Undisclosed Markets to Participate in IPTV Trial 141
prostoalex writes "Associated Press has the story that three communications corporations are doing test trials of IP-based television in undisclosed markets. From the article: "SBC Communications, the dominant local phone company from the Midwest to California, is deploying a full-blown IPTV system that it plans to launch by year-end in at least a few undisclosed markets. Verizon Communications plans to offer some interactive IP-based features on top of a conventional digital cable service... BellSouth has expressed doubt about whether a cable rollout makes financial sense, the company sees enough potential to trial IPTV technology in undisclosed markets." Currently about 1 mln Europeans get their television via phone line."
here in New Zealand (Score:1)
Re:here in New Zealand (Score:1)
Re:here in New Zealand (Score:3, Funny)
Re:here in New Zealand (Score:1)
Microsoft TV (Score:5, Insightful)
It's sorely disappointing to continue to see this attitude. Many of us "bemoan" Microsoft because their software doesn't work, exactly what this analyst claims they're trying to avoid. Do you get fired if you choose Microsoft and it doesn't work? What's wrong with this picture?
Re:Microsoft TV (Score:5, Insightful)
No. Because it's Microsoft. If you choose Microsoft and it doesn't work, you get to pass on the blame; but nobody in the corporate world blames Microsoft, since Microsoft is seen as unavoidable, almost a force of nature. If you choose Microsoft and it doesn't work, then nobody does anything about this your customers just have to put up with using a product that doesn't work.
In other words: No, because if you choose Microsoft and it doesn't work, you get to move the goalposts of what constitutes "working" to whatever crappy point you're at. It's like that old joke, how many Microsoft engineers does it take to change a light bulb? They don't change it, they just define darkness as the new standard.
Re:Microsoft TV (Score:2)
Microsoft proably has the cash to muscle out (or buy out) a lot of start ups in this area, but It wouldn't suprise me to see someone like apple, or maybe someone less consumer oriented like cisco stand up to microsoft and not let them take the market without a fight.
Re:Microsoft TV (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft TV (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft TV (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft TV (Score:1)
It works most of the time and in much of the way it should always leading you to hope that with a little more tweaking it would be perfect.
Necessary for telco survival (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Necessary for telco survival (Score:5, Interesting)
With a phone line and broadcast/cable tv, there is never a bandwidth problem. The TV station can send their signals over the air and from that point anyone can recieve as much of their programming as they want. As we start routing everything over IP, we had better hope that new technologies emerge to provide guaranteed connection availability and bandwidth because nobody wants their Desperate Housewives to be laggy.
Re:Necessary for telco survival (Score:2)
Wow, you can get TV from over the air!! Wireless TV, what will they think of next!!
Oh, wait, you don't mean satellite, do you?
Seriously, though, I know damn few people who get their TV off traditional broadcast these days... life without South Park or the Surreal Life would be pretty brutal...
nobody wants their Desperate Housewives to be laggy.
That's where having a large local storage capacity and TiVo-like playback/order-ahead capability come in handy. S
Exactly. (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm... I don't know.... (Score:2)
Re:Necessary for telco survival (Score:1)
Re:Necessary for telco survival (Score:2)
Great (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the worst of all possible worlds. I sure can't wait until they find a way to make it mandatory.
Re:Great (Score:3, Insightful)
Even worse... (Score:2, Insightful)
The DVB st
how can this help p2p IPTV? (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with this SBC proposal is that the content is still corporate-controlled.
Re:how can this help p2p IPTV? (Score:1)
p2p IPTV should actually be helped by Verizon's FTTH solution, since the pricing isn't completely off base [slashdot.org] and you get quite an upload speed (5MB/s upload for $200/mo). Too bad I'm in o
Re:how can this help p2p IPTV? (Score:1)
Great. (Score:2, Funny)
If you're in Western Canada (Score:4, Informative)
Still behind the times. (Score:4, Interesting)
To make sure people watch the commercials, you can use a custom player/P2P app that disable fast forwarding during commercials the first time it is downloaded or some other method to make sure they watch X seconds commercials for every Y minutes of the show.
--
Free iPod? Try a free Mac Mini [freeminimacs.com]
Or a free Nintendo DS [freegamingsystems.com]
Wired article as proof [wired.com]
Re:Still behind the times. (Score:2)
embedded commercials to support p2p IPTV? (Score:2)
As for supporting production, how about embedded ads in the video? product placement?
