yep NBC Sports (US) has a planet block on anything that may be olympic content....

    Come-on...if Channel 7 wont meet the local content demand, NBC Sports only allows US viewing but blocks the rest of the world... then just get out of the way of the amateur Youtube channels to fullfil regional content needs and rather than flatout blocking its upload...why not take one of the less dramatic video ID matching routes and say (outside US) allow uploading but have Google assign the various advertising partners that the corporations are so worried about protecting.... best of both worlds the masses get to see the content THEY want to see on demand and the corporates get the advertising coverage they are so worried about....

    I Could Not Have Said It Better Anonymous -- 14/08/08

    The 7 Network's coverage has been so boring and all they seem to be showing is the swimming. Sure I want to watch our olympic swim team win gold in the pool but I would also love to watch our other athletes who have worked just as hard to get to the top. Channel 7 need to be reminded, it is not a swim meet - it is the Olympic Games! I called today to see what time our Boomers game was being telecast and was told they were only showing the last two quarters and it would start at 2 - well it is 2:20 and they have just started broadcasting nearly 5 minutes into the 3rd quarter. It is pathetic. I hope channel 7 either use these comments as constructive critisism or loose the coverage for the next olympic games.

    Multi-channelling Anonymous -- 14/08/08

    My understanding (and I'm open to correction) is that commercial stations can, under current legislation, only show different programming on their HD and SD/analogue channel. Hence the proliferation this year of alternative programming on Seven, Nine and Ten's HD channels. True multi-channelling on SD won't be allowed until January 1, 2009.

    Correct Anonymous -- 18/08/08 (in reply to #320109793)

    You are correct right there. Also to the author of this blog, please, please do some research before whining.

    There are not "4" seperate channels being broadcast. You might see "7 Digital 1, 7 Digital 2, 7 Digital 3 and 7 Digital 4" but they are all a single MPEG stream, simply with different PID's. It is not 4 channels, it is 1 channel with 4 different names. Channel 7 got annoyed with the government because they aren't allowed to multicast 4 different shows all at once. So they have just configured their stream to make it look like they can, for future use, and so that the people out there would notice and feel sorry for them.

    Yes Seven blew it Anonymous -- 14/08/08

    Seven should have had 2 channels running separate content - 7HD and 7SD. They're not allowed to have more SD channels until next Jan.

    But they could have had more via the Internet or using SBS. SBS is allowed to have 2 SD channels and a HD. 7 and SBS together could have had 5 channels of coverage.

    BitTorrent Anonymous -- 15/08/08

    I've been downloading the UK coverage of the Equestrian events using BitTorrent.

    Excellent quality presentation - zero advertising.

    Easy

    Bit Torrent Equestrian Anonymous -- 19/08/08 (in reply to #320109852)

    Any chance you can enlighten us with the address of the bit torrent that you are using Channel 7's coverage in Melbourne is nothing short of shitful

    Next G olympics not that good Anonymous -- 15/08/08

    I changed from CDMA to Next G last Saturday and at same time took up Olympics subscription...2 days of it not working and reporting the problem they say "we are working on it" .... I can now get some service but the live coverage gets about 20 secs and then buffers for a further 20....reminds me of the dial up days of internet...thank God it is only $10 as it is not really even worth this...it is really a marketing ploy to suck people into other services like sitcom reruns at $5 each etc.

    I changed to Next G and find often "out of range" messages etc....and I live in Sydney (on the Southside in a black spot called Grays Point)....come on Telstra...lift your game.

    Very interesting David Braue -- 21/08/08 (in reply to #320109854)

    Sorry to hear your experience hasn't been ideal -- I'd be interested to know whether you have used other forms of video over Next-G? eg can we attribute this to congestion due to high demand for Olympics videos, or is it just a case of Next-G video basically being quite bad at delivering video?

    Channel seven sucks Anonymous -- 15/08/08

    Like most corporations in Australia acting in their own interests and then hype the public up.Does anyone complain by Email or phone at the actual TV station ?

    I was cheated by News Ten Australia Anonymous -- 15/08/08

    This is Xiao Lu, poor Xiao Lu. Our country held 2008 Olmpics games. I used to work for the irish times and the australia long time,so I had deep expericence for media.I 'm also expected to work for this olmpics games. I gave up my good salary job to studied English about Olmpics games from Feb - July this year . I did these jobs to become for asistant of foreign media.
    I sign an constact with news ten australia through DPSC at end of July in this year. They send one person call "Craig" to Beijing. I' was gald to serivce for Austral media. I had been connected with this reporter when he arrive Beijing before. He stoped whole connection with me after he got to Beijing. I did not know why? I worked with a lot of foreign journists to meet first time this bad man. His action destried my dream of the olmpics games , but also made big loss of my life. I know real Australia through this thing. I hope everybody to stop to see programes of news ten australia about the olmpics games , their reporters about this olmpics games did not real depond on this matter.

    How Seven blew the internet Olympics Anonymous -- 18/08/08

    I am currently on holiday in the UK and have been watching the excellent olympics coverage on the BBC. They have multiscreen options that provides the viewer with a great choice of events to watch. Yes the coverage has a British bias (only to be expected). However, there has been very good coverage of many events that have little or no british interest at all. This not a wingeing pom writing just someone who has experienced Australian sports coverage in the passed and has been extremely disappointed by the coverage.

    Patriotism is a great thing and I am all for it. However, there really is more to sport than what eminates from this great country.

    "WELL SAID" said I 2 U Trace-O -- 18/08/08

    Seven really ruffled my feathers this year. With all of the technology available to keep people in tune and up to date with what is happening in and around the Olympics and the village, we sure have been short changed. I am very upset that with all of the money spend to have the rights, they used crappy presenters, showed only what they wanted us to see and not necessarily what other sports or other countries are doing. Surely in this day and age, we are not limited to this small minded viewing.

    Why no multi-channeling with Seven Adam Nelson -- 19/08/08

    I have abit of theory why no multi-channelling was used this olympics

    Nobody watched them or knew they exist. Cause when people setup digital tv box to scan for channels and remove the 2-3 useless rebroadcast ch7

    When there something on multi-channelling you don't know about it. Channel 7 knows this is happening and see it as pointless to multichannel once every 3-4 years or when a big sporting event is on

    A very good point David Braue -- 21/08/08 (in reply to #320110067)

    You raise an excellent point. I have personally left the other channels activated but there would be many people who did exactly what you said - and would be unaware of the networks' plans to (eventually) use multichannel broadcasting over those channels.

    It's like opening a new road but forgetting to put it in the Melways. They're going to face a big uphill battle to get people to even notice the channels are there. Yet another example of how the protracted digital transition is failing to meet customer expectations.

    You have said what Alot thought! Anonymous -- 20/08/08

    Thank you, somebody with complete and utter common sense. I look forward to watching the Diving every Olympics, but as usual I think I have seen approx 8 dives when two Australian women were in the semi-finals. I love to see Australia do well in the Olympics and sat up to watch Sally win silver in the 100m hurdles last night, But I enjoy watching the sport not just the Aussie competitors at the Olympics. I am glad to hear that seven will not have the games in 2012. I hope Channel Seven can justify why the need to show the 100m Mens Sprint approx 5 times in one day when they could have been showing another sport and had better rating. Foxtel have brought the rights to every other sporting event in this country so why not the Olympics and have dedicated Channels to particular sports (we pay enough each month). Channel Seven need to think long and hard before they ever bid to televise the games again.

    Couldnt agree more Peter Graham -- 21/08/08

    I upgraded to foxtel HD a few months ago thinking that there would be multi channel coverage from channel seven .. but it didnt happen.

    How is it that channel v can be totally interactive with your choice of 5 different styles of channels to watch and yet channel seven .. who I'm guessing have a lot more money then channel V failed to utilize this technology .. its pathetic.

    Advertising money David Braue -- 21/08/08 (in reply to #320110214)

    I would venture to suggest the real reason Seven didn't invest more in multi-channeling over its multiple digital channels is that there just aren't enough advertising revenues to support the extra broadcasts -- and that if people were tuning into the other broadcasts they would dilute the audience Seven promised its advertisers for the main broadcasts.

    If nothing else, this wasted opportunity has highlighted the extent to which commercial considerations have compromised the promise of digital TV.

