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July 28, 2004

Bandwidth & TV Phones

The Bandwidth wars are starting. TW Cable announced it's upping its service to 6 MBits. Not to be out done, wounded but fiesty, RCN said that it will up its service to 7MBits. And so it begins ... the Broadband Wars. At 6 MBits, you can receive full 30 fps video that looks like television. At 20 MBits, the signal can be HD (on multiple sets). Who's going to get there first? More importantly, which CE devices are going to be part of the "new" business of broadband. Candidates include: Sony, LG, Westinghouse, Epson, HP, Intel, Samsung and Sanyo to name a few. Basically, every CE manufacturer has broadband and WiFi enabled hardware to take advantage of the bigger pipe.

In other news, NBC Universal, Fox Sports Interactive Media and Comedy Time have entered into an agreement with MobiTV, the TV service for mobile phones users, to provide TV programming to Sprint customers via its Sprint Nationwide PCS Network. Programming content will include headlines and breaking news from NBC News, which is in addition to NBC Universal and MobiTV existing deal which features programming from MSNBC and CNBC. The FOX Sports channel programming will FOX Wire national sports coverage, and regional sports news via its Regional Sports Report, and a variety of programs like Beyond the Glory and Fox Sports One, College Football Saturday, NFL on Fox and MLB on Fox. Comedy Time will feature stand-up comedy acts. Some of the other broadcasters that provide TV through MobiTV's monthly subscription service are ABC News Now, College Sports Television, and Discovery Channel, Discovery en Espaˆ±ol, Discovery Kids, and The Learning Channel.


Posted by yatta at 04:00 PM