Probably quite similar, but the point made by the study authors is that where previously 1 group of people - .e.g. a family - would have watched 1 TV, now every individual in that family might, potentially, be watching a different item of streamed content, simultaneously. That's analogous to have multiple TVs on at the same time...
Probably quite similar, but
Probably quite similar, but the point made by the study authors is that where previously 1 group of people - .e.g. a family - would have watched 1 TV, now every individual in that family might, potentially, be watching a different item of streamed content, simultaneously. That's analogous to have multiple TVs on at the same time...