The high demand and falling prices for high- definition has driven an already booming TV business for the 2006 holiday shopping season in the U.S., according to NPD Group. With HDTV content selection improving and prices decreasing consumers are upgrading older, smaller TVs. Flat-panel televisions,...
Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in IPTV | Posted on 02-01-2008
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SEOUL: IPTV – internet protocol television – broadcasting over South Korean broadband networks in real-time was, until a few days ago, technically illegal. However, the country’s National Assembly last week legalized this anachronism.
According to the Assembly’s website, the country’s two largest broadband-service operators by sales, Hanarotelecom and KT Corporation are now poised to launch IPTV services as a new source of revenue.
The move comes as a welcome respite to increasingly sluggish growth in traditional broadband and telephone markets.
Revenue generated by the premium video services market, an area comprising pay-TV, mobile video, DVD, broadband video and theater/box office receipts, is expected to rise to $277 billion by 2010, up from less than $200 billion in 2006, according to a new study byiSuppli. Much of that growth will be driven by increasing revenue for pay-TV services, particularly for the fast-expanding Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) area. The pay-television industry representing about $120 billion in worldwide sales in 2006. The segment is dominated by direct-to-home satellite and digital and analog cable TV services. However, the telecom companies are entering the market with aggressive Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) offerings that are sure to spur an arms race in pay television and in quadruple-play services. IPTV is the fastest-expanding segment of the pay-TV market, with revenue expected to increase to $23.5 billion in 2010, a growth rate of 103% from $681 million in 2005.
Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in IPTV | Posted on 30-01-2007
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Despite the hype, there are benefits to be had from TV carried over the Internet
by Johna Till Johnson
January 30, 2007 (Network World) — If you’re like a lot of folks, you’re probably thinking IPTV is just a tad overhyped. Service providers from AT&T to BT to India’s Reliance Infocomm have announced IPTV initiatives. Market researcher Dittberner Associates forecasts an IPTV services market of $12 billion in 2013, an increase from virtually nothing in 2005 (now that’s a long-range crystal ball). And Microsoft has been investing heavily in the technology — a sure sign that the hype-fest is at its height.
And the arguments favoring it seem singularly lame. Not that I’ve got anything against TV — on the contrary, I’m addicted to it. (C’mon, with 500 channels, what are the odds that somewhere there’s a Vin Diesel movie on?) But at first blush, it’s hard to see how delivering TV over IP makes it appreciably better.
Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in IPTV | Posted on 28-01-2007
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The market is ready – here’s where and how to get IPTV now.
by David Cotriss
If you’re in the market for an IPTV service and you live in the U.S., chances are two companies come to mind: AT&T and Verizon. And for the most part you’re right – they are the only two operators with (somewhat) significant deployments and a decent chance for success. If you live in Europe, however, you’re much more likely to be able to get IPTV now, with a larger number of operators having much wider coverage areas. Coverage in the U.S. is much more limited, and your chances of living in a service area are somewhat slim. Nevertheless, the market is ready and growing, and more customers are signing up every day.
AT&T’s IPTV solution is working better than the company expected–and AT&T plans to ramp up deployments in the coming year, Chief Executive Officer Ed Whitacre said Thursday.
Whitacre commented on the expansion of AT&T’s IPTV service during the company’s fourth-quarter 2006 earnings call. By the end of the year, AT&T’s U-verse IPTV service will be available to 8 million homes, he said.
“Our fiber-to-the-node network is performing better than we had anticipated,” he said. “We’re getting better bandwidth both on the short and long loop links. And the customer feedback has been very good, outperforming what’s available from cable.”
So far, AT&T’s IPTV service is available in only 11 markets. And in those markets, it’s available only to a handful of subscribers. AT&T had said it expected to have service available in 15 markets earlier in 2006, but the company changed its projections toward the end of the year.
Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in IPTV, Statistics | Posted on 20-01-2007
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Technological innovations are rapidly redrawing the Chinese telco landscape. Operators are compelled to diversify in order to thrive in the competitive environment. China’s flourishing broadband environment is paving the way for IPTV to reach out to the potentially huge addressable market. In a new study, ABI Research forecasts the IPTV take-up in mainland China to pass the 23 million subscriber mark by 2012.