Re:Still behind the times. (Score:2)
And, the distribution costs are so negligible with a bit torrent type system! Think about what it costs to run a full broadcast system, versus hosting a torrent.
tv over phone in canada (Score:4, Insightful)
Here in Canada, at least in Manitoba, they've had TV over the phone line for a little while now.
Here's [mts.ca] their website.
I don't know first hand what people's experiences have been with it though.
Buffering.... (Score:3, Funny)
Buffering (40%)...
Buffering (100%)
Playing 10s
Buffering (10%)
Enough said...
Bandwidth? (Score:1)
I assume that in such network you're only receiving what you're watching instead of all the channels like it is right now?
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
You deserve a medal. Check your local listings of the time and channel of the medal awards cermony.
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anywhere from 4 to 37mbps. 4 mbps would assume the low end of a DTV (that's SD signal), encoded using the normal MPEG-2 DTV standard. 37mbps is the highest HD feed I know of; it's the bitrate found on the D-Theater D-VHS source tapes. More realistically, a proper HD (720p or 1080i) signal over the airwaves is between 20 and 27 mbps. So we are talking about a decent amount of bandwidth here.
Of course, it's more likely that they're encoding in an MPEG-4 or Windows Media 9 format, given that the use of a set-top box eliminates the need for maintaining the HD standard of MPEG-2 video plus Dolby Digital audio.
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
What does that work out to in cycles per second (Hertz)?
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:1)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:1)
Specifically, I think the HDTV comes out to 6-12MB dep
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
An ATSC channel is is 19.8 Mb/s, which can be divided into several subchannels. Most of my local broadcasters divide their allocations up into a HDTV channel, and a SDTV auxiliary channel. Usually the the subchannel is used for weather information, though my PBS channel gets into the habit of showing "Ooh what a pretty picture" stuff on its main channel, and regular PBS programming on the subchannel. PAX shows 6 channels of SDTV-- mostly relig
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:1)
Re:Bandwidth? (Score:2)
It's about fraggin' time! (Score:2)
Been in Ohio for a couple of years now (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Been in Ohio for a couple of years now (Score:2)
My problem with HDTV is that the delay between hitting the button on the remote, and the channel actually playing. it just destroys the channel surfing experience.
different from digital cable how? (Score:1)
What took them so long? (Score:4, Insightful)
Runing a Myrio system. Hardware is MainStreets or something like that.
It's ADSL to the house with a modem. From there, the customer can have up to 2 STB, and unlimited PCs with 3M down, 128k up bandwidth for internet.
Each STB requires 3M, so if they have low quality lines, they can only have one box.
The STB is a linux based PC booting from the NIC, with software loaded on a smart card type drive.
We even have a PPV video on demand system. You can choose the movie you want, and it's streamed from our servers to you. You can stop it, rewind, fast forward, etc. for up to 24 hours. Each movie is streamed out individually to each customer.
Re:What took them so long? (Score:1)
We started with the Fujitsu boxes. Now they have a slim blue box (can't remember the brand) and they are testing a tiny black one that's no bigger than most 5 port hubs.
Re:What took them so long? (Score:1)
As far as I know, it's OC-3 from the routers to the CEC boxes. From there, the customers copper line from the telco plugs into a port on a card, and then their line to their house plugs into another port with POTS, and ADSL on it.
So bandwidth is only limited by how far from the CEC they are. There's very few places in the county that can't run 2 STB.
Of course, we are fairly small.
We're facing this choice right now where I work. (Score:5, Interesting)
Most of the hardware we've been looking at uses MPEG2 encoding but in the near future the standard is likely to be either MPEG4 or some form of WMV. Microsoft has been aggressively pushing its video codecs and they seem to be gaining traction in the marketplace. However, they're not gaining as much acceptance as they otherwise might in the video world because at this point their reputation precedes them.
To a small player like us their previous behavior in other markets is more than a little alarming. A Comcast- or SBC-sized provider presumably might have some amount of leverage with Microsoft but what kind of consideration can you expect when you're a tiny little speck on the map in a place few people even know exists? Choosing a proprietary Microsoft standard over a reasonably open industry standard could leave you at Microsoft's mercy and, well, they're not known for mercy, are they?
Re:We're facing this choice right now where I work (Score:3, Informative)
It's an amazing codec since it actually allows stellar HD at surprisingly low bitrates.
You're also right that Mircosoft has an uphill battle to fight considering nobody really wants to give them control over
Microsoft TV: What do they really have? (Score:2, Interesting)
Since apparently you've been investigating Microsoft, I am curious to understand what they truly have.
