News
Nokia touts mobile-TV standard
Mobile phone giant Nokia has revealed details of its television technology to help jump start the young mobile TV industry.
On Tuesday, Nokia unveiled its version of a standardised method for delivering broadcast digital TV to handsets in the US, Europe and Asia. The standard, DVB-H, or Digital Video Broadcast-Handheld, competes with a host of other similar technologies, including Qualcomm's new MediaFlo. Companies supporting DVB-H say it's less expensive and allows a quicker product turnaround.
"We are emphasising our commitment to open standards and interoperability as a means to enable positive market development," Nokia Vice President Richard Sharp said in a prepared statement.
Aside from Nokia, DVB-H supporters include UK wireless operators O2; multicast operator Crown Castle Mobile Media, which plans to build a mobile-TV network; mobile phone infrastructure-equipment provider UDcast; and a number of chip makers including Texas Instruments and Intel.
Nokia's move supports the wireless industry's view that there is a sizable market for mobile-TV fare, including films, news clips and standard programming typically found on living room TVs. If the market for it is indeed robust, such a service could generate significant new revenue streams for wireless operators.
But so far, Verizon Wireless in the US and other top-tier operators offering TV services are finding them a hard sell, according to research group Informa. This year, Verizon expects to sell only about 130,000 video handsets, suggesting the worldwide market for them is commensurately small.
Sectors harbouring high hopes for the mobile-TV market do so because of television's dominance as an entertainment form and the ubiquity of mobile phones. Informa concluded in a recent study that 125 million people -- about 5 percent of all mobile phone owners -- will be watching TV on their handsets by 2010.
More about Software
- Obama in sex video shocker? Oh wait, it's just spam September 11, 2008
- No black holes from Large Hadron Collider, say scientists September 10, 2008
- Michael Moore to premiere film online September 05, 2008
- Images: Touring Google's Chrome browser September 05, 2008
- Extensions promised for Chrome September 04, 2008

- Virgin Media and CView to rifle through your packets
- Motorola Milestone: The Droid drops exclusively on eXpansys until 2010
- Opinion: Apple owes Microsoft $30bn
- How MySpace can beat Facebook in 2010
- CNET UK Podcast 163: Is giffgaff the future of mobile tariffs?
- Technics 1200 and 1210 axed by Panasonic: Number's up for the ones and twos?

- Virgin Media and CView to rifle through your packets
- How MySpace can beat Facebook in 2010
- Want to try the new Google homepage? We show you how
- Windows 7 Family Guy clips outed, with bonus Sugababes
- Last.fm interview: Behind the music
- Truphone talks turkey with free calls on Thanksgiving
- Man arrested for not tweeting to teeming tween tumult
- The best of Photosynth
- Seesmic Desktop for Windows: Better for Twitter than TweetDeck?
- Microsoft and Murdoch ganging up on Google?
- Spotify launches on Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson phones
- Behold: The Facebook 'magic circles' trick
- Free Office 2010 beta available to download
- Domino's mobile: When the noms hit your iPhone like a big pizza pie
- Twitter vs the world: Ten scandals that set Twitter alight



