Today Purchase of Pluto TV New Technology.
What purchase of Pluto TV trading Technology.
So what is Pluto TV?
The USA –New technology catchphrase Pluto TV
The types of advertisement-supported streaming service technology, which boasts of offering 100 channels and thousands of movies and TV shows, got purchased for $340 million this week by media giant company that owns MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central etc
The upshot for consumers: Look for shows and possibly Viacom networks on Pluto in the near future. Viacom itself has been one of the stodgier old media firms in embracing new media. Its channels are not found on popular cutting-the-cord cable TV alternatives like youtube tv serial, Hulu with Live TV and PlayStation VUE.
But in announcing the acquisition, Viacom said Pluto would act as a distribution outlet for its programs, but that cable would still be the place to see the complete Viacom network experience. Viacom's AwesomenessTV channel currently airs on Pluto TV.
It's a very different animal than most streaming services, which generally either require a monthly subscription (as in Netflix and Hulu) offer movies on demand for a fee (VUDU) or acts as an aggregator of cable TV content that's only viewable if users authenticate their cable account.
Pluto TV is a collection of live channels – some of those you've heard of, like CNBC, Cheddar TV, and CBS News, and others you haven't. Most are homegrown channels offering movie genres like comedy, horror, and romance.
In addition, many movies, mostly older titles like "Superman III," Clint Eastwood's "In the Line of Duty," the original 1968 "Funny Girl" with Barbra Streisand and even older 1937 "A Star Is Born" with Janet Gaynor are available on demand, with commercials.
Additionally, Pluto offers TV series like the original "Roseanne" series from the 1980s, "Hell's Kitchen" with Gordon Ramsey and the reality series "Kate Plus Eight."
The news offerings are vast: news channels from NBC, CBS, CNBC, Cheddar, The Young Turks, Newsmax, Bloomberg, and BBC.
When watching the movies or TV shows "on demand," as the network is ad-supported, viewers cannot fast-forward during the commercials.
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