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April 04, 2005

C/Net reports that a streaming radio service called MSpot Radio is coming from Sprint cellular. The service initially will be available to Sprint PCS Vision customers.

MSpot Radio, which will mainly compete with the likes of Sirius and XM satellite radio, consists of 13 live, on-demand music, news, sports, finance, weather and talk channels. Sprint is offering the service for $5.95 a month.

"Cell coverage may not be universal, but it's a lot better than satellite," said MSpot CEO Daren Tsui. He expects customers will upgrade to unlimited data plans and high-fi handsets such as the Sanyo MM-5600 and MM-7400 which currently offer the service.

The audio content is just the beginning, according to MSpot, which plans to introduce additional wireless streaming services in the coming months, including motion pictures, premium video programming and mobile-exclusive original programming.

"It is absolutely critical that we make sure that as mainstream consumers begin to investigate what the phone holds beyond voice calls, what they find is high-quality, compelling and entertaining," says MSpot co-founder and CEO Daren Tsui.

It's not very clear how long users will want to stare at a small screen, or whether they'll be able to watch anything longer than a few minutes. Wireless providers have asked media companies to produce specialized video clips -- brief news reports and "mobisodes," that run as only a minute or so.

Sprint's MobiTV service, operated by Idetic, costs about $10/month. RealTV, for $5 a month, lets you stream prerecorded RealVideo clips of news and sports.

How can Sprint afford to loose their valuable channels to unlimited data streamers? No doubt they'll move users to a different frequency, either Qualcomm's 700 Mhz mobile video service or Crown Castle's 1.6 Ghz mobile video service.

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Verizon's V Cast video clips use Microsoft's Windows Media Format software on the handsets, either archived or in a streaming media format. The transmission takes 30 seconds or less, and sometimes the video is a bit shaky or choppy. The NBA has video highlights on Verizon's new V-CAST multimedia service which uses their EV-DO network. Verizon says it's now available in some 30 metropolitan markets covering a potential 75 million people.

The Junxion Box uses a cellular backbone and outputs a Wi-Fi signal. Could it be used for WiFi radio/tv? Not likely, without the approval of Cingular, Sprint or Verizon.

Via Daily Wireless


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on Apr 4, 2005 at 07:37 PM