Skip to content
  • Categories
Collapse

The Silver Fern

  • Tipping
  • Team Sheets
  • Highlights
  • Results
    • All Blacks

      Search every All Blacks Test. Filter results by year, opposition, location, venue, city and RWC stage

    • Super Rugby

      Search every Super Rugby since match 1996

    • NPC

      Search NPC results. Only first division matches from 1976-2005. All results from the 14 team competition (2006-present) are included

Spark Sport

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Sports Talk
786 Posts 70 Posters 43.2k Views 2 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • nzzpN nzzp

    I'm in the minority - I think this is great. Twenty bucks a month for cricket, and a bunch of stuff on top - I'm in.

    $240 for all home cricket for a year (unless you sign up with Spark). Sounds good, can't wait.

    BovidaeB Offline
    BovidaeB Offline
    Bovidae
    wrote on last edited by
    #624

    @nzzp Have Spark given any guarantee that the price will remain at $20 per month? Someone has to pay for this new sporting content, and that's usually the consumer.

    The big winner here will be NZR. They should be able to name their price as both Sky and Spark will be fighting hard for these rights. Sky's survival depends on retaining rugby.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
    2
    • GodderG Offline
      GodderG Offline
      Godder
      wrote on last edited by
      #625

      Good to see competition finally actually happening. I assume TVNZ haven't completely forgotten how to film live sport, or if they have, still have contacts who remember, so maybe part of the deal is TVNZ assisting with broadcasting.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • BovidaeB Offline
        BovidaeB Offline
        Bovidae
        wrote on last edited by
        #626

        I look forward to the first ODI or T20 game in Wellington on Spark Sport.

        Welcome from Sky Stadium.... 🤣

        1 Reply Last reply
        4
        • BovidaeB Bovidae

          @nzzp Have Spark given any guarantee that the price will remain at $20 per month? Someone has to pay for this new sporting content, and that's usually the consumer.

          The big winner here will be NZR. They should be able to name their price as both Sky and Spark will be fighting hard for these rights. Sky's survival depends on retaining rugby.

          nzzpN Offline
          nzzpN Offline
          nzzp
          wrote on last edited by
          #627

          @Bovidae said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

          @nzzp Have Spark given any guarantee that the price will remain at $20 per month? Someone has to pay for this new sporting content, and that's usually the consumer.

          The big winner here will be NZR. They should be able to name their price as both Sky and Spark will be fighting hard for these rights. Sky's survival depends on retaining rugby.

          Frankly, I ditched satellite sky a couple of years ago as I just wasn't getting value for money. With a young family, going to all the Blues home games, I was struggling to watch more than a game or two a fortnight. That worked out to twenty to forty dollars a game -- and while I love me some rugby, that's getting a bit silly.

          Basically, if you're a big sport consumer (as I was as a student), Sky was awesome. When I don't have time, and have to pick and choose, having streaming makes a massive difference. Delayed start, no need to record, multiple devices can play it, can view it remotely when away from home, all big bonusses in my opinion.

          Sky also treated customers like crap. Didn't care, didn't invest in any proper technology; their new CEO seems switched on, but they felt like the very example of a sunset industry. Hopefully the competition means both parties lift their game

          BovidaeB 1 Reply Last reply
          3
          • SnowyS Snowy

            @Yeetyaah said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

            @Baron-Silas-Greenback Why?

            I'll start.

            Ads. I record the cricket and fast forward through the ads. This is really difficult with streaming due to not having a moving picture - just time. More important with cricket as they squeeze them between overs.

            My internet connection is shit and is unlikely to change for the next 6 years. Buffering, freezing, restarting, all issues.

            If people thought competition for sky was good, now we are likely to have to pay BOTH providers to get all of the content that I want to watch. I am at the moment for RWC.

            I will think of more.

            sharkS Offline
            sharkS Offline
            shark
            wrote on last edited by
            #628

            @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

            @Yeetyaah said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

            @Baron-Silas-Greenback Why?

            I'll start.

            Ads. I record the cricket and fast forward through the ads. This is really difficult with streaming due to not having a moving picture - just time. More important with cricket as they squeeze them between overs.

            My internet connection is shit and is unlikely to change for the next 6 years. Buffering, freezing, restarting, all issues.

            If people thought competition for sky was good, now we are likely to have to pay BOTH providers to get all of the content that I want to watch. I am at the moment for RWC.

            I will think of more.

            That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

            nzzpN SnowyS 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • sharkS shark

              @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

              @Yeetyaah said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

              @Baron-Silas-Greenback Why?

              I'll start.

              Ads. I record the cricket and fast forward through the ads. This is really difficult with streaming due to not having a moving picture - just time. More important with cricket as they squeeze them between overs.

              My internet connection is shit and is unlikely to change for the next 6 years. Buffering, freezing, restarting, all issues.

