[opendtv] News: Mobile DTV Offers Oasis of Hope in Vegas
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 10 Apr 2009 07:13:10 -0400
http://www.tvnewsday.com/articles/2009/04/09/daily.3/
NAB NOW
Mobile DTV Offers Oasis of Hope in Vegas
By Carl Lindemann
TVNEWSDAY, Apr 9 2009, 11:47 AM ET
With the economy casting a long, dark shadow over this year's NAB
Show, mobile DTV should be a bright spot for broadcasters' seeking
growth and opportunity.
"We're at the beginning of a new era where we reach the consumer
where they are rather than have them go somewhere to access content,"
says Ardell Hill, president, broadcast services, Media General
Broadcast.
"I believe this is the opportunity that makes our future clear. This
gives us the tools to reconnect with the Twitter and Facebook
generation that has left us."
Leading the discussion of mobile DTV, as broadcasting ATSC-compatible
mobile video technology has come to be called, will be the Open
Mobile Video Coalition (OMVC), an alliance of U.S. commercial and
public broadcasters committed to the development of mobile digital
television. It will have a booth in Central Hall and will host a
breakfast session on Monday, April 20.
Emceed by Fox Business News Anchor Liz Claman, the breakfast will
feature a panel of top television executives offering the latest
information about broadcaster and device manufacturer efforts to
accelerate mobile DTV deployment.
According to OMVC, more than 65 stations in more than 25 markets,
covering more than 35 percent of U.S. television households, are
already committed to delivering mobile DTV services this year.
The ATSC Mobile DTV Pavilion in the Content Central area of the
exhibit hall will showcase technologies that will enable broadcasters
to provide quality digital television services directly to mobile and
handheld devices.
Exhibitors include Axcera; Pixtree; DTV Innovations; ETRI; Expway;
Zenith/LG; Linear Acoustic; Rohde & Schwarz; RRD USA; Sarnoff Corp.;
Sencore; Sinclair Broadcast Group; and Triveni Digital.
The NAB will also give broadcasters an opportunity to investigate the
larger world of mobile video and see what they are up against.
The Mobile Entertainment Summit on Tuesday, April 22, will present
ways to capitalize on mobile trends to expand audience reach and
generate new forms of revenue. Co-produced by NAB and iHollywood
Forum, the conference will highlight important developments in mobile
entertainment, including mobile video, devices, advertising and
marketing, music, mobile search engines and building social networks.
In addition to having a booth on the show floor, the Mobile
Entertainment Forum (MEF), a group representing global mobile
entertainment providers, will also host a panel in the Content
Theater. MEF's mission is to build awareness, create business
development opportunities and facilitate the development of
commercial guidelines for the mobile entertainment industry.
The Super Session "Mobile Entertainment To Go," sponsored by RipCode,
will feature an executive panel addressing revenue and investment
opportunities as well as how various industries - broadcast,
wireless, cable and satellite - will affect mobile networks of the
future.
All told, according to NAB, mobile video technologies, content and
applications are expected to be on display by more than 300
exhibitors, including Harris Corp., AT&T, Verizon Wireless, mmi
Broadcasting, V4x, MOBICLIP, TVU Networks, TeamCast and
Qualcomm/MediaFLO.
According to proponents of mobile DTV, 2009 will be the year that the
service becomes reality.
"Last year we were talking basics, now we're talking implementation"
says Jay Adrick, Harris' vice president, broadcast technology. "We're
far beyond the rough draft and have been into fine-tuning since it
was elevated to candidate status last November.
Most of the stations that have committed to broadcasting the service
should be on the air before the holiday shopping season, he says.
"This will spur a lot of activity."
Harris and other broadcast technology vendors will be showing
products that broadcasters need to offer the service - the complete
mobile DTV infrastructure.
Meanwhile, consumer electronics manufacturers will demonstrate a wide
array of offerings of cell phones another other portable devices
capable to receiving the mobile DTV signals.
"We can expect to see the first devices available for early adopters
in the coming holiday shopping season, and an acceleration of
mainstream acceptance in 2010 with significant retail shelf space
devoted to it," says Open Mobile Video Coalition Executive Director
Anne Schelle.
According to Schelle, industry excitement over mobile DTV is based on
two easy-to-understand realities.
First, research indicates that mobile has the potential of generating
more than $2 million in annual ad revenue. What's more,
subscription-based business models suggest the revenue could go as
high as $5 billion a year.
The second reality is the relatively low cost of entry, between
$75,000 and $150,000 per station.
There are, of course, skeptics.
"I'm interested to see what the business is here," says Dave
Converse, vice president and director of engineering for ABC's O&Os.
"Someone needs to help me with my education on this. The overall ad
pie is only so big and it isn't growing. I don't know of any CEO
saying 'Here's a new way to spend ad dollars.' That means the pieces
of the pie get smaller with more people nibbling."
Schelle claims that mobile DTV will not cannibalize terrestrial
viewership, but instead will add some 10 percent to existing
audiences. Others suggest that mobile will lead to an overall
reconfiguration of the media landscape, with broadcasters marking out
new, protected turf.
Story continues after the ad
"This taps into what's unique to broadcast - the one-to-many model
that only we can do," says Sterling Davis, vice president of
engineering for Cox Broadcasting. "Satellite, telcos, cable and the
Internet can't touch this. It's something that is going to catch on.
It will start slow, but then take off."
Out of the box, mobile DTV will offer simulcasts of the regular
over-the-air service. But that's just a start, broadcasters say.
"Audio, video and data channels are all available. This can be free
to air or by subscription depending on the business model at any
given station. To simulcast your main channel is pretty simple, a
starter. Stations will be trying out lots of things, and there's no
way to tell how this is going to come out," says Davis.
One uneasy possibility for some broadcasters is that mobile DTV could
prove to be a competitor to HD radio, a suggestion that Davis
discounts.
"It's like saying that consumers have to choose between buying
refrigerators or cars. One has a vehicle tie-in, the other doesn't.
These are two different services," Davis said.
Others aren't so sure. Audio-only concepts could leverage local TV
news assets to create a formidable competitor to radio's news/talk
formats. Music, too, could find a new home on mobile DTV services.
"Audio-only services are one of the many capabilities offered in the
ATSC mobile DTV solution. We intend to leverage all of the feature
sets of that technology," says Mark Aiken, Sinclair's director of
advanced technology.
Aiken, who also serves as chair of the ATSC's S4 group developing the
standard, sees NAB 2009 as making manifest a longstanding vision.
Sinclair has made a substantial investment in it. "We recognized the
need [for a mobile platform] early on," he says. "The tech companies
heard us and have been working on it ever since. Now, we've made a
corporate-wide commitment to make this happen. We want to be sure
that mobile prospers, and that the entire broadcast industry is
engaged.
"Being the front-runner is one thing. But if you're the only one
running, it isn't much of a race."
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