I watched Microsoft's keynote at CES 2005 [microsoft.com] and I have been present at several broadcast tradeshows. (Click the link "100 K" or "300 K", the IPTV demo is 47'30 into the stream).
I really felt uncomfortable with all the lies. One of them is that by design "IPTV allows instantaneous channel change". What Microsoft is showing is probably a set-top box that decodes 4 streams at the same time. What amount band
Calgary (Score:1)
Shaw Communications(the cable company) just launched VOIP. Its a blow to TELUS(the phone company) which is going to launch IPTV someday.
Their IPTV solution apperently sucks beyond belief, and they can't get it to work very effectively. They were doing trials in the regional offices more then a year ago now, and it couldn't get it working in half of them.
Which indicates they had the basic infastructure in place that long ago, and they have had over a year to work on the
Yargle-Yargle-Yargle-AAAAGH! (Score:1)
Why do I envision a mutant version of WebTV?
*Shudder*
I would swallow carpet tacks than accept service from this flatulent combine of corporations...
I'm guessing it'll fail (Score:2)
Bandwidth (Score:2)
Millions/Billions of simultaneous full res video streams will surely bring everything to a crawl.
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
But is that so infeasable? I don't think so. I download episodes of "Lost" because they look better than on my (analog) cable TV - yet the stream is under 1 megabit per second. Could today's infrastructure handle that for everybody? Certainly not, but the Internet will never grow unless applications push it. And 1 megabit for everybody isn't so hard to imagine. A lot of us are payi
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:1)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
What about... (Score:1)
you mean tvtorrents.com? (Score:2)
IPTV? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:IPTV? (Score:2)
Available in Canada (Score:2)
MTS TV [www.mts.ca], and FAQ [www.mts.ca].
Local Telco's are already into VoIP and IPTV (Score:2, Interesting)
I think it's good that local telco's are adapting so quickly to stay in the race. With the lines already there for use, it makes it easy to dominate the local area. Personally, I would like to see more competition, instead of one massive provider ruling the IPTV market --not that companies like microsoft are bad for anyone... [sorry, lo
YES! (Score:1)
Hallelujah (Score:1)
Re:Hallelujah (Score:1, Redundant)
If you have an area in the residence that is used exclusively by you (or you and your roomate, etc), then you should be able to get a dish.
BTW, don't buy into Dish's "drop cable because they raise prices" BS, though. My Dish Network bill has gone up in Jan/Feb for each of the 4 years that I've had a dish. Granted, I get a few extra channels that I don't want now, but it still goes up (more than cable did, actually, bu my cable company dropped the p
VoIP international? (Score:3, Interesting)
More places where it's rolled out already ... (Score:2)
Sasktel.com
"Max"
$C 45.00/month
$C 5.00 discount per month if bundled with either a long distance package or DSL, $C 10.00 if both
135 TV channels (some at additional cost to basic package)
45 streaming Audio channels (commercial free); included in basic
33 streaming commercial Radio channels, included in basic
Video-on-Demand movies, included in basic
I'd link to it, but only the ho
Re:More places where it's rolled out already ... (Score:2, Informative)
I think as soon as Aliant was formed, they scrapped all the DSL-cable-tv and gave people Bell ExpressVu because *shock* Bell owns Aliant now. NBTel used to truely be a telephone pioneer. They were pretty deep in bed with Nortel which is why I always chuckled when I saw tv ads for US carriers advertising *69 .
Re:More places where it's rolled out already ... (Score:2)
Set Top Boxes from Pace (UK)
Switching technology (at source) from Lucent Technologies (their first customer of the Stinger system for TVoverIP)
Switching technology (teleco to customer) from VComm (Vancouver BC with manufacturing in Saskatoon, SK).
NBTel was a leading teleco before the Aliant "chainsawing". NBTel and SaskTel were the first (1993), and second (1994), respectively, telecos in
OpenTV, OpenStereo? (Score:2)
Getting TV over phone lines 5 years ago in Phoenix (Score:1)
Infinite channels (Score:1)
But when you move to IPTV, where you can send a highl
Re:Infinite channels (Score:1)
The idea of watching whatever you want, whenever you want is definitely exciting. As part of my job, I have been studying the possibility to watch any program one would have missed in the past week of programming. You don't even bother to record the programs! All are recorded, on the server side!
However, a big, big factor to consider is scalability. I don't think you can let 100% of IPTV subscribers watch TV at their own pace. The network cannot handle that.