              If people thought competition for sky was good, now we are likely to have to pay BOTH providers to get all of the content that I want to watch. I am at the moment for RWC.

              I will think of more.

              That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

              nzzpN Offline
              nzzpN Offline
              nzzp
              wrote on last edited by
              #629

              @shark said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

              That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

              So, right now, you can sign up for Spark for the summer, and get all the domestic cricket for about $120. That's just over a month of Sky.

              I have no issue with this; they have very low overheads, it's a different model. Plus, you don't need any infrastructure to deliver - the number of people who won't be able to stream is less than 15%, and dropping.

              Crunching some numbers, they need 8000 subscribers for a full year to cover the costs at $20/month. That's a business proposition I can handle as Spark.

              canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • nzzpN nzzp

                @shark said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

                So, right now, you can sign up for Spark for the summer, and get all the domestic cricket for about $120. That's just over a month of Sky.

                I have no issue with this; they have very low overheads, it's a different model. Plus, you don't need any infrastructure to deliver - the number of people who won't be able to stream is less than 15%, and dropping.

                Crunching some numbers, they need 8000 subscribers for a full year to cover the costs at $20/month. That's a business proposition I can handle as Spark.

                canefanC Offline
                canefanC Offline
                canefan
                wrote on last edited by
                #630

                @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                @shark said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

                So, right now, you can sign up for Spark for the summer, and get all the domestic cricket for about $120. That's just over a month of Sky.

                I have no issue with this; they have very low overheads, it's a different model. Plus, you don't need any infrastructure to deliver - the number of people who won't be able to stream is less than 15%, and dropping.

                Crunching some numbers, they need 8000 subscribers for a full year to cover the costs at $20/month. That's a business proposition I can handle as Spark.

                Sky saw the future and tried to merge with Vodafone. Ironically they got blocked by Spark

                nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • sharkS shark

                  @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                  @Yeetyaah said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                  @Baron-Silas-Greenback Why?

                  I'll start.

                  Ads. I record the cricket and fast forward through the ads. This is really difficult with streaming due to not having a moving picture - just time. More important with cricket as they squeeze them between overs.

                  My internet connection is shit and is unlikely to change for the next 6 years. Buffering, freezing, restarting, all issues.

                  If people thought competition for sky was good, now we are likely to have to pay BOTH providers to get all of the content that I want to watch. I am at the moment for RWC.

                  I will think of more.

                  That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

                  SnowyS Offline
                  SnowyS Offline
                  Snowy
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #631

                  @shark said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                  I've voted with my wallet

                  I voted with my wallet too. I'm a rugby fan, a RWC comes around every 4 years, I'm going to watch it and not cut off my nose to spite my face.

                  Spark weren't stupid they targeted RWC because they knew they would get a decent take up. I'm pretty sure they had a business plan to keep getting content even if they had a low turnout for RWC. So you not buying it probably hasn't had a huge effect. Enjoying the tournament?

                  sharkS 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • canefanC canefan

                    @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                    @shark said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                    That second to last sentence. This is your fault. I've voted with my wallet and not bought the Spark package. Anyone and everyone who has purchased the Spark package has encouraged Spark to expand. Bah.

                    So, right now, you can sign up for Spark for the summer, and get all the domestic cricket for about $120. That's just over a month of Sky.

                    I have no issue with this; they have very low overheads, it's a different model. Plus, you don't need any infrastructure to deliver - the number of people who won't be able to stream is less than 15%, and dropping.

                    Crunching some numbers, they need 8000 subscribers for a full year to cover the costs at $20/month. That's a business proposition I can handle as Spark.

                    Sky saw the future and tried to merge with Vodafone. Ironically they got blocked by Spark

                    nzzpN Offline
                    nzzpN Offline
                    nzzp
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #632

                    @canefan said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                    Sky saw the future and tried to merge with Vodafone. Ironically they got blocked by Spark

                    that's a good point.

                    Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                    SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • nzzpN nzzp

                      @canefan said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                      Sky saw the future and tried to merge with Vodafone. Ironically they got blocked by Spark

                      that's a good point.

                      Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                      SnowyS Offline
                      SnowyS Offline
                      Snowy
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #633

                      @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                      Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                      Why? Genuine question.
                      On demand is great but Sky have that anyway. So what is it?

                      The rewind, fast forward is a real pain for sports - not so much for TV / Movies.

                      nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • SnowyS Snowy

                        @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                        Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                        Why? Genuine question.
                        On demand is great but Sky have that anyway. So what is it?

                        The rewind, fast forward is a real pain for sports - not so much for TV / Movies.

                        nzzpN Offline
                        nzzpN Offline
                        nzzp
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #634

                        @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                        @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                        Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                        Why? Genuine question.
                        On demand is great but Sky have that anyway. So what is it?

