The Nielsen Company has announced that its estimated variety of TV households for 2012 is dropping to 114.7 million (96.7 percent), down from 115.9 million (98.9 percent) the year before that is the primary time it’s gone down in twenty years. While some will say this marks the top of the TV era as we’ve known it , there are a few factors take into consideration, starting with how numbers are gathered — Nielsen only counts TVs which might be able to tuning into at the least one channel. In the event you’ve cut the cord and gone all internet / Blu-ray / DVD without putting up an antenna or never upgraded for digital broadcasts (as some rural or low-income homes haven’t) then your TV doesn’t count. After reviewing the numbers and watching Apocalypto twice we still can’t tell if this suggests it’s already over for linear TV or if it’s more of a brief bump by reason of an uncertain economy love it was in 1992. After all , the truth that we rented the movie on iTunes can be telling.
Roku remote for iOS updated, easier navigation features in tow
Hack enables fast refresh mode on Nook Simple Touch (video)