    It's quite telling when the ABC is leading the commercial networks in embracing new distribution models. But since the free-to-air broadcasters are counting on multi-channeling to fight back against the pay TV operators, one can't help but wonder whether this whole experience wasn't the first nail in the coffin for FTA.

    Vancouver in 2010 will be the next chance, and London possibly the last chance, to convince people that the networks 'get' the possibilities of digital. Hopefully someone in the networks will notice this, and get a bit more proactive about all of this. If, that is, the entire audience isn't watching TV online by then.

    Hola Anonymous -- 27/08/08 (in reply to #320110227)

    Ja, ja ja, podríais poner un traductor

    Event Viewing Times Trixie Powell -- 21/08/08

    I enjoy watching some Olympic events but not all. All the program guides that I could find didn't have the times that the individual events would be televised. The closest times I could find was when watching a telecast the commentator might say that en event would be shown "tonight" or "tomorrow morning". Technology hasn't moved forward very far in programming at Seven either. I watched what I wanted when it happened to be on the news or the highlights, or I was lucky enough to be tuned in within the designated eight hour specified timeframe....Shabby.

    Event times David Braue -- 21/08/08 (in reply to #320110221)

    If you're watching the Olympics on Seven, the events are on whenever it suits Seven to have them.

    If you want to know when they actually happen, the Olympics Web site has a full schedule at http://en.beijing2008.cn/ -- (remember the times are Beijing time, 2 hours before Sydney/Melbourne time). Like many of us, you may be surprised at how many events are actually being held in the Olympics but simply missed on TV.

    Embarrassing Anonymous -- 22/08/08

    Seven's coverage is truly embarrassing, I have friends here from the US and either of us can watch anything and see more 'talking heads' than actual live sport.

    To the management of seven sport, we know you're trying to re-invent the wheel, take a pride swallowing pill, go overseas and see how the Europeans do it, then come back and wow us next time. Please!

    Woeful programming Mark Dickson -- 25/08/08

    I think the worst aspect was the chopping and changing of events at the whim of the twits predicting viewing patterns. and the greedy execs sticking ads in willy nilly - Matthew Mitcham final round of 10m dive....last 5 or 6 dives & what do we get? 6 mins of adverts so the last dive was NOT live.... the US watched him win gold several minutes before we did. And to add insult to injury they stuck more ads in before the medal ceremony & missed he beginning of that - First Gold in 10m since 1920's, highest score ever in a dive in olympics, Matt's first olympics & scores gold, First openly gay Oz olympian - a pretty significant event for many reasons but their stupid Telstra ad was more important!! I for one will not be watching channel 7 for the next month in protest at their greed & disrespect for the viewers and atheletes.

    & don't get me started on the idiocy of wasting multiple channels on Digital tv & why has the government not forced the stations to use them? channel ten and ABC are both using 2nd channels for alternate programming now) . Everything in this article is correct - just glad they don't have the London one.

    Worst olympic coverage yet Anonymous -- 25/08/08

    1. In SA, the olympic coverage came second to football matches - 2-3 hrs at a time.
    2. The coverage was not always live, was interrupted constantly by sanity testing Coles and Telstra adds, even half way through a 4x400 relay? Cant wait 4 minutes to appropriately place an add?

    Pathetic.

    Investigate before you post! Anonymous -- 26/08/08

    Something you may not understand David is that each channel requires a certain amount of bandwidth. Seven does not have 4 SD channels, they have one. The other three "point" to the ONLY SD channel - 7. They also took down their EPG (electronic program guide), to increase the bandwidth available to HD, for the first time ever 7HD was show in true 1080i high definition.

    The stupid media laws goverening this backwards country also prohibit any major event to be solely broadcast on digital only first. Same as high definition - it cannot be aired there first.

    Nine's Wide World of Sports will do a far better job in London.

    Amen Anonymous -- 17/09/08

    Dead on.

    I was so sick of watching medal ceremonies and replay after replay of swimming.

    SBS had much better coverage in my opinion. You could watch full games with them. You knew when everything was starting. And you saw countries other then australia.

    I am really hoping nine can improve on the crap that seven has been bringing. The only good thing seven ever had was roy and hg, and they didn't even have that this time round!

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David Braue

David Braue

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