TVs A Turn-Off For Online Video Generation

And online and mobile viewing is rising - three quarters of users said they now watched more than they did a year ago.
From the 27 November 2006 the BBC News Website is running a series of special features looking at the future of TV.
The website's survey also suggests that online video viewers are still in the minority - just 9% said they did so regularly. Another 13% said they watched occasionally, while a further 10% said they expected to start in the coming year.
But two-thirds of the population said they did not watch online and could not envisage starting in the next 12 months.
In the survey, one in five people who watched online or mobile video at least once a week said they watched a lot less TV as a result.
Another 23% said they watched a bit less, while just over half said their TV viewing was unchanged. Some 3% said online video inspired them to watch more TV.
Online and mobile video is far more popular among the young, with 28% of those aged 16 to 24 saying they watched more than once each week.
An average of 10% aged 25 to 44 were net video regulars, with that figure falling to just 4% of over-45s.
Earlier this year, media regulator Ofcom said the number of 16 to 24-year-olds watching TV in an average day had dropped 2.9% between 2003 and 2005.
Comedian Ricky Gervais, whose audio and video podcasts have become hits on the web, said amateur video would never replace TV - but broadcasters would harness the power of the internet.
"You can't knock up an episode of The Sopranos or 24 on a little handheld digital camera," he told the BBC News website.
"I don't think you'll ever be able to sidestep TV or DVD. But TV companies will embrace it."
The choice offered by new platforms was "exciting", he said, and any future developments depended on how many people started using the technology.
"I'm sure when the BBC first launched, they were going: 'Ah, not many people have got tellies. Who's watching this?' So it's good to get your act together. And then people catch up with the know-how and the means to watch it."
The BBC News Website Future TV special includes the interview with Ricky Gervais, predictions from other leading TV figures, a guide to new TV technologies and exclusive videos of "famous" YouTubers talking about online video.
Visit Bbc.co.uk/futuretv for more information.