                        The rewind, fast forward is a real pain for sports - not so much for TV / Movies.

                        I covered this in my previous response (maybe even in this thread?), but in a nutshell for me off the top of my head:

                        • don't have to worry about games starting, remembering to record, or having the recording cut off because the EPG was wrong. You just rock up and watch, either live, or from the start.
                        • Quality is comparable to Satellite HD (and will only go one way)
                        • It's portable and mobile. Can watch at the bach, at the airport, etc. At christmas, when I go to non-Sky households, can still put the sport on. With mobile data now, I'm comfortable watching in a bunch of places
                        • Didn't expect this, but you can shift streaming service part way through and it picks up - so I have been watching in the lounge, grab a computer to watch while rowing and it picks up where I left off. Just convenient; Sky couldn't do that
                        • content always available, don't have to record and then only have it in one place
                        SnowyS dogmeatD 2 Replies Last reply
                        2
                        • nzzpN nzzp

                          @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                          @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                          Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                          Why? Genuine question.
                          On demand is great but Sky have that anyway. So what is it?

                          The rewind, fast forward is a real pain for sports - not so much for TV / Movies.

                          I covered this in my previous response (maybe even in this thread?), but in a nutshell for me off the top of my head:

                          • don't have to worry about games starting, remembering to record, or having the recording cut off because the EPG was wrong. You just rock up and watch, either live, or from the start.
                          • Quality is comparable to Satellite HD (and will only go one way)
                          • It's portable and mobile. Can watch at the bach, at the airport, etc. At christmas, when I go to non-Sky households, can still put the sport on. With mobile data now, I'm comfortable watching in a bunch of places
                          • Didn't expect this, but you can shift streaming service part way through and it picks up - so I have been watching in the lounge, grab a computer to watch while rowing and it picks up where I left off. Just convenient; Sky couldn't do that
                          • content always available, don't have to record and then only have it in one place
                          SnowyS Offline
                          SnowyS Offline
                          Snowy
                          wrote on last edited by Snowy
                          #635

                          @nzzp O.K. but pretty much have all of that anyway (if Sky got their act together a bit more with on demand).
                          The quality isn't comparable for some people with shit internet.
                          Sky Go did the mobile thing (I know some people have had issues with it) but I haven't.

                          Point 4 I didn't know about, that's cool.

                          I guess Sky really should lift their game for on demand. Always annoyed me that I could only get highlights of sports rather than a whole match if I hadn't recorded it.

                          nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                          2
                          • taniwharugbyT Offline
                            taniwharugbyT Offline
                            taniwharugby
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #636

                            Why cant Spark/TV1 have a dedicated channel to broadcast as well (paying customers have access)

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • SnowyS Snowy

                              @nzzp O.K. but pretty much have all of that anyway (if Sky got their act together a bit more with on demand).
                              The quality isn't comparable for some people with shit internet.
                              Sky Go did the mobile thing (I know some people have had issues with it) but I haven't.

                              Point 4 I didn't know about, that's cool.

                              I guess Sky really should lift their game for on demand. Always annoyed me that I could only get highlights of sports rather than a whole match if I hadn't recorded it.

                              nzzpN Offline
                              nzzpN Offline
                              nzzp
                              wrote on last edited by nzzp
                              #637

                              @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                              @nzzp O.K. but pretty much have all of that anyway (if Sky got their act together a bit more with on demand).

                              Yep - if Sky had a better streaming service, at a better price point, I'd seriously consider it. Right now it's only 24 hour delayed start.

                              The hardware that would sell like hotcakes would be a bluetooth remote for fastforward, rewind, pause, etc.

                              Edit: I'd buy one 🙂

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • jeggaJ Offline
                                jeggaJ Offline
                                jegga
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #638

                                My mother was bragging about how she had no issues with Spark and how she thought the people who had complaints were just moaners with nothing better to do . So the old dragon picks up the remote to show me and says “ see it’s as easy as this, just press these buttons “. Whereupon the thing shit itself and it took her five minutes to unfuck whatever went wrong . When she saw me and the old man trying not to laugh we got “ the look” from her.

                                SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • jeggaJ jegga

                                  My mother was bragging about how she had no issues with Spark and how she thought the people who had complaints were just moaners with nothing better to do . So the old dragon picks up the remote to show me and says “ see it’s as easy as this, just press these buttons “. Whereupon the thing shit itself and it took her five minutes to unfuck whatever went wrong . When she saw me and the old man trying not to laugh we got “ the look” from her.

                                  SnowyS Offline
                                  SnowyS Offline
                                  Snowy
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #639

                                  @jegga Funny.
                                  It's not the "new and scary" thing that pisses people off, most of us aren't luddites, it's simply that it isn't very good. If I'm going to change to something it really should be an improvement, not worse.

