V Cast Spam and Why I Don’t Do Video on My Phone

Anyone familiar with me knows that I don’t carry around the most up-to-date cell phone. I like to use my phone for phone calls, and am content to save other apps for other gadgets. Until very recently I clung to a Motorola E815. That phone took a beating, but it always worked, and I liked the feel of it in my hand.  Then a couple weeks ago I upgraded to a first-gen Motorola RAZR. The adjustment has been easy because the interface is similar to the E815, and the RAZR has already survived several drops to the pavement. So far, so good.

A few days ago on my RAZR I received my first Verizon V CAST spam messages. The first one warned me to “stay tuned” to my phone for a “hot new opportunity from Verizon Wireless.”  The second one downloaded a video for me about  ESPN MVP on V CAST. Kind of irritating, but kind of cool. After all, I’ve never watched video on my own phone.

The little promo clip had a talking head and some screenshots showing how to set up my Fantasy Football league using V CAST. The video quality was crappy to say the least, but I found myself still entranced my moving pictures on my cell phone. If I was utterly bored and standing in line somewhere, I can see myself watching more video clips on my RAZR. Why not?

But here’s the kicker. Would I pay for video on my phone today? Hardly. First, there are a million video screens in my life. I don’t need to pay for one more. Second, my phone is not today’s most powerful hardware (and I’m fine with that), so why would I use it, and its tiny screen, for resource-hogging video when I have so many other options? Third, I can justify shelling out money once for a gadget, but I hate adding to my regular monthly bills, particularly when there’s the possibility I could end up exceeding a flat-fee service rate by going over a bandwidth cap.

So here’s a message to Verizon. Want to get me hooked on mobile video? You’re going to have to send me a lot more free video, and it’s going to have to be stuff I really want to see. Fantasy Football leagues? Meh.  Send me clips from the Olympics in a week and a half. Send me clips of the Redskins when football season actually starts. Send me trailers from some of the best new TV shows scheduled for the fall. Send it all to me for free. Get me in the habit of watching video regularly on my phone, and maybe I’ll decide it’s worth paying for some content in the future. I don’t need mobile video, so you’ll have to convince me I want it badly enough to add on the monthly fee. Otherwise, my cell phone is just going to act as a cell phone for years to come.

6 thoughts on “V Cast Spam and Why I Don’t Do Video on My Phone”

  1. Of course being a former Sling Media employee and ongoing Slingbox fan, I find the concept of paying multiple times for the same content to be silly. For about what VCast or Mobi service would cost over a year, folks could pick up a Slingbox and watch *all* their existing cable or satellite programming (rather than a subset of channels and select clips), including recorded content, on a variety of platforms (PC, Mac, mobile). Just not the Moto RAZR… or iPhone. ;)

  2. Ditto. Ditto. Ditto.

    I have lots of free video podcasts on my iPhone, and all those shows waiting for me on my Tivo when I get home. I don’t know why I would pay for cell phone video in its current state. The ONLY thing I would watch on a cellphone is probably current news. And that would only work if they have enough bandwidth for CNN, Fox News and MSNBC so they can appeal to all tastes, which I doubt. And I wouldn’t be willing to pay very much if ANYTHING for it, since I’d use it so little…

  3. Well, I for one have a slingbox but refuse to pay for verizon’s exorbitant prices for data. I’ll stick with the vcast v pak on my voyager and get a few basic mobiltv channels, unlimited pre-recorded clips, and unlimited web browsing. It’s good enough for now. And I’ll be getting the Olympic coverage in a few weeks. If they start sending out lots of free videos then it starts to take away from the people who are paying for the service.

    I pay $39.99 + $15 for that vs. $80 for a blackberry I could run slingplayer on.

  4. Good point, John – not everyone needs/wants a data plan. I’m the kinda guy who is always connected and will probably always have a data plan… and as long as I have it, I may as well maximize my service. Well, not at the moment with my iPhone.

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