Tag: BIS standards

  • Cablequest to hold CAS seminar in Bangalore on 20 May

    MUMBAI: With the deadline for Conditional Access System (CAS) barely two months away, the media industry is on tenterhooks regarding its impact and successful implementation. To examine the various CAS related issues, Cablequest magazine is organising a day-long CAS seminar in Bangalore’s Hotel Atriya on 20 May 2003.
    During the course of the seminar, the Cablequest team comprising of professionals (with an experience of more than 10 years in the industry) will point out as to how the representatives of cable trade would benefit from this new change which will bring about a revolution in the country.
    According to the release, prominent persons from the industry will speak on various issues related to CAS which include the CAS bill, digital and analog technology, BIS standards, financial aspects, digital headends and getting the network ready for CAS.
    For registration and further details you could log onto the website www.cable-quest.com or call at 011-25131540. The delegates will be charged a fee of Rs 750 and Rs 1200 for two persons.
    Seminar programme
    Session-1
    The Conditional Access amendment Act 2002 
    A discussion on salient features of the Act and its implications on the business of cable operators, broadcasters and the consumers.
    Session-2
    Basics of conditional access technology
    How the technology will work for you and new scenario of programme packaging.
    Session-3
    Digital CAS 
    Highlighting the working of Digital CAS and set-top- boxes; its advantages and disadvantages.
    Session-4
    Analog CAS 
    Functioning of analog conditional access and set-top-boxes. Its advantages and disadvantages.
    Session-5
    Subscriber management and billing system 
    Hardware requirement and interfacing of SMS with CAS hardware; basic functioning; billing of subscribers and interaction with broadcasters.
    Session-6
    Financial aspects of CAS
    Financing the CAS hardware at the headend; financing options of Set-top-Boxes for the subscribers.
    Session-7
    BIS Specifications
    Specification for hardware at the headend; specification for Set-top Boxes; digital as well as analog.
    Session-8
    Scrambling techniques and open architect 
    Methods of scrambling in analog and digital systems. Functioning of open architecture; advantages and disadvantages. 
    Session-9 
    Preparing CATV Network for CAS 
    What upgrades and modifications are required to introduce different types of CAS in a Cable TV Network.
    Session-10
    Headend In The Sky (HITS)
    The concept that may become boon to small and independent operators.
    Session-11
    Implementation of CAS
    Hassles to be faced in implementing CAS; preparing oneself for 15 July 2003; preparing subscribers for the new technology; price structure; post CAS.
    Session-12
    Internet on cable and value addition 
    Providing Internet and value added services on cable; using Set-Top-Boxes as gateway to Internet, Video-on-demand etc.
    Session-13 
    HFC Networking in CAS environment 
    Using fibre optic Networking to enhance the quality & extent of a network to facilitate CAS installation.
    Fibre to home technology.
    Session-14
    Question and answer session

  • Govt. seeks details of cable headend set-up costs

    NEW DELHI: The government has asked the cable and broadcasting industry to come back with more details on the investments that are likely to be needed to be made in headends if conditional access system – facilitating addressability in Indian cable homes – is implemented. This would also form the basis for pricing of the minimum of 33 channels, which a cable operator would have to provide to subscribers as part of the basic-tier of service.

    There are some differences between the government estimates on the finances involved and that arrived at by cable operators that hampered a consensus on pricing of the basic tier of service at a meeting of the costing committee on CAS held on Thursday.

    For example, while the finance ministry, after collating data and doing mathematical calculation, feels that the cost of one channel for a headend servicing a 7 km radius would be approximately Rs 45,000, some cable operators, according to industry sources, told yesterday’s meeting that if all BIS standards are to be followed then the figure arrived at by the finance ministry would almost double per channel.

    Additionally, while government estimates put cable penetration in the metros at almost 70 per cent of the total TV homes, the cable industry representatives say it does not exceed 58-60 per cent.

    The costing committee meeting, chaired by joint secretary (broadcasting) in the I&B ministry, Rakesh Mohan, has asked the cable industry to provide it with more details on the actual finances involved to set up a headend if coaxial cable/fibre optics are laid.

    These issues are important because they are related to the pricing of the basic tier of prices which, the government says, would be fixed by it.

    The 33 free-to-air channels that are to be part of the basic tier also include three Doordarshan channels.

    However, the genres of channels that should be included in the basic tier have not yet been specified. “Specifying the genres of channels would be difficult because it will depend on the availability of free-to-air channels in a specific genre,” a cable operator told indiantelevision.com.

    For instance, it would be very difficult to include a sports channel in the basic tier of service at the moment because there are no free-to-air sports channel available. Even DD Sports is a pay channel, though Prasar Bharati is mulling making the channel free-to-air. “This move may have been necesisated so that at least DD Sports can be included in the basic tier of cable service, ” a media analyst, closely following developments related to CAS, said.

    On the pricing front, while some independent cable operators have suggested charging Rs 3 per channel for the basic tier of service (Rs 99 per month for the package), some broadcasters have suggested a much lower price in the range of Rs 45 to Rs 50.

    However, implementation of CAS in the immediate future looks bleak as the government may not hurry it through via an executive order (Ordinance) in between Parliament sessions.

    Though the official reason being cited for this delay is that if the prices of pay channels hold, there is no immediate need for CAS, it seems that the government has realised that it would be difficult to convince the President of the country to promulgate an Ordinance at a time when the country has more pressing problems compared to CAS.