Computing and Consumer Electronics Devices Expand the Market for Mobile Video

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008
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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The entry of a broad range of new mobile devices able to display video will have a profound effect on the mobile video market, reports In-Stat. The reach of new device choices will provide more markets for mobile operators, mobile broadcasters, advertisers and other content owners, the high-tech market research firm says.

“Even though cellphones and smartphones will remain the predominant method of viewing mobile video, over 160 million other devices that provide mobile video over networks now in exclusive use by cellphones will be sold in the next five years,” says David Chamberlain, In-Stat analyst.

Recent research by In-Stat found the following:

  • Shipments of 3G video-capable cellphones will increase at 11.2% annual growth, reaching over 641 million by 2013.
  • The number and types of devices using digital mobile broadcast networks such as ISDB-T, DVB-H, MediaFLO, and DMB-T will expand to nearly 127 million in five years. China’s CMMB will make up over 12% of those devices.
  • More than a half-billion devices capable of viewing Internet video over 3G networks will be sold in 2013. Cumulative sales will approach 2 billion units.

Recent In-Stat research, Global Cellular Video Devices: Internet Video Expands the Market (#IN0804045WH), covers the worldwide market for devices that can support mobile video. It provides analysis of the market for various consumer electronic devices capable of receiving mobile video from a variety of sources. It includes worldwide device shipment forecasts for video-connected:

“¢ Computing devices, such as mobile Internet devices (MIDs), ultra-mobile PCs (UMPCs), and laptop/notebook computers.

“¢ Cellphones and smartphones, such as the RIM BlackBerry, Apple iPhone, and smartphones having Symbian, Windows Mobile, Palm OS, Android, and Linux operating systems.

“¢ Consumer electronics products, including personal navigation devices (PNDs), portable media players (PMPs), and handheld games, such as the Sony PSP and Nintendo DS.

The forecasts cover devices that will be able to provide mobile video from mobile operators (including MobiTV, GoTV and VCast), mobile digital video (ISDB-T, DVB-H, MediaFLO, DMB-T and others), as well as devices that access the Internet over 3G networks.