485 Million to Receive Mobile TV by 2013

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

CAMBRIDGE, UK — The number of people receiving Mobile TV will reach 485 million by 2013 according to predictions made by Cantab Wireless.

Cantab Wireless Ltd has just published a new analyst report: “Mobile TV – Technologies, Country Cases, and Forecasts for 2008-2013“.

This report argues that subscriber growth is anticipated to be strongest in Asia at first, especially in Korea and Japan. From 2010 onwards, Europe and the USA are expected to catch up. Especially in Europe the shortage of radio spectrum before the analogue TV networks shutdown may delay the launch of mobile TV networks in some countries, most importantly in the UK. Also, from 2012-2013 onwards, cellular operators may start providing mobile TV services via their upgraded 3.9G/4G networks, which will offer greatly increased capacity. They will become serious competitors to broadcast TV systems.

The report includes a thorough review of the various mobile TV standards. However, as the author of the report, Dr Juha Korhonen, points out: “even more important than choosing the right technical standard is choosing the right business model”. It is not yet obvious on how to make money in the Mobile TV business. Various business models have been tried and tested around the world, some successfully, and some less so.

Mobile TV business is a contested area between two established businesses, broadcast TV and cellular telephony. TV broadcasters believe that they should be in charge in the Mobile TV business because they are familiar with the TV business, they have established relationships with content producers and they also often have access to physical broadcast networks. Cellular operators, on the other hand, know the business of mobile devices. They have distribution channels for mobile TV receivers, which are often integrated into mobile phones, and they have contract and charging relationships with mobile customers. However, cellular operators typically do not have access to content, and moreover, they cannot provide mobile TV to masses via cellular networks since these networks currently lack the necessary capacity to do it. Therefore, both parties need each other and a successful mobile TV system has to find a business model which benefits both parties.

The report argues that in the medium term, broadcast Mobile TV systems will be popular. However, in the long run, point-to-point Mobile TV channels, delivered via upgraded high capacity cellular networks, will become a more popular service.

The main topics of the report include:

“¢ Technical overview of the broadcast mobile standards: DVB-H, DMB, MediaFLO, 1seg, MBMS, TDtv, CMMB, TBBM, DMB-T/H, CDMB, and CMB.
“¢ Comprehensive Mobile TV country / area cases for Korea, China, Europe and the USA.
“¢ Concise reports for 26 other countries.
“¢ Overview of Mobile TV satellite systems.
“¢ Mobile TV terminal types, and market forecast by type.
“¢ Mobile TV usage patterns
“¢ Mobile TV content, what do customers want to watch?
“¢ Discussion of different Mobile TV business models.
“¢ Review of spectrum allocations. Is there enough spectrum?
“¢ Market forecasts by area and by technology, in hard numbers.
“¢ World-wide schedule of releasing analog TV spectrum

The forecasts in this report reach until 2013. The market situation is discussed in detail in about 30 countries or regions.

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