The delivery of mobile television in Europe will eventually fall under the
Digital Video
Broadcast-Handheld (DVB-H) standard, industry experts predicted today.
Frost
& Sullivan believes that over the next couple of years mobile TV will be
carried over a variety of standards and technologies.
"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 is a few years down the line," said Frost &
Sullivan 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 analyst firm asserts that the migration from analogue to digital
standards across Europe will help the uptake of the DVB-H UHF spectrum, as DVB-H
is backward compatible with its fixed terrestrial counterpart
Digital Video
Broadcast-Terrestrial (DVB-T).
The DVB-H UHF spectrum also becomes available during a time when existing 3G
operators in Europe will be nearing the end of the subscriptions on their
cellular networks and looking to migrate their video services to a comple
mentary network for the future.
However, Frost & Sullivan admitted that competition for DVB-H could come
in the form of South Korea's
Satellite-DMB
and
Terrestrial-Digital
Media Broadcast (T-DMB) services. These two standards have divided the South
Korean communications industry.
"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," added 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."
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