According to a recent Nielsen study, Americans spend 35 hours each week watching content across screens, and 94% of that is still on a traditional television. In conjunction with that, Internet Protocol TV (IPTV), a direct connection to video that is watchable on the living room TV but streamed from the Web, is gaining traction. Pat McDonough, Nielsen’s SVP Insights Analysis and Policy, says “Internet Protocol TV has grown dramatically... it doesn’t look like... ‘TV is dead, or that it’s dying yet’...” Traditional TV distribution, broadcast and cable and watching on a TV set continues to be the dominant means of ingesting video content. Much like eReaders, which saw small but noticeable gains in penetration in the last three quarters of 2011, IPTV is following suit and market penetration is on the rise. As of February 2012, 10.4% of homes had an IPTV, compared to just 4.7% that same month a year prior. In October 2011 the use of the Internet feature in IPTV-enabled homes was estimated at about 2% of their TV use. In February 2012 it jumped to about 5% in Internet-enabled homes. While traditional TV is still the major player in most households, viewing options are evolving. DVRs now appear in 44% of homes, up almost 80% since 2007. Conversely, VCRs and DVDs are down over that same time period, serving as a reminder to marketers, manufacturers and consumers alike that “the only constant is change,” says the report. The emergence of IPTV is one of a growing number of viewing options to emerge over the past decade and continues to compete with other advances for market share. Unlike other burgeoning tech-sector technologies, IPTV functionality is being built right into current and future generations of televisions, which could drive an increase in usage as penetration increases. According to Nielsen’s global survey of multi-screen media usage in May, watching video content on computers has become just as common as watching video content on television among online consumers. More than 80% of Internet respondents in 56 countries reported watching video content at home at least once a month: