Tag: NDS

  • ThinkAnalytics focuses on India expansion, hires former TiVo & Zee exec Samir Narsiker

    MUMBAI: ThinkAnalytics, a developer of the world’s most-widely deployed TV search and recommendations engine, is strengthening its presence in India. Samir Narsiker has been appointed as the vice-president to head business development activities in India and neighbouring countries.

    ThinkAnalytics already has a global R&D team in Pune. Based out of Mumbai, Narsiker will report to Singapore-based senior VP – APAC region Alan Dishington.

    Narsiker is a seasoned industry professional with a proven track record. Prior to joining ThinkAnalytics, he was the director of business development at TiVo / Rovi. He has also held senior positions at Ericsson, Cisco, NDS, Dish TV and Zee TV Group.

    “We already have a substantial number of customers in India. With Narsiker spearheading our efforts locally, we are anticipating even stronger growth. In particular, he will be responsible for expanding Thinkanalytics Search and Recommendations platform and the leading ThinkInsight customer and video insight platform to local TV and video providers,” ThinkAnalytics founder and CTO Peter Docherty said.

  • Neo@Ogilvy names NDs of SEO and Mobile

    Neo@Ogilvy names NDs of SEO and Mobile

    MUMBAI: The full service digital arm of the the Ogilvy Group, Neo@Ogilvy has made a few appointments. Anil Singh joins Neo@Ogilvy as national director of SEO and Megha Ahuja will take on the role of national director (mobile) Neo@Ogilvy.

     

    On the appointments, Neo@Ogilvy president and country head Sanjay Ramakrishnan said: “It’s great to have Anil and Megha join the neo@ogilvy team. One of the goals at Neo is to build deep domain capabilities across each aspect of digital marketing – Search, Mobile, Social and Display. The depth of capabilities is going to matter even more in the ever changing digital landscape. Anil and Megha are specialists in their domains and bring in vast amount of knowledge and experience in the SEO and Mobile space and I am sure it’s going to benefit all our clients.”

     

    Singh brings in over 13 years of work experience in the digital space that spans various sectors. His expertise is specifically in SEO and prior to this he had spent seven years at Interactive Avenues, building the SEO practice from scratch. 

     

    Ahuja comes to us with a background that covers seven years in strategy, account management and digital marketing. Her exposure cuts across FMCG, auto, travel, telecom, media, healthcare and paints.

     

    They will both be based in Delhi

  • Digitisation: Cisco ships 1.3 mn STBs to India in Q4

    Digitisation: Cisco ships 1.3 mn STBs to India in Q4

    MUMBAI: Cisco, which acquired NDS, has won a significant standard definition (SD) set-top box business in India for the quarter ending January, benefitting from India‘s move towards mandatory digitisation.

    Cisco shipped 1.3 million boxes in the fourth quarter compared with 850,000 in the trailing three-month period, with a large portion of the increase coming from India.

    Cisco CEO John Chambers remarked that the company has “been more selective in the business we are taking in terms of set-top boxes and the lowest margin set-top box business in particular.”

    “Cisco has been able to retain attractive margins delivering set-top boxes in India because the engagements are based on end-to-end services. These engagements include Cisco headend equipment (notably, cable modem terminations or CMTS), middle ware, and conditional access systems in addition to the set-top boxes,” comments Sam Rosen, practice director at ABI Research.

    ABI Research‘s Set-Top Box Database has provided further details.

    Chinese set-top box manufacturers ChangHong and Jiuzhou surged in unit shipments in the third quarter of 2012 and together grew 66 per cent sequentially to nearly 5 million units from 3 million in the prior quarter. The tracked market grew approximately 10 per cent worldwide.

    ChangHong serves primarily the Asian markets, while Jiuzhou has more of a mix of domestic and international business.

    “Asian market strength within the set-top box sector is no surprise. North American and Western European markets are largely flat as Asian markets grow and African markets are expected to open up in the next few years,” continues Rosen.

    “Western manufacturers are using end-to-end strategies, as shown by Cisco, while Asian manufacturers are operating at lower margins and aiming to compete on price within low-ARPU Asian markets.”

  • NDS launches state-of-the-art R&D campus in Bangalore

    NDS launches state-of-the-art R&D campus in Bangalore

    MUMBAI: Cisco-owned NDS has launched its new R&D campus in Bangalore as it reaches 12 years of operations in India.

    The new campus is NDS’ largest R&D facility and will support development for nearly 50 per cent of the company’s service provider customers around the world.

    Spread across 330,000 sq. ft, the state-of-the-art facilities R&D campus is capable of scaling up from its current 2,100 skilled technical and development employees.

    The new R&D campus was inaugurated by Cisco’s Service Provider Video Technology Group SVP and GM Jesper Andersen.

    While the Bangalore Centre supports innovative development worldwide, the R&D centre in India also strives to provide locally-developed solutions and set-top-box integration services specifically for the Indian market, the company said in a statement.

    Solutions developed locally in Bangalore enable the launch of digital platforms with a full roadmap of features and functionality for small and medium-sized operators looking to digitalize their service ahead of the deadlines in the mandate, including hosted solutions to enable a fully managed service that reduces upfront software, hardware and integration cost.

    The NDS R&D centre in Bangalore plays a key role in the company’s global development activity, with full product management and product ownership. The centre provides support for market-leading operators worldwide including Astro (Malaysia), BSkyB (UK), CCTV (China), DIRECTV (US) and Sky Italia (Italy) to name but a few.

  • NDS to deploy its advanced solutions for SCTV in China

    NDS to deploy its advanced solutions for SCTV in China

    MUMBAI: NDS, a subsidiary of Cisco, has collaborated with one of China‘s largest cable operator Sichuan Cable TV Network (SCTV) to deploy advanced functionality that will provide an enriched subscriber experience with greater flexibility for over 15 million subscribers.

    SCTV will employ a number of solutions from NDS, including NDS MediaHighway set-top box middleware, XTV DVR technology, an electronic programme guide (EPG) and NDS Dynamic advanced EPG advertising. VideoGuard, the world‘s leading conditional access (CA) technology, secures SCTV‘s service to ensure revenues and provide anti-roaming protection between regional operations.

    According to NDS, the deployment, which addresses 131 branches and 15 million subscribers, is one of the largest feature upgrades of its kind in China and will enable access to HD services across the entire province.

    SCTV GM Guo Jianxin said, "We have been working with NDS for over a decade and are delighted with what we have achieved together – an advanced platform that truly utilises our network to get the best for the subscriber. NDS has shown strong technology and support capabilities in enabling such an exceptional user experience." He added "We look forward to NDS‘ continued support as we evolve our service."

    NDS Asia Pacific VP and GM Sales said, "SCTV are taking great steps to provide their subscribers with the best possible experience across their entire network – a substantial task, and one that we are extremely proud to be working with them on in such close collaboration. With underpinning technologies from NDS, SCTV have the foundations to enable continued innovation and enhancement of their service and we are excited to support them in their next endeavour."

  • NDS, CyberLink to deliver TV entertainment to PCs

    NDS, CyberLink to deliver TV entertainment to PCs

    MUMBAI: NDS, the leading provider of technology solutions for digital pay-TV, and CyberLink, a world leader in digital home software solutions, have partnered to integrate NDS VideoGuard PC technology with CyberLink’s PowerCinema home entertainment solution for PCs.

    PowerCinema supports full TV services including live broadcast channels, digital video recording (DVR) functions, Electronic Program Guides (EPGs), secure content downloads, on-demand services, and Video-on Demand (VOD). By integrating the NDS VideoGuard® technology, PowerCinema enables operators to expand their services to PC owners, and extend their market reach.

    The VideoGuard PC solution uses hardware-based security and a USB VideoGuard Key™ to provide a secure way of extending content usage rights beyond the set-top box. The VideoGuard PC solution ensures that you can extend your existing services such as broadcast TV and VOD to PCs. It also maintains secure storage for the ultimate solution of content protection convergence.

    “Our partnership with such a ubiquitous PC technology as CyberLink PowerCinema presents a win-win situation for our pay-TV operator customers, PC vendors, and consumers”, said Joseph Deutsch, Vice President of Product Marketing, NDS. “Because VideoGuard combines CA and DRM to protect TV services as well as the licensing and content rights, operators can rely on secure content transfer between DVRs, PCs, and Portable Media Players (PMPs). Users can therefore enjoy their high-definition content on their PCs along with the flexibility to move it to PMP devices or CDs without compromising the content owner’s rights.”

    Alice H. Chang, CEO of CyberLink added: “CyberLink PowerCinema offers a complete TV solution for enjoying high-definition digital TV from satellite, cable and IPTV service providers. By working with NDS to integrate VideoGuard PC, we now support the world’s leading conditional access technology for premium pay-TV content. This collaboration delivers an extremely valuable solution for PC companies and pay-TV operators who can now expand TV’s reach onto a new PC platform within the digital home.”

    “We are delighted to integrate VideoGuard PC into PowerCinema” continued Chang. “We have decided to partner with NDS, a company that has the industry’s best track record for conditional access and digital rights management. This ensures that pay-TV operators will see our “Cyberlink inside” PCs as a natural extension to their network and provide subscribers the freedom to enjoy the best services and content beyond the living room”.

    This solution for the PC market follows NDS’s earlier integration of VideoGuard Mobile and Electronic Service Guide (ESG) with CyberLink’s Mobile DTV player, enabling any pay-TV operator to provide a true end-to-end secure multi-platform, multi-network service.

  • NDS completes acquisition of Jungo

    NDS completes acquisition of Jungo

    MUMBAI: Pay TV technology firm NDS has completed the acquisition of 100 per cent of the share capital of Jungo.

    Jungo provides residential and business gateway software platforms and applications. Jungo’s flagship products, OpenRG – the residential gateway software platform and OpenSMB – the small and medium gateway software platform enable Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) to bring broadband customer premises equipment (CPE) such as Residential Gateways, triple play gateways, office-in-a-box gateway, firewall/VPN routers to market quickly.

    Jungo also develops USBware, a complete embedded USB software stack for mobile handsets, set top boxes and other consumer devices, and WinDriver, – a driver development toolkit that enables developers to create custom device drivers for multitude of operating systems.

    NDS last month had announced plans to acquire Jungo. The acquisition NDS says bolsters its position in the growing broadband television market Jungo’s products and expertise further accelerate introduction of new end-to-end solutions for the converging broadcast/broadband market.

  • NDS expands Indian ops with new office in Mumbai

    NDS expands Indian ops with new office in Mumbai

    MUMBAI: With Conditional acces coming in next year and DTH taking hold in the country the time is right for television technology firms to take a serious look at India. One such firm is the News Corp owned NDS, which provides technology solutions for digital pay-TV.

    It has opened a dedicated sales and support operation in Mumbai. NDS chairman and CEO Dr Abe Peled, said, “NDS has had a research and development facility in Bangalore for over five years. This has grown to nearly 600 employees. NDS Bangalore is pivotal in our ability to roll out state-of-the-art technologies, such as advanced middleware solutions, digital video recorders (DVR) and interactive TV applications, to some of the world’s largest broadcasters.

    “The opening of the NDS Mumbai office, is in recognition that the Indian market itself is ready for the wide-scale deployment of digital pay-TV. NDS has been growing at a compound rate of 15 per cent. We have 66.6 million active Smart Cards using our VideoGuard for conditional access globally. Our middleware is present in 45 million set top boxes. 4.2 million of our Digital Video Recorder (DVR) software has been shipped. Our innovation in DVR shows that we are ken on merging technologies. DVR marks a fundamental change in how people watch television. This basically is a shift from a time viewing paradigm to a content viewing one. ”

    As of now NDS has two clients in India – the Tata Sky direct to home (DTH) service and MSO Hathway Cable Datacom. A point of note is that both companies are News Corp affiliates by virtue of the fact that Star has a 20 per cent equity in Tata Sky and a 26 per cent stake in Hathway.

    Peled claims that NDS provides a competitive advantage because its services go beyond just securing content. “Our message to the cable fraternity is that you cannot afford not to have NDS. There is this notion that we are expensive. But when we have dialogues with them I think that they will be surprised at our edge. After all it is a long term investment for them and it is important to choose the right partner.”

    30 per cent of NDS’ revenue goes into research and development activities says Peled. NDS India VP, GM Vladimir Ruppo says that the Bangalore center is fully responsible for delivery and product ownership. “The focus is on the Mediahighway middleware which is a software glue within the set top box and can also act as an end to end solution. It is built on Modular Architecture and can work on any set top box. It has already been integrated with 60 set top box vendors. Right now the Bangalore center is working on
    developing a new Elecvtroni9c programme Guide (EPG).

    “This solution is aimed at allowing a broadcaster to make dynamic changes and also the user can have a richer experience. The subscriber will be allowed to choose his/ her EPG scheme. The Bangalore office is also working an a solution for enabling mobile TV and also on high definition. It can also offer an end to end IPTV solution which will offer IP connectivity.”

    Coming back to its existing deals in India NDS end-to-end systems are deployed by Tata Sky to offer a range of digital and interactive TV services that give their subscribers greater choice, control and convenience. The NDS systems deployed include NDS VideoGuard conditional access solution (CAS),MediaHighway middleware, and a bouquet of interactive

    TV applications including the electronic programme guide (EPG) for viewer navigation. The PEG was customised to suit the broadcaster’s requirements.

    For example there is a favourite channels feature which offers a display of key channels. Then there is the parental control feature which allows for disabling of channels deemed inappropriate for children by their parents. The EPG also sports multi lingual capabilities. So a bradcaster can offer a feed in multiple languages and the user can select accordingly. There is also fingerprinting to combat piracy.NDS points out that the main aim was to make the EPG simple use for anyone from 7-70 years of age. For Hathway NDS provided a customised EPG.

  • NDS acquires residential gateways software firm Jungo

    NDS acquires residential gateways software firm Jungo

    MUMBAI: Pay television technology provider NDS has acquired residential gateways software firm Jungo. Jungo NDS says brings experience in embedded software for home networks and IP service delivery devices.

    The acquisition NDS says bolsters its position in the growing broadband television market Jungo’s products and expertise further accelerate introduction of new end-to-end solutions for the converging broadcast/broadband market.

    Jungo’s market presence in major telecom firms will help NDS promote its Synamedia IPTV system offerings.
    The acquisition cost $107.5 million in cash This includes $17 million of earn-out payment contingent on the attainment of certain fiscal targets for the 12-month period following completion. The completion of the acquisition is expected to occur during the first calendar quarter of next year.

    Jungo’s numerous innovations include OpenRG, a complete and integrated middleware software platform for deployment on network devices in the digital home and small office including triple play residential gateways, home/SOHO routers, wireless access points, cable/DSL routers and voice gateways. Jungo’s customers are leading residential gateway manufacturers like Actiontec, Cisco, Pirelli, Sagem, Siemens and Westell, who sell their residential gateways to major broadband pay-TV operators such as France Telecom, NTT, Qwest, Telecom Italia, Verizon and others.

    Residential gateways, have grown in sophistication, and are increasingly deployed by telcos as the main service termination point in the customer premises for the delivery of a variety of value added services including broadband data, IPTV, voice over internet protocol (VoIP) telephony, video telephony and convergent wireless/wireline telephony. The residential gateway and the software contained in it act as the interface between the broadband network and the various consumer electronic devices that are attached in the home network including IPTV set-top boxes.

    The residential gateway plays a key role in controlling the quality and management of the individual services, such as video, data andtelephony. Providing the key underlying software for both the residential gateway and the set-top box will allow NDS to offer a unique solution for an enhanced, optimised and managed video over broadband service. In addition, the collaboration between the two devices in the home network will accelerate the ntroduction of new and innovative convergent services such as enabling the set-top box to access music, video and pictures stored on PCs in the home network, archiving of digital content stored on the DVR and video conferencing via VoIP.

    NDS president and CEO Dr Abe Peled said, “The acquisition of Jungo positions NDS to better serve the ever-increasing need of pay-TV and telecom network operators to offer reliable video over broadband services. We are extremely excited about joining forces with the Jungo team to achieve our shared vision of securing and enabling content any time anywhere and on any device. We are of course committed to serving all of Jungo’s current customers after the transaction closes, as well as helping the Jungo team expand their market penetration worldwide.”

    Jungo will continue to operate as a separate unit within NDS under the leadership of the current management team. It will focus its activities on the residential gateway software market while closely collaborating with other NDS business groups to forge stronger relationships with broadband customers and to offer new and innovative end-to-end solutions.

    Jungo CEO Ofer Vilenski commented, “This is an exciting time for Broadband. Residential gateways are enabling television, data services, telephony and a host of new services to be delivered over IP networks. Our association with NDS will allow both companies to deliver to consumers new and innovative applications and services. We are delighted about joining NDS, and about the confidence our customers will have using our products, now backed by such an accomplished and innovative company. Jungo’s success was made possible by our extremely talented employees, whose expertise and teamwork gave us the ability to define and lead
    this market.”

    Joel Fisch, Director, Intel Capital/Israel, Digital Home Investments and a Jungo investor said, “Following our initial investment, Intel and Jungo joined forces to bring Linux-based solutions to the embedded gateway
    market. Jungo and Intel both continue to derive great value from this long-standing relationship which has served both parties well for the past five years. Intel Capital has supported Jungo in its financing rounds and is pleased to see Jungo become part of NDS, a great company with which Intel works closely.”

  • ‘Fall in STB prices make digitisation affordable in low ARPU countries.’ : Dr. Abe Peled – NDS chairman & CEO

    ‘Fall in STB prices make digitisation affordable in low ARPU countries.’ : Dr. Abe Peled – NDS chairman & CEO

    With conditional access system (Cas) coming in next year and DTH already in, the time is right for television technology firms to take a serious look at India. One such firm is NDS, which provides technology solutions for digital pay-TV. It has opened a dedicated sales and support operation in Mumbai. Indiantelevision.com’s Ashwin Pinto caught up with NDS chairman and CEO Dr. Abe Peled for a lowdown on the company’s plans and the emerging digital age.

     

    Excerpts:

    For NDS, DTH is a high revenue earner. How is the company gearing up to new delivery technologies, particularly at a time when investments are coming into IPTV and growth in DTH subscribers is slowing?

    The market for satellite is getting competitive and complex because of triple play. We have 70 per cent of our revenues coming from DTH. We expect our growth in this area to stay strong as DTH service providers are going in for advanced technologies. We will benefit not primarily from subscriber growth but because of penetration of new technologies. We, for instance, have shipped 4.2 million digital video recorders (DVRs) and there is a scope for explosion in this segment as prices drop. But we realise that IPTV is also offering opportunity and have 14 different contracts including Yahoo in Japan which has 200,000 subscribers.

     

    You have just acquired for $107.5 million Jungo Ltd. which is a leading provider of software for residential gateways. Will this help you penetrate the broadband television market?

    It will definitely help us better serve the telecom network operators to offer reliable video over broadband services. We are looking at acquisitions in the IPTV and mobile space even as pay-TV operators are looking at different delivery platforms.

     

    With Cas coming in next year and DTH already present, how is NDS tapping the growing opportunity in India?

    We actually started selling our products in India three years back with Hathway Cable & Datacom. The reason why DTH and Cas are coming in now is that the technology is sufficiently inexpensive to be able to be used even in countries where subscriber revenue is a few dollars each month. The first set-top box (STB) launched by DirecTV in the US cost $700. But now the cost of the STB is below $50. Also, the cost of digital compression has fallen. All this makes digitisation affordable in countries which have low ARPUs (average revenue per user). China and India are key growth markets for us.

    NDS is seen as a high-cost encryption system. Do you have a pricing strategy for the low ARPU countries like India?

    We have a product called VideoGuard which addresses this issue. There is a myth spread by our competitors that we are not affordable. We are very competitive and cable operators will have to take a long term view. It is not the Cas mandate that they have to service but also look at interactive features. Besides, we see a consolidation take place in the cable TV industry here.

     

    DTH has grown wherever there has been premium content. How do you see the Indian DTH market evolve?

    I have a word of caution. While we would like to supply technology to lots of people, the experience is that in satellite very few places have room for more than one player; it is just not cost effective. In France, the two operators merged this year. The US has two operators as it is a large country. So maybe India will follow the US. But surely there can’t be space for so many players who have expressed their intent to join the fray. Exclusive content is also not allowed and the sectoral cap on DTH of 20 per cent stake by broadcasters can seriously hamper big capital coming into the business. But Tata Sky is off to a good start. And with DVR prices falling, we see it as an incentive to push digitisation.

     

    Are you in talks with the major telcos like Reliance Infocomm for IPTV?

    We are looking at expanding business in India and are in talks with several companies. But I can’t give any specific details. We have opened office in Mumbai specifically for this purpose.

     

    Are you also ramping up the research and development facility in Bangalore?

    We have almost 600 people in our Bangalore lab and are still hiring. We have just moved into our new office premises which can house double the capacity we are operating in now. Bangalore is a key part of our research and development operations. The EPG (electronic programme guide) was developed out of here and the middleware was adapted for our two clients, Tata Sky and Hathway, in India.

