[opendtv] The Coming Mobile-Video Deluge

  • From: Monty Solomon <monty@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: undisclosed-recipient: ;
  • Date: Wed, 26 Oct 2005 02:08:14 -0400

The Coming Mobile-Video Deluge

By Olga Kharif
OCTOBER 11, 2005

As carriers gird for an expected surge in demand for TV mobile 
phones, many are looking to Qualcomm to deliver the goods

When Qualcomm announced plans for a network that would deliver video 
over mobile phones last November, analysts met the idea with more 
raised eyebrows than approving nods. Qualcomm (QCOM ) had built its 
reputation on licensing wireless technology and making cell-phone 
chips. The concept, dubbed MediaFLO and championed by Paul Jacobs, 
who later became Qualcomm's chief executive, came across as costly 
and too far outside the company's core areas of expertise.

Even though demand for TV over cell phones had taken off in Asia, it 
was still unproven in the U.S. What's more, the number of 
technologies for beaming video to wireless handsets was already on 
the rise. Investors wondered what would set MediaFLO apart -- and 
whether Qualcomm would ever break even on the estimated $500 million 
it would take to build the network.

Almost a year later, Jacobs's announcement is looking distinctly 
less odd. Early video services from providers Cingular Wireless and 
Sprint Nextel (S ) have attracted more than 500,000 subscribers, 
according to MobiTV, which provides TV services for both carriers.

BALLOONING BASE.  Cingular has seen its video-user numbers surge with 
virtually no advertising. "It has been very popular, and that tells 
us that there's something there," says Rob Hyatt, executive director 
for mobile content at Atlanta-based Cingular, the largest U.S. 
wireless operator. Other providers, including Verizon Wireless, have 
joined the race to add customers intent on watching news, sports, and 
entertainment clips over their cell phones.

Mobile video is set to take the wireless industry by storm (see BW 
Online, 12/1/04 "TV Phones Prep for Prime Time"). The U.S. mobile 
video user base may balloon to more than 20 million by the end of 
2007, up from less than 1 million today, says Albert Lin, an analyst 
at American Technology Research (ATR). Assuming each subscriber pays 
$5 a month for such services, that would translate to a $1.2 billion 
market. Worldwide, more than 250 million people are expected to be 
watching mobile video by 2010, generating some $27 billion in sales, 
vs. with $200 million today, according to market consultant ABI 
Research.

Why the meteoric rise? For starters, the technology has improved, 
and prices on video-capable handsets have dropped. In fact, now that 
some devices are available for less than $100, "adoption rates are 
going up like a hockey stick," says Key Sar, associate director of 
content programming at Verizon Wireless, the second-biggest U.S. 
mobile-phone carrier.

...

http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/oct2005/tc20051011_9768_tc024.htm

 
 
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