Infographic: Sorry Hulu, Netflix still rules the living room

Netflix squarely dominates game consoles and other connected devices while Hulu still heavily relies on PC-based streaming: Thats the gist of some new data Nielsen published Wednesday that looks at the way viewers use both video services. It turns out that 58 percent of all Netflix users now watch programming on a connected or mobile device, compared to only 11 percent for Hulu. Check out detailed device-specific data in the infographic below:

Two things are worth noting: The difference isnt as surprising when you take into account that each and every one of Netflixs 25 million subscribers has access to the service on connected devices. For Hulu, the picture looks a little different, because non-PC streaming is restricted to those who pay for Hulu Plus, which is only about 1 million subscribers to date.

Also noteworthy is how dominant the Wii is in the data, which doesnt quite match up with data weve recently gotten from Sandvine. (PDF) The network management company revealed in a recent report that Sonys PlayStation 3 console is now responsible for around 30 percent of all Netflix traffic, followed by the Xbox 360 with around 25 percent. Sandvine had the Wii pegged at just 10.75 percent of Netflix streaming. The discrepancy to Nielsens data is likely to be explained by the fact that the Wii doesnt support any HD streaming, which means that each and every Wii user consumers much less bandwidth.

Regardless of whether! Netflix streaming gets dominated by the Wii or the PS3, Nielsens data serves as an important reminder that devices like the Apple TV and Google TV dont matter all that much to the average consumer.

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

< a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/OmMalik?a=bNptAtcj0bY:iDC-2CNRuXk:F7zBnMyn0Lo">

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

China Watch: Magical New Maglev, Fire the Ambassador?

Live Blog: GMIC G-Startup Competition 2011

Chinese Pinterest Huaban.com Grabs Money and Attention