Blackarrow Consulting at IBC2011

IBC has rolled round again and we will be enjoying the delights of the RAI – hot dogs and Coke Lite that are almost as expensive as Inkjet Printer Ink (that is the most expensive thing by volume on the planet I understand) – for the 14th year in a row, over the coming days starting today – 9th September and going through to the end. As for many it will be a hard work expo with quite a bit of networking with the aim of not expiring under the green bottles, and hitting those 9am and 10am meetings feeling refreshed (and not damp under rain). The weather forecast is mixed from warm days to rainy days… Amsterdam is always a little different.

The word on the street is that we will see ‘Cloud’ everywhere, whether it is content delivery or production, and quite a number of hybrid broadcast/IPTV and OTT solutions. We shall see really what that brings, and whether there is good business, poor business or pure hype.

If you want to meet up at all then feel free to tweet me at @iannock, and follow me there as I tweet the occasional on-the-spot experience from the show.

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Mobile TV–the end, long live Mobile TV

I have written before about how Mobile TV just is not a good customer proposition, and now we have the market decision in the US that Qualcomm is shutting down FLO TV that followed the much earlier UK decision, albeit 3 years later. The crux of the matter is that the mobile customer is not actually interested in TV, they are interested in short form video content and, much more importantly, audio content. This can be reasoned to be when you are a mobile customer, you are actually passing into or out of reception (a killer for live TV or even audio), and not always interested in content that requires you to watch because normally you need to be watching what is going on because you need to control where you are going to… whether you are a pedestrian, passenger or driver.

I am sure also that the bandwidth availability is also coming into play, making the place and timeshift the normality rather than purely taking live content as the old transistor radio was able to. The amount of bandwidth available in high density population areas also does not suit the broadcast model, particularly in the iPhone centric, AT&T broken mobile network that is struggling to provide the interactive access demanded by customers.

All in all, this has to be death of mobile TV, the continuing life of mobile audio through place and time shifting, and the need to focus on trying to give customers interactive access to information websites. The other point to make is the only mobile content that people desire is either free or one off costs – not the regular subscription model.

At least this is my view, what is yours?

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IBC comes around again… is this one about real IPTV?

Well September has rolled around again and IBC is coming. All of our mailboxes are full of bumf, invites and some that can only be described as spam for even the hardened IBC visitor. However what will it bring this year? Previous years have been about 3D and IPTV, and of course we cannot forget mobile TV… well maybe I can forget mobile TV :-)  .

My own view is that this year is the year when IPTV will break out of its clique as operators are finally starting to figure out that it is not about the technology as much as making sure that you have the content… and some operators have now got decent content that will atract the customers. However who are the operators that are making best use of this? Could it be those that decide that dedicated IP connectivity is no longer required? OTT….

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Targeted Broadband and Digital TV News

This is a reminder for many of you, and that is that this blog maintains an aggregate news feed of hand picked content that is pertinent to the Broadband and Digital TV industries, paying quite a bit of attention towards consumer devices such as STBs and other video/information devices. You can access this information off the masthead – see the ‘News Headlines in Detail‘ option, or for the information deficient amongst us you can subscribe to the RSS feed via the same page.

Give it a try and get access to the best of the best sites and content out there… who knows you may actually start visiting these great sites directly yourself!

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Electronic Content Guides coming next

bt-vision The entertainment world has become a complex place compared to 20+ years ago. Back then the UK had 4 channels and the biggest challenge was in ensuring that you had an in house distribution feed for those terrestrial analogue channels, that you had remote control capability and that on at least one TV you had a video player/recorder and a video rental shop account. Simple times.

Now we have a combination of analogue (for a short while at least) and digital services provided by at least two methods – terrestrial and cable/satellite, combined with a proliferation of PVR/DVR devices, video on demand, push video on demand, OTT services such as iPlayer, iTunes and others, music services such as iTunes, Napster, and Spotify, and other video/music content newly converted into digital forms. The world is a mix of scheduled broadcast and on demand content delivered from near and far storage. This is a very complex environment, which operators and consumer electronics companies are starting to fight over as they recognise that this is the future, and that this is where money can be made and lost, business models found and destroyed.

Much of the effort is on making this home environment interoperable so that content can be as easily as possible delivered to whatever device the consumer wants to watch it on, whilst making some sort of profit on the transaction – either from the initial content purchase or even the actual viewing event itself. Some of the effort is focused on how to find and distribute the content but not a lot, and this home ecology has many solutions which focus on where the content is and provide a user interface that reflects this. The User Interfaces are a mish-mash of TV, DVR, Network, Internet, or local content. This, in my view, is not going to be a success as it leaves complexity management to the consumer, a consumer who actually does not wish to even think about where the content is or what the content is in format – only whether it is video or audio, and what that content is – the TV episode, the music track, the film, the photograph.

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The consumer in my view wants a cloud approach – not a cloud as in the current Internet view of applications somewhere out there -  but a cloud into which content is placed and out of which content is played out, a cloud that comprises local and far storage that does not bother the consumer with exactly where it really is – the cloud hides that. It is about the content … stupid after all.

In line with this, a new UI needs to appear… something akin to the EPG – the Electronic Programme Guide you see on all STBs, something that I like to call ECG – the Electronic Content Guide. This would be a UI that concentrates on the content and not where it is, that presents the content to the user as content they already have access to full time, content that they can have temporary access to, and content that can be shared around. This ECG would include in that view content that is being made available from the past, from the present and from the future. This would present the consumer with an old film that the person owns for example, give them access to content that is being played out now such as a football event and content that will be available in the near future such as the next episode of a hot new TV series. The challenge will be in presenting it with today’s technology and with the involvement of today’s content owners, distributors and device manufacturers.

More on this soon. What do you think of the UI and home ecology of the near future?

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Digital Britain – What now for Radio?

The Digital Britain report plainly emphasised DAB radio as the future of audio broadcast services in the UK. It under-emphasised however the fact that to survive, a new model of funding and customer acceptance had to be found and that technically DAB is struggling. DAB needs to move to DAB+ to allow more services with better quality to be deployed but that obsoletes almost every DAB radio currently in use – a wasted investment for listeners. It did mention the other challenge – that their is no real worldwide standard in use and radio equipment is to end up country specific based on the current path. Not maybe a huge issue, but a poor one at that for radio equipment manufacturers who will struggle with international scale.

The report plainly did not investigate what could be the real future of radio in the UK and worldwide – as an audio service being multicast or unicast over IP networks, which themselves could be fixed-line or wireless. These devices and services are software driven and are worldwide in nature already, with equipment and software already on the market allowing the listener to pick from thousands of radio stations from all over the world and to listen pretty much anywhere for fixed line, and anywhere in the 3G and Wifi covered regions of the UK. This is without stepping towards the evolving music/spoken word podcast market that is only being held back by those rigid old world business models that content owners are clinging to.

The coming four years in my belief will see the end of DAB and the growth of 3G based audio devices, whether phone or dedicated device, for the future mobile audio consumer and WiFi based devices for in-home use. This will be helped greatly by the increasing popularity of non-mainstream content producers bypassing the big media organisations. What do you think?

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