Europe UK : The next couple of years will witness the delivery of
mobile TV in Europe over a variety of standards and technologies,
including digital audio broadcasting (DAB), terrestrial-digital media
broadcast (T-DMB), digital video broadcast-handheld (DVB-H) and cellular
multicasting. However, as the market matures, the need to migrate
mobile TV delivery to a common and more capable platform will see
the emergence of DVB-H as the preferred standard.
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"The fight
for the mobile TV standard in Europe will be won not by the first
standard introduced in the market, but by the most efficient, economical
and future-ready one, even if it (DVB-H) is a few years down in line,"
explains Frost & Sullivan (http://www.wireless.frost.com) ICT
Industry Analyst Pranab Mookken. "DVB-H is likely to become the
European standard and delivery mechanism for mobile TV in Europe by
2010 as it perfectly complements the existing digital TV standard
and is likely to solve the spectrum allocation issues in the preferred
UHF band."
The completion
of migration from analogue to digital standards across Europe will
create demand for the DVB-H UHF spectrum. Due to its synergies and
ability to backward integrate with its fixed terrestrial counterpart
digital video broadcast-terrestrial (DVB-T), DVB-H is the only standard
having the capacity to accommodate the mature mobile TV market of
the future. Also, the availability of DVB-H UHF spectrum coincides
with the period when existing 3G operators in Europe would be nearing
subscription maturity on their cellular networks and looking to migrate
their video services to a complimentary network for the future.
Despite its manifold
advantages, competition for DVB-H could rise from South Korea's satellite-DMB
(S-DMB) and terrestrial-digital media broadcast (T-DMB) services.
These two standards have divided the South Korean communications industry.
The key difference between S-DMB and T-DMB is that while the former
uses a combination of satellite and terrestrial repeaters to transmit,
the latter uses only a densely covered terrestrial tower network.
S-DMB transmission has limited industry support and the use of a dense
network of terrestrial towers also provides a much more affordable
option for mobile TV than the use of satellites.
"Since they
are already available, broadcasters and operators may consider the
use of DAB-IP and T-DMB delivery mechanisms for the interim period
before the introduction of DVB-H," notes Mr.Mookken. "Also,
successful trials over DAB-IP and a readily available mobile TV packaged
product from BT Movio could tempt operators to experiment with these
alternatives."
While evaluating
standards that mobile operators are likely to use, service providers
need to decide where and how well mobile TV (and other broadcast services)
fit into their larger company goals. They also need to adopt technologies
and standards, which allow for easy migration and evolution.