Spark Sport
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@nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@Nepia honestly sometimes boggles my mind that we can get that for what we pay. It's positioned us for the future ... who knows what it's going to be used for someday, but it sure isn't an impediment to anything involving internet speed.
How much is it?
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@Nepia said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@Nepia honestly sometimes boggles my mind that we can get that for what we pay. It's positioned us for the future ... who knows what it's going to be used for someday, but it sure isn't an impediment to anything involving internet speed.
How much is it?
110 NZD a month, unlimited data, with a phone line and unlimited national calling included. We only have the phoneline because of some older people who haven't gone fully mobile yet.
Basically, broadband prices haven't gone up much, but the speed and data has increased exponentially.
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@nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@Nepia said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@Nepia honestly sometimes boggles my mind that we can get that for what we pay. It's positioned us for the future ... who knows what it's going to be used for someday, but it sure isn't an impediment to anything involving internet speed.
How much is it?
110 NZD a month, unlimited data, with a phone line and unlimited national calling included. We only have the phoneline because of some older people who haven't gone fully mobile yet.
Basically, broadband prices haven't gone up much, but the speed and data has increased exponentially.
WTF, I pay about $80 for 50/20 and would happily pay $30 more for those speeds.
So, so envious.
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@Bovidae said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
From Spark Sport:
Midway through the first half we identified that the quality of the video stream was fluctuating for some customers. This meant that customers experienced brief, intermittent periods of reduced video quality such as pixilation and buffering.
We were uncomfortable at the quality of the experience our customers were getting and, as we always said we would, we moved quickly to provide them with an alternative means of watching the match. We had prior established procedures with our partner TVNZ to enable live, free-to-air coverage at short notice.
We made the call just before half time to immediately simulcast the rest of the match live on TVNZ Duke and we communicated this through our channels and the media. A banner message was also subsequently displayed on Spark Sport.
The video streaming quality issue improved shortly afterwards and from midway through the second half streaming across all devices appeared stable once again.
The majority of customers continued to watch via Spark Sport and did not experience video quality issues. The service peaked at 132,000 concurrent streams and by the end of the match had dropped to 126,000.
There were not the same video quality problems during the day’s two earlier matches. Although some customers needed help from our care teams at times during the day, for the most part these related to isolated device issues and in-home set up.
The root cause of the video streaming issue is still being investigated with our international streaming partners. However, we can confirm that the issue was not related to New Zealand broadband capacity, with the demand for this game well within our operating thresholds. It was not confined to customers of any particular broadband provider.
This made me think. There's people that had to work during the game. Thoughts and prayers.
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@Kirwan said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
@Machpants said in [Poll] Will you use Spark to watch RWC?:
Not much use to those of us that don't have TVNZ
But reasonable for them as a provider. Confident that it will get better, and pool games are where you want them to find the issues.
I disagree. I purchased (unwittingly) the rugby WC package. Not the quarter finals packages. (Semi and final are free to air)
As a paying customer it should be sorted before it starts not during the time when the package represents the investment.
I don’t go to to a new restaurant, having a degustation with the expectation that if the dessert is ok and the entrees, secondi and main are below standard, that the whole experience is value for money.
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@Bovidae said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
Spark Sport will lose millions on this, not to mention a lot of goodwill.
Not sure about that. They had 130,000 streams at peak. At $75 typical per user, that covers their buyin - and there'd be a heap of people not logged in who were out/at mates places (like me).
now throw in the sponsorship dollars, money from TVNZ, and the pubs/clubs costings, and it'll stack up just fine.
The reputation, on the other hand... (noting I'm loving streaming compared to satellite. On demand is grea, and the quality is fantastic)
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@Machpants said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
I certainly applied for the 15% back
Thanks for the heads up, made me read the Spark email properly
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@Machpants said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:
I certainly applied for the 15% back
I will too.
BTW, what surround sound format is everyone getting with their streams? Only stereo 2.0 ch?
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I far prefer the streaming and on-demand coverage than bloody Sky, so I'm willing to cut Spark a bit of slack for taking a risk but at the same time moving NZ forward away from dinosaurs like Sky.