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The digital pipeline.


Film in America whether Hollywood or indie--is on the verge On the Verge (or The Geography of Yearning) is a play written by Eric Overmyer. It makes extensive use of esoteric language and pop culture references from the late nineteenth century to 1955.  of a major revolution as it finally converts to digital technology. The replacement of 35 millimeter film with digital files is already upon us. Today most movies are viewed as DVDs. As broadband access See broadband and wireless broadband.  slowly spreads to more American homes For the American mortgage lender, see .
The American Home is a center of intercultural exchange located in Vladimir, Russia. The home is designed to model a typical American suburban home and its main focus is the ESL school that provides lessons for Russian students.
, Web-based digital distribution of film will eventually replace the DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc.
DVD
 in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc

Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology.
. At the same time, movie theaters will be converting to digital projection. This all will happen--probably in this decade, certainly in the next. The only question remaining is: Who will control the new distribution process? The answer will determine what stories get told in America, and who gets to see them.

The digital film revolution is not quite here--movies are still mostly shot on actual film and projected onto a theater screen the way Thomas Edison did it, by shining light through a plastic print. There are still only 192 digital-projection movie theaters in America, versus 38,000 old-fashioned ones. The holdup among theater owners has been the cost of the digital equipment. It's five times as expensive as the analog gear. But as anyone who's bought a personal computer lately knows, the prices will only go down, and the change will come eventually. In the end, theaters will change because online distribution and radically improved home playback equipment will force them to change or go out of business.

Online distribution, over broadband home Internet connections, will be the driving force of all the changes looming in the film industry. And this is where public policy will determine the future shape of American culture. Our culture will either become more tightly controlled by an ever-shrinking number of ever-bigger transnational corporations Any corporation that is registered and operates in more than one country at a time; also called a multinational corporation.

A transnational, or multinational, corporation has its headquarters in one country and operates wholly or partially owned subsidiaries in one or more
, or we will see a great democratic opening that will generate new visions of who we are and what we could become.

THE BASIC ISSUE is (still) how broadband access will come into American homes. As long as a large percentage of people still get their Internet over telephone lines, downloading digital video will be prohibitively slow. When people get the faster connection to the bigger broadband pipeline, almost anything will become possible. Today most people who have broadband access are getting it from their cable television company. This makes sense. Most homes are already wired for cable TV, and the fiber-optic cable the TV companies have strung or buried all over America can also carry huge amounts of high-speed digital information.

The problem is that cable companies see the Internet through the lens of their existing operation. Cable subscribers pay to receive what the company will let them have. They can buy pack ages with more or fewer channels. But they can only order off the company's menu. And in most local areas, the cable company is a monopoly. The big telephone companies that own our telephone lines are required by law to let other telephone service providers (long distance or local) use their wires. Cable TV companies face no such requirement.

It's not hard to see where this is heading. If cable companies bring broadband into our homes using their existing business model, they will expect to retain control over the digital pipeline. Such control, with regard to film, is already in place. Cable companies that have gone into the Internet business routinely limit streaming video A one-way video transmission over a data network. It is widely used on the Web as well as company networks to play video clips and video broadcasts. Computers in home networks stream video to digital media hubs connected to a home theater.  to a few minutes--the length of a movie's promotional trailer. If a Web site puts up a feature-length documentary, or a bootleg version of a Hollywood movie, your cable broadband provider will simply cut it off after a few minutes. The companies have done this because they see Web-based film distribution coming and they want to be able to control it and charge for it.

Of course, if measures are taken now to force broadband providers to allow open access to their pipeline, we could see a very different digital future. Using the existing wide-open Internet model, everyone with $5,000 or so could become a filmmaker with a global distribution network. The result would be a democratic explosion. We could see a video equivalent of the media revolution that came with mass literacy in the 19th century. That's when nearly every big city had several daily newspapers, dozens of national general-interest magazines flourished, and novels--such as Uncle Tom's Cabin Uncle Tom’s Cabin

highly effective, sentimental Abolitionist novel. [Am. Lit.: Jameson, 513]

See : Antislavery
 and the works of Dickens--changed the world. It's no accident that this same era saw the abolitionist movement, the birth of the labor movement, the first women's suffrage The term women's suffrage refers to an economic and political reform movement aimed at extending suffrage — the right to vote — to women. The movement's origins are usually traced to the United States in the 1820s.  campaigns, the populist rebellion, and the Progressive reforms.

Danny Duncan Collum, a Sojourners contributing editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw. , teaches writing at Kentucky State University Kentucky State University (KSU, or less commonly, KYSU, to differentiate from Kansas State University) is a four-year institution of higher learning, located in Frankfort, Kentucky, the Commonwealth's capital.  in Frankfort, Kentucky Frankfort is the capital of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, a state of the United States of America. It is also the county seat of Franklin County. The city has a population of 27,077 (July 2006 est.). History
Gen.
. He is the author of Black and Catholic in the Jim Crow Jim Crow

Negro stereotype popularized by 19th-century minstrel shows. [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 138]

See : Bigotry
 South (Paulist Press).
COPYRIGHT 2006 Sojourners
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:movies, digital technology
Author:Collum, Danny Duncan
Publication:Sojourners
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2006
Words:775
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