    What are the challenges that lie ahead for NDS?

    As the media landscape changes, pay TV operators are facing more competition. There are new modes of delivering and distributing content that perhaps bypass traditional avenues. Our challenge is firstly to help our pay TV customers embrace new technologies and broaden the entertainment experience that they offer. At the same time, we want to work with telecom firms or people who want to distribute content directly to the PC or are keen to get into triple services play. We will be an enabler in this changing, fluid media landscape.

     

    How has NDS been able to quickly identify consumer tastes and preferences with evolving technology?

    While consumers are not our direct customers, our success critically depends on them enjoying the entertainment experience. For example, in the early days of interactive television the first instinct was to say that we will allow consumers the technology to access the web to view television. We did not do that, as we understood that is not the case. We, instead, moved towards enhancing the television experience, which means interactive sports and other programmes. Companies came to us wanting to sell stuff through interactive TV. MTV wanted to sell music CDs. But we learned quickly that there isn’t a good enough business model to do that. The margins are not enough after you account for all the costs. We focussed on things that allowed channels to increase their viewership share like interactive quizzing. This way they could hike their ad rates. One of the key lessons was that T-commerce does not really work. We are working with Nickelodeon in the UK for games that you can overlay onto the programme.

     

    There is something called Pie in the face. So if you score enough points you can throw pie on an actors face. These things enhance the television experience.

    Is there a resistance from consumers for digital TV?

    The only resistance from the consumer is the price. They appreciate what the DVR and EPG have done. Price is determined by two factors. One is the absolute cost of the technology, which is coming down. Second is the business model of the operator. Will they bundle the cost into subscription and spread it out over several years or expect consumers to pay upfront? That is what dictates the rate of adoption. If the payment asked for upfront is modest, the adoption is quite quick. If the upfront is higher, the adoption is slower.

    What are the key markets for NDS in terms of revenue?

    The US accounts for 35 per cent of our revenues while 20 per cent comes from the UK. Asia is about 11 per cent. Our hope is that in five years time Asia will contribute at least 20 per cent. Last year in China, one million STBs with our technology were deployed in Shenzhen. This year we expect three million deployments.

    Market for DTH service providers is getting competitive & complex because of triple play

    Has China been a more difficult market to penetrate vis-a-vis the rest of Asia as you need to show demonstrable commitment and the fact that the Chinese government takes a personal interest in how TV technology develops?

    The Chinese government takes an active interest in content. I don’t think that it takes a greater interest in technology than governments in other countries. We have a small development lab in Beijing as we are committed to it. The challenge is that there is no premium content that an operator can offer. So digitilisation is a result of government initiatives rather than a demand from consumers for getting more premium content. NDS has contracts with the larger Chinese provinces.

    How is NDS coping in the face of competitors like Kudelski and Irdeto?

    In terms of scale, NDS has 66.6 million STBs deployed worldwide. Irdeto has two to three million. Kudelski, a Swiss firm, is our main rival but we are ahead. The fact that we have so many deployments gives us the scale to invest in research and development. That enables our technologies to be more sophisticated and secure.

     

    Secondly NDS has a much broader offering for pay TV operators. While conditional access is necessary, you have other technologies like interactivity and games. None of our competitors have this broad range of technological capabilities. It is not just about providing Cas but also about providing an enhanced experience. We are at much better place to do that vis-avis our competitors. Our competitors can offer price but we are competitive there as well.

    NDS recently was ranked as the top research and development investor among all UK-based software companies. Could you talk about your R&D centers and their importance?

    We believe in being a leader in television technology. We spend over 30 per cent of our revenues on research and development. We have centres in Israel, UK, Bangalore, France, Korea, US etc.

    Is NDS also working in the mobile sphere which allows for content viewing anytime, place?

    We have a DVB H system that we are doing trials with. Korea is the most advanced country in terms of mobile deployment. We are doing a trial there with WiFi Hotspots. If you go into that Wi Fi it will pick up different channels that you can watch by streaming.

    Finally what are the major changes you see in the digital television landscape five years from now in India and Asia?

    A large percentage of homes will have a box. It will offer interactive TV. A percentage of that will be DVR I would hope at least eight per cent. A similar percentage will have broadband capabilities. I am not sure about the potential of High Definition. It will be a small percentage.