Tag: HD programming

  • Verizon launches FIOS TV in New York and Massachusetts

    MUMBAI: Global providers of wireline and wireless communications Verizon has launched FiOS TV in New York and Massachusetts. The television service runs over high-speed fiber-optic cables wired directly to the homes. Verizon’s new service enables the company to offer television, Internet, and phone service.
    Verizon’s Retail Markets Group president Bob Ingalls said, “This is not cable TV. This is not satellite. This is FiOS TV. Customers who liked what FiOS did for their Internet connection will love what it does for their TV. We’ve harnessed the speed and capacity of broadband with the power of broadcast to create a revolutionary, new entertainment experience.”
    FiOS TV is designed to be a formidable competitor to cable and satellite and delivered over Verizon’s fiber-to-the-premises (FTTP) network. Fiber delivers sharp pictures and sound, and has the capacity to transmit a wide array of high-definition programming that is so clear and intense it seems to leap from the TV screen. It also delivers Internet download speeds of up to 30 Mbps (megabits per second) and upload speeds of up to 5 Mbps as well as high-quality voice services, states an official release.
    Verizon’s network design includes backup facilities not common to traditional cable systems, such as duplicate “super head ends” where the TV service receives national programming.
    The service includes a broad collection of all-digital programming with more than 330 total channels. Customers get a lead offer of more than 180 digital video and music channels for $39.95 a month. More than 20 high-definition channels and over 1,800 video-on-demand titles will also be available. Channels will be grouped by genres such as entertainment, sports, news, shopping, movies and family, making it easy for audiences to find their favorite programming, the release adds.
    An easy-to-use interactive programming guide that integrates HD programming, video on demand and the digital video recorder along with broadcast television into a seamless user experience. The TV service includes a dual-tuner DVR that gives customers the freedom to pause and rewind live TV, record one show while watching another, and fast forward to their favourite part of the program – all without a VCR, tapes or DVDs.

  • Broadband TV subscribers to reach 25.3 mn in 2008

    Broadband TV subscribers to reach 25.3 mn in 2008

    MUMBAI: According to a new study from Research and Markets, the number of subscribers receiving broadband-delivered TV services will rise from 1.9 million in 2004 to 25.3 million in 2008.

    Subscription revenues are projected to soar from $635 million last year to $7.2 billion in 2008. The IPTV Global Forecast: 2005-2008 report looks at the developments in IPTV platforms worldwide, including plans by SBC and BellSouth to deploy large IP TV networks in the U.S., and Verizon’s strategy to use IP TV technology to deliver VOD over its FTTP access network. In addition, China Telecom is looking to introducing broadband-delivered VOD, and continued growth is expected for PCCW’s Now Broadband TV in Hong Kong and FastWeb in Italy.

    Meanwhile Kagan Research has released a study on the economics of High Definition (HD) cable networks in the US. Kagan notes that several early HD TV cable network entrants are banking on the burgeoning growth potential of the HD market. In spite of the current limitations on bandwidth, programmers are ready to capitalize on what could be an explosive area of growth.

    A few networks already offer a full array of HD programming completely distinct from what�s available on either cable’s or satellite’s current channel lineups, while others are delivering merely a HD feed of their current standard def lineup. Whether cable networks focus on an HD simulcast or a channel with new content, all programmers must eventually move viewers from analogue based programming to digital.

    The report notes that in the US currently over 20 non-broadcast networks are offering HD programming on a daily basis, up from just six in the years between 1998 and 2003. 2005 has already seen the launch of another HD network: ESPN2 HD – a simulcast of ESPN2 – launched its service on 6 January. Going forward into 2005, plans are under way for launching nine additional HD networks.

    The eight networks classified as pure HD services, are expected to grow revenues at a CAGR of 88 per cent over the next five years and produce total revenues of $943 million. The bulk of the revenue in 2009, Kagan estimates, will come from ESPN HD with HDNet and Discovery HD taking second and third, respectively.

    On the expense side, Kagan estimates that by 2009, total expenses for the pure HD networks will be $627 mil. or $5.26 per subscriber. The 2009 per sub figure will be 68 per cent lower than the 2005 figure of $16.43. Through 2009, Kagan expects total expenses to increase at a CAGR of 42 per cent; while expense per sub should decrease at a CAGR of 25 per cent.

    With over 16 million digital sets shipped to retailers since 1998, more than 12 million of which are HDTVs, movement to advanced compression technologies such as MPEG-4 and VC-1 under way and HD awareness among consumers at record levels, the vision of an all-digital/HD country is taking hold.

    Some key factors on the side of HDTV cable network growth:

    – More than 12 million HDTV sets have been sold to U.S. consumers; bringing penetration of HD sets into TV households to 10 per cent

    – On the broadcast side, 1,373 stations are now broadcasting in digital in 211 markets serving 99.98 per centof TV homes.

    – DBS operators garnered 672,000 HD tier subscribers in 2004. This is expected to reach 11.5 million. by 2009.

    – Network migrations to high-definition feeds are prompted by the limited amount of bandwidth available on cable systems and satellite transponders.

    – MPEG-2 remains the dominant codec in the market. However a migration to MPEG-4 and/or VC-1 is just around the corner.