What happens when designing an IPTV system,
Re:Infinite channels (Score:1)
Re:Infinite channels (Score:1)
> why not have the show download to the TV box?
I suppose that you mean multicast download, otherwise it would have no significant benefit over unicast streaming. That videos are "pushed" as files to set-top boxes certainly makes sense. I'm sure there's a deployed system somewhere that makes use of that.
However, for really big numbers of subscribers, it seems to me that having the price of the STBs as low as $80-100 is important. Having a HDD on the box makes it difficult to reach the targeted pric
Re:Infinite channels (Score:1)
Testing in Michigan (Score:1)
Re:Testing in Michigan (Score:1)
Brilliant! (Score:1)
I don't get all this: IP? 1mln? Italy? MSFT ? (Score:4, Interesting)
First, why do you need IP for TV ? over ADSL, it's a lot better to send it in raw ATM. Of course, you can use IP to broadcast TV to the DSLAMs. And if it's IPTV to play TV on the computer, what exactly is the use ? Isn't it better to get it directly on TV ?
Then, why do you need Microsoft for that ? Are these Bells not using MPEG2 or MPEG4 for TV ?
And, 1mln users in Europe for TV over ADSL ? It's very very low ! There are about 700 000-800 000 only in France: France #2 ISP provides TV over ADSL [adsl.free.fr] as part of their triple play solution, and they have reached 600 000 [freenews.fr] people subscribed to the triple play offer.
Also, their triple play offer, and especially the freebox, is running Linux, like most of their whole architecture, so how exactly the Bells' choice is a coup for Microsoft: thet are entering a market very late. In France, all of it has already been taken, with the 3 major ISPs already offering TV over ADSL. And I can't see how Italy could top that, with their currently expensive ADSL.
Moreover, they're already working [isp-planet.com] on providing HDTV through their triple play offering.
So i think either i missed the point, or both articles are (at least partially) wrong: some other people explain here that several ISPs are also offering triple play offers in the US or Canada. Can someone explain me ?
Re:I don't get all this: IP? 1mln? Italy? MSFT ? (Score:1)
But a very useful potential feature is video on demand. They could do this as a real VoD system, with potentially hundreds of videos.
IP / TV over DSL (Score:2, Informative)
> First, why do you need IP for TV ? over ADSL, it's a lot better to send it in raw ATM
What everyone expects from TV over DSL is interactivity. People want video-on-demand, they want to pause or record live, they want to provision their account, etc. At the same time, broadcasters and telcos are looking for new revenue streams. Without IPTV, the features mentioned above would only work if you add a hard-drive to each set-top box (STB). However, for deployments to hundreds of thousands of subscribers
Re:IP / TV over DSL (Score:2)
Now,
Interesting. (Score:1)
Interesting.
If it is true that everything is in raw ATM at Free.fr, I suppose that they wrote some kind of a communication layer for making requests to the DSLAM. If you know of a place where to find further information, I'm interested.
Re:Interesting. (Score:2)
Someone wrote a paper [b0op.com] (in french) about that. Basically, he guesses that channel hopping is done through IGMP reques
Thanks. I'll read the paper. (Score:1)
Thanks for the link. I will read the paper since I can read French.
IPTV here in the UK. (Score:4, Interesting)
Interesting you can thank the privatisation of the telephone system for this development. The telephone system here in the UK used to be run and managed by the Post Office. Then when it was sold off the whole lot was bought by British Telecom (now BT) except for the network around Hull which was bought by the local Council (local government). Eventually the was privatised and became Kingston Communications who were for a while, the only phone company that wasn't BT. So the government restrictions on BT supplying television didn't apply and Kingston set up their own digital television service.
How many times. (Score:1)
But seriously I think the ability to get TV over the internet could be excellent all round. The consumer hordes can then use the internet TV services and the rest of us can use the "good old" internet.
Hopefully all the idiots who make flash only, or plugin riddled, "crudsites" will all then fuck off to build internet TV related sites and leave the rest of us the hell alone.
Hmmm... I can dream can't I ?
Re:FCC? (Score:1)
Re:FCC? (Score:2)
This will not be public, so they will have no reason to run out of IP addresses. Hell, they could use IPv6 if they wanted
Re:FCC? (Score:2)
Re:FCC? (Score:1)
These are TV execs. Don't get your hopes up.
Re:IP? (Score:1, Insightful)
Was it intended as humor? I for one thought there were some questions to be asked about how TV over Internet would intersect with copyright, such as whether it would be space-shiftable to mobile devices, excerptable under fair use, etc.