
What is PLAnet Vision?
"Planet
Vision is about
providing high-quality video and multi-media content on a streamed/downloadable
or pushed basis to enable the delivery of IPTV, MATV, VoD, nVoD & Dynamic Digital
Signage via the web's IP protocols using planet Broadband Powerline or Cable
Access network and displayed on your TV set or monitor at
your premise."
IPTV is currently provided by
major telcos around the world. The experience is delivered via broadband to your
TV or LCD (not your PC) via a set-top box in the home. Crucially it’s "lean back" not
"lean forward" technology.
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Research suggests that
although there are barely 25 million IPTV subscribers globally today, there
will be around 100 million by 2011. China is the leading candidate for IPTV
growth (49 million subscribers), followed by the US with (34 million),
France (25 million), Germany (2 million), Italy (1.6 million), the UK (1.5
million) and Spain (777,000).
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The ability to pipe TV
content over broadband has the potential to turn the broadcasting, film,
advertising, telecoms and cable industries upside down. It’s extremely
disruptive technology.
What technology
is involved?
MPEG-2 is the most widely
supported video codec in the TV industry, but it isn't the most efficient for
IPTV.
The services running today have proved that MPEG-2 can be delivered over
broadband, the downside being MPEG-2 is very bandwidth "hungry"
PLAnet Broadband provide our IPTV service over MPEG-4 AVC (H.264) and in
some cases Microsoft's Windows Media Video 9 codec which dramatically reduces
the bandwidth requirements, enabling IPTV systems to carry more high
definition channels.
This service is delivered to the home across PLAnet broadband or existing high
speed Internet services to a set-top-box and the content is accessed via
the TV or LCD/Plasma monitor.
Your set top box acts as a web browser with your TV as the monitor and programs
are searched by customized guides containing video search abilities.
Why is IPTV
happening now?
1. Technology changes
There's nothing new about the concept of Internet Protocol Television but early
examples have been a poor experience and downloading content has just taken too
long. Bandwidth and the cost of servers conspired to limit the growth of IPTV.
That's now no longer the case, thanks to rising broadband speeds and more
efficient compression. Faster broadband is key.
2. Business imperatives
The other key element is that the telcos are rapidly losing voice revenues to
their cable competitors. As this revenue goes into sharp decline, the telcos
must do something new to improve their offering and drive more revenues. Getting
into video delivery for them is not a choice; it’s an economic necessity.
Some predict that it’s too much of a gamble for a telco to become a broadcaster,
deliver consistent high premium content to TV’s and oust the likes of providers
Sky from the home. Why would you switch your TV service if you were already
happy with what you had?
How can IPTV compete with existing TV services?
Telecommunications companies will compete on:
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Price: Get your telephone,
data and video (called a “Triple Play”) for a monthly cost via your telco
that undercuts your combined costs of getting those services delivered in
other ways.
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Exclusivity of content:
expect BT to become a bidder for premium content viewers will pay for, like
football and films.
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The return path: watching
TV on an IP connected service allows for the delivery of a wide range of
extra services from targeted ads to interactive options.
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Niche content: An IPTV
supplier can push out multiple new channels across their existing bandwidth
relatively easily. It’s very possible that niche viewers drawn in to watch
sand boarding or basket weaving will stay for other services, and consumers
are all increasingly becoming niche viewers. GDB are providing such a
service with channels currently unavailable anywhere else.
Where is IPTV
being deployed?
IPTV is happening now. There
are multiple deployments across the world, but all are currently operating with
relatively low numbers of subscribers and only on their own networks -
effectively VPN TV.
Those already up and running with first-generation IPTV services include
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Planet Broadband
in Indonesia
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Fastweb in Italy
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HomeChoice in the U.K.
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Global Digital Broadcast on
a global network
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MaLigne and Free in France
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Telefonica in Spain
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Chunghwa Telecom in Taiwan
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PCCW Ltd. in Hong Kong
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Softbank/Yahoo BB in Japan
There are numerous smaller
roll-outs across the US.
Huge US telco incumbents SBC and Verizon are making vast investments into IPTV
services. SBC hopes to have 18 million homes hooked up to its service (project 'Lightspeed')
in 2007. They have invested more than $7 billion into the project.
SBC's rival, Verizon, hope to have around 5 million homes connected to its own
service by the end of 2009.
BT and Sky in the UK launched IPTV services in 2006. Homechoice already operate
in the London area.
What’s going on
in the market right now?
There has been a huge amount of
activity over the past year in the IPTV market. It’s a very hot market right
now, some would say bullish and overheated. Semiconductor suppliers, system
vendors and software companies have piled onto the IPTV bandwagon, eager to sell
their own solutions.
Microsoft sits squarely in the midst of the IPTV market. They are now positioned
to serve theoretically 26 percent of the world's fixed-access phone subscribers
with their own IPTV platform.
Eleven operators around the world have signed up for Microsoft's early adopter
program. They include British Telecom, Swisscom, SBC, Verizon, T-Online in
France, Telecom Italia, Bell Canada, Bell South and India's Reliance Infocomm.
But some projects are already reporting slips in timescales, something that
Microsoft could do without.
A key alignment in the UK recently has been Sky’s purchase of Easynet, heralding
Sky’s entry into IP delivered video services. Meanwhile, BT Entertainment is
planning to roll-out IPTV services next year, and is already under intense media
scrutiny.
Conventional UK broadcasters have been quick to spot the new opportunities that
broadband TV can deliver. The BBC has been running the second of its Interactive
Media Player trials (iMP), enabling users to download TV and radio shows after
broadcast.
How will IPTV
shape the future?
IPTV services are likely to
complement rather than replace today's TV delivery in the short term. What it
will do is cause TV viewing to fragment even further. It will also start to
effect release windows for feature films; when does the Internet release start
to become more profitable than the DVD, and how does that model start to stack
up?
An interesting conundrum is also advertising space. IPTV will start to break
down the traditional 30 second TV spot, and fragmented viewing where consumers
do not have to choose to watch advertising will create challenges for brands and
agencies alike.