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LYON, France- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research
report related to the worldwide television industry is now available to
its catalogue.
DVB-H Mobile TV Services - Demand, Handsets, Analysis & Forecasts to 2012
http://www.reportlinker.com/p056704/mobile-TV-services.html
Mobile TV will be successful. DVB-H is the one technology that has gained headway
in Europe and the US, but various alternatives remain. Questions still remain
about demand, cost-effectiveness, user's willingness to pay and handset design.
With an industry move towards various FMC services, is the technology and formats
currently in place for mobile TV, the most effective?
Rather, the service is likely to be a stepping stone to a broader, more complete
mobile multimedia experience and convergence. This is just one of the findings
of our brand new DVB-H Mobile TV Services - Demand, Handsets, Analysis & Forecasts
to 2012.
Key questions linger such as:
Will Qualcomm be able to use their technological muscle to guarantee the success
of their MediaFlo system?
Will Placeshifting TV offer a more user friendly system?
If DMB is so successful in South Korea maybe we should just copy it?
So who is actually going to watch? What sex, what age and what will they watch? Is advertising going to be the only profitable Mobile TV segment?
Is the industry ready for a peer-to-peer format which will inevitably grow?
Samsung & LG currently have the greatest number of TV compatible models available,
essentially due to working in the Korean and Japanese markets. Will they be able
to transfer this knowledge successfully to the North American and European markets?
If they can and a TV handset becomes an essential purchase (whether accessed or
not), then their strengths within the 3 major technologies (DVB-H, DMB, MediaFLO)
may hit Nokia and other manufacturers hard. Will Nokia’s new launches have the
commercial break through that they hope? The cost does certainly begin to reach
affordable levels with Nokia pitching it at $480.
If handsets are to deal on-going with mobile TV then they must continuously answer
technical problems such as:
1. High Power Consumption
2. Memory must improve to support the high buffer requirements of the mobile
TV.
3. User Interface Design must appeal to end users while not increasing handset
size greatly
4. Processing Power must improve to support intense TV applications
The new report "DVB-H Mobile TV Services - Demand, Handsets, Analysis & Forecasts
to 2012" details how with unclear standards and even more confused pricing models
the success of Mobile TV is far from guaranteed.
Mobile TV has the potential to become a success in the non-voice segment. In
this 180+ page report you will learn how advertising can be integrated into the
Mobile TV environment cost-effectively for the operator, broadcaster and ultimately
the user.
Why You Need To Buy This Report:
With charts, tables, figures and analysis this report provides insight into the
services, pricing and business model of mobile operators that have already launched
TV, as well as providing 'best and worst case' subscriber and revenue forecasts
up until 2012. The report gives an overview of the Mobile TV market in its current
and future form, the technology behind the services and the various solutions
offered by the leading vendors. The challenges facing the industry are discussed
and recommendations to help this service to reach its full potential are also
provided.
Methodology
The information contained in this report is from primary industry sources. This
includes one-on-one interviews with companies, with governmental bodies and academic
institutions. Analysis has also been drawn from company reports, whether annual
financial returns or white papers. |