IPTV is the Chinese government’s platform of choice because it is aligned to its long-term plan of unifying broadband, Internet, and television. Hence the future of the industry continues to be viewed optimistically. More resources will also be allocated to making IPTV a success because it is to play an important role in multimedia communications and upcoming major events in China. According to Fong, “The growth of IPTV will remain modest for now, and take off only after 2008. Adoption will be boosted by major events such as the Beijing Olympics in 2008, and then the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai.”
For now, however, IPTV has to cope with certain bottlenecks that have been restricting growth. “While the IPTV service is regarded by the industry as a potential revenue generator, lack of content may prove a short-term barrier to increasing uptake rapidly,” says Fong. “Current program content, which is strictly controlled by media authorities and the government, is not rich enough to attract paying users, and overseas content, which is restricted and difficult to get approval for, does not help alleviate the situation.
The much speculated IPTV service by Skype, previously codenamed ‘The Venice Project ‘ is now officially out of the bag, as ‘Joost’.
The free service will allow viewers to access all kinds of television from across the world, over the Internet.The ad supported site will try to replicate the complete television experience, in full-screen, broadcast quality, along with channel flipping, and interactivity. The service is still undergoing trials, but thousands of people have been invited to download the software on trial.
Joost aims to offer TV-like experience enhanced with the choice, control and flexibility of Web 2.0, which enables broadcasters to get their program in front of a global Internet audience. Joost CEO Fredrik de Wahl says the team plans to offer studios, cable stations and anyone else who wants to distribute high-quality video over the Internet, a fast, efficient and cheap distribution method. He says the company will use the same peer-to-peer technology used in Skype and Kazaa.
The Joost menu allows users to switch channels with the click of a link, TiVo-like control of the content and access to any show, any time of the day. Users may also move forward or backward within a show and skip commercials. There is a line-up of sports, documentaries and music programming, but the team says this is just trial programming and that when the full launch takes place in the next few months, there will be more impressive content on offer.
The site also promises to provide a platform for the ‘best television content on the planet’ to bring users the shows from TV studios, as well as the specialist programs created by professionals and enthusiasts. The Joost team also reveals that they’re working on a native Macintosh Intel version and expect it to be available in the next few months. A Linux version is also in the works.
Posted by Mark Levy | Posted in IPTV, VideoGames | Posted on 08-01-2007
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MS integrates IPTV with Xbox, ships 10M 360s
January 8, 2007
Microsoft chairman and founder Bill Gates crowed to an audience at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, saying the company beat expectations by shipping 10.4 million Xbox 360s by the end of 2006 and claiming Microsoft would overtake Sony as the game console leader. He also called the Xbox 360 the “living device that does it all” referring to the console’s capability to connect to the Internet, download and play high-def video as well as the new IPTV function.
The IPTV service for the Xbox 360 is expected to launch toward the end of 2007. Microsoft plans to integrate its popular Xbox Live service, which currently counts 5 million registered members, into the IPTV software, allowing friends to connect, chat and play games while using the IPTV functionality. ”By integrating these industry-leading solutions, we are delivering on our promise to drive innovation and enable new connected entertainment experiences for consumers in a way that only Microsoft can,” said president of Microsoft’s Entertainment and Devices Division Robbie Bach.
With a plethora of consumer gadgets presented at CES, it’s dizzying. But the big question is what type of content will they deliver? Bambi Francisco interviews Daniel Ernst of Hudson Research who expects to hear content announcements at CES.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, December 31, 2006; Page N03
Ever since their invention, the television set and the home computer have remained separate devices, often in separate rooms. But next year could be the year they come together — or at least become less distinguishable.
New gizmos are coming (and many are already here) that enable you to send content from your PC to your TV, and vice versa. Just as important, these devices enable you to send content from any PC (work, home, laptop, etc.) to any TV set or video playback device you want, anywhere. And vice versa….
Say there’s a neat video on YouTube that you want to watch on your living-room TV set. Done. Say your living-room TiVo captured a show that you want to watch later on the TiVo-less TV set in the basement. Done, too. Or say — sneaky fella — you want to watch the big game on your computer while you’re at the office. Can do, too.