                                  As @nzzp says if Sky had their shit together they might retain some customers.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • nzzpN nzzp

                                    @Bovidae said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                                    @nzzp Have Spark given any guarantee that the price will remain at $20 per month? Someone has to pay for this new sporting content, and that's usually the consumer.

                                    The big winner here will be NZR. They should be able to name their price as both Sky and Spark will be fighting hard for these rights. Sky's survival depends on retaining rugby.

                                    Frankly, I ditched satellite sky a couple of years ago as I just wasn't getting value for money. With a young family, going to all the Blues home games, I was struggling to watch more than a game or two a fortnight. That worked out to twenty to forty dollars a game -- and while I love me some rugby, that's getting a bit silly.

                                    Basically, if you're a big sport consumer (as I was as a student), Sky was awesome. When I don't have time, and have to pick and choose, having streaming makes a massive difference. Delayed start, no need to record, multiple devices can play it, can view it remotely when away from home, all big bonusses in my opinion.

                                    Sky also treated customers like crap. Didn't care, didn't invest in any proper technology; their new CEO seems switched on, but they felt like the very example of a sunset industry. Hopefully the competition means both parties lift their game

                                    BovidaeB Offline
                                    BovidaeB Offline
                                    Bovidae
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #640

                                    @nzzp How people view sport will differ with each individual and their circumstances. Sometimes streaming has advantages, and sometimes not.

                                    Not everyone has fibre and unlimited broadband. If you lived in some rural regions you don't have the option of watching Spark Sport, Netflix etc and they rely on satellite to watch FTA TV channels.

                                    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • No QuarterN Offline
                                      No QuarterN Offline
                                      No Quarter
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #641

                                      I see a lot of criticism of Spark picking up rugby and cricket because parts of NZ don't have good enough Internet speeds, but basically no criticism of the fact that those Internet speeds are a fucking embarrassment for a first world country. They're not good enough and we should be shouting that from the hilltops to get the investment to bloody well fix it. A positive of Spark trying to move NZ into the future is that it will create a strong drive to sort it out.

                                      PaekakboyzP 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • nzzpN nzzp

                                        @Snowy said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                                        @nzzp said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                                        Streaming is the future I think. I find it way more convenient and useful than TV .. except for fast forwarding

                                        Why? Genuine question.
                                        On demand is great but Sky have that anyway. So what is it?

                                        The rewind, fast forward is a real pain for sports - not so much for TV / Movies.

                                        I covered this in my previous response (maybe even in this thread?), but in a nutshell for me off the top of my head:

                                        • don't have to worry about games starting, remembering to record, or having the recording cut off because the EPG was wrong. You just rock up and watch, either live, or from the start.
                                        • Quality is comparable to Satellite HD (and will only go one way)
                                        • It's portable and mobile. Can watch at the bach, at the airport, etc. At christmas, when I go to non-Sky households, can still put the sport on. With mobile data now, I'm comfortable watching in a bunch of places
                                        • Didn't expect this, but you can shift streaming service part way through and it picks up - so I have been watching in the lounge, grab a computer to watch while rowing and it picks up where I left off. Just convenient; Sky couldn't do that
                                        • content always available, don't have to record and then only have it in one place
                                        dogmeatD Offline
                                        dogmeatD Offline
                                        dogmeat
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #642

                                        @nzzp you can also watch from multiple devices and multiple locations live simultaneously koff koff which surprised me

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • BovidaeB Bovidae

                                          @nzzp How people view sport will differ with each individual and their circumstances. Sometimes streaming has advantages, and sometimes not.

                                          Not everyone has fibre and unlimited broadband. If you lived in some rural regions you don't have the option of watching Spark Sport, Netflix etc and they rely on satellite to watch FTA TV channels.

                                          nzzpN Offline
                                          nzzpN Offline
                                          nzzp
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #643

                                          @Bovidae said in And the winner of the RWC broadcasting rights is...:

                                          @nzzp How people view sport will differ with each individual and their circumstances. Sometimes streaming has advantages, and sometimes not.

                                          Not everyone has fibre and unlimited broadband. If you lived in some rural regions you don't have the option of watching Spark Sport, Netflix etc and they rely on satellite to watch FTA TV channels.

                                          absolutely, but internet access is only going one way. Three years ago, data caps were the norm. In three years time, I'd expect there is decent cell broadband or better to most of the population - and that will keep improving.

                                          At times I stream at a rural location, at the end of a private road, with speeds of about 4-5MB. It's OK not great - but beats the hell out of no sport.

                                          I do get it, but people made the same argument when Sky came out - that some people woudln't be able to afford it, and sport would be limited by income. Now it's the benchmark baseline, and internet access is the determinant. I get that it's not perfect,

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Search
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Search