Mobile TV is television which is watched on a small handheld device. It may be a pay TV service delivered to subscribers via mobile telecommunications networks, such as the mobile phone carriers, or received free-to-air via terrestrial television stations operating either in regular mode or a special mobile TV transmission format. It can also be in the form of IPTV streaming video from a wireless network, and in many contexts even recorded TV programs such as podcasts which are downloaded and stored on the mobile device for later viewing.
History
Mobile TV is one of the features provided by many 3G phones. In 2005, South Korea became the first country in the world to have mobile TV when it started satellite DMB (S-DMB) and terrestrial DMB (T-DMB) service on May 1 and December 1, respectively. Today, South Korea and Japan are at the forefront of this developing sector.Mobile TV services have been launched by the operator CSL in Hong Kong in March 2006 on the 3G network. BT in the United Kingdom was the among the first companies outside South Korea to launch Mobile TV in September 2006, although the service was abandoned less than a year later. The same happened to "MFD Mobiles Fernsehen Deutschland", who launched their DMB-based service June 2006 in Germany, and stopped it in April 2008. Also in June 2006, mobile operator 3 in Italy (part of Hutchison Whampoa) launched their mobile TV service, but opposed to their counterpart in Germany this was based on DVB-H. Sprint started offering the service in February 2006 and was the first US carrier to offer the service. In the US Verizon Wireless and more recently AT&T are offering the service.
Overview
Mobile TV is a service which allows cell phone owners to watch television on their phones from a service provider. Television data can be obtained either through an existing cellular network or a propriety network.
In South Korea, mobile TV is largely divided into satellite DMB (S-DMB) and terrestrial DMB (T-DMB). Although S-DMB initially had more content, T-DMB has gained much wider popularity because it is free and included as a feature in most mobile handsets sold in the country today.
Mobile TV is also available for consumers in India. BSNL introduced this feature for its eastern and north-eastern regions of India. In 2007, it also launched a mobile TV application called "isee". Today, isee is available not only in the four BSNL zones but also to other networks across India (except Reliance and TATA Indicom CDMA services). An individaul using a streaming-enabled handset can download or access the WAP version of this application on his/her mobile by sending a simple sms "isee" to 57575 or log on to http://www.isee.co.in for further information.
Challenges
- Device Manufacturer’s challenges
1. Power consumption: Battery technology for mobile portable devices may be stuck in a race condition. Improved battery life can be used up by the upgraded mobile content and enhanced functions. However, dashtop mobile devices can also be powered by a 12-volt vehicle battery, however vehicle batteries are not a sustainable source of power for mobile devices.
2. Memory: To support the high buffer requirements of mobile TV. Current memory capabilities available will not be suited for long hours of mobile TV viewing. Furthermore, potential future applications like peer-to-peer video sharing in mobile phones and consumer broadcasting would definitely add to the increasing memory requirements. The existing P2P algorithms won't be enough for mobile devices, necessitating the advent of mobile P2P algorithms. There is one start-up technology that claims patentability on its mobile P2P, but has not drawn attention from device manufacturers yet.
3. User interface design: A large number of mobile phones do not support mobile TV; users have to purchase new handsets with improved LCD display and user interface that support mobile TV. This new design has to appeal to the end-users and increase the clarity of images without making the handset very bulky. The wider LCD touchscreens will be preferred by end-users and iPhone's popularity in the United States is part of the compelling evidence.
4. Processing power: Device manufacturers should improve the processing power significantly to support a MIPS intensive application like mobile TV.
- Content Provider’s challenges
The mobile TV industry opens up a new market for the content specifically tailored for mobile TVs. These could include making new mobisodes –mobile episodes of popular shows which are relatively shorter in length (3 to 5 minutes), modifying the content to suit mobile TV.
Digital TV
North America
Mobile TV and mobile digital radio has been a challenge in North America, in part, because of the decision of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to use proprietary systems instead of the principles of network neutrality. This sometimes leads to vendor lock-in by mobile phone companies and manufacturers.
The FCC chose the ATSC system for digital TV, which along with the choice of 8VSB modulation (instead of COFDM that's used in the rest of the world) makes even fixed reception difficult, especially because it is heavily prone to multipath interference (which changes rapidly in a mobile reception environment). While ATSC-M/H was developed to allow for mobile reception, it still rides within each TV station's regular MPEG transport stream, depending heavy error correction to compensate for poor signals, and taking space out of the "bit budget" for each station's other digital subchannels and/or HDTV, unlike DVB-H. Unlike DVB-T, there is no hierarchical modulation to allow for LDTV reception and no variable transmission modes which each station may choose to make its signal more robust and receivable (at the expense of bitrate throughput). Due to these issues, chipsets for ATSC-M/H are still not in any consumer electronics as of 2009.
The FCC also chose HD Radio, which although it uses COFDM and has reasonable mobile reception, does not have provisions for mobile TV as DAB-T has with DMB-T and is incompatible even with neighboring Canada, where the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) already chose DAB in the L band. Satellite radio is also proprietary with no choice made by the FCC regarding the system. MediaFLO is broadcast on UHF TV channel 55, but like satellite TV is encrypted and controlled by conditional access (provided via the cellular network). Also, it must be purchased as pay TV for a limited number of cellphones which must have AT&T Mobility or Verizon Wireless phone service.
Broadcast mobile DTV development
While MediaFLO uses the TV spectrum and MobiTV used cell phone networks, "mobile DTV" (ATSC-M/H) uses the digital TV spectrum.
At the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) show in April 2007 in Las Vegas, the ATSC and 8VSB methods for delivering mobile DTV were shown. A-VSB (Advanced VSB), from Samsung and Rohde & Schwarz, was shown at the previous year's show. In 2007, LG, whose Zenith Electronics came up with 8VSB, introduced (with Harris Group) its Mobile-Pedestrian-Handheld (MPH) system.
As the broadcast networks began making their content available online, mobile DTV meant stations would have another way to compete. Sinclair Broadcast Group tested A-VSB in fall 2006, and its KVCW and KVMY were participating in the mobile DTV product demonstrations at the NAB show. A-VSB had worked in buses at the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show.
ION Media Networks started a test station on channel 38, which was to be used for digital LPTV, to use for a single-frequency network (SFN). In some areas, more than one TV transmitter would be needed to cover all areas.
Mobile DTV could have been used at that time because it would not affect HDTV reception. A single standard, however, had to be developed.
Two years later, ION said it was making available HDTV, standard definition and Mobile DTV streams using its affiliates in New York city and Washington, D.C. The "triple-play" concept is part of an effort to create a Mobile DTV standard. For now, only those with prototype receivers can pick up the streams. Eventually, the Open Mobile Video Coalition, made up of over 800 broadcast TV stations, wants to help Mobile DTV reach its potential.
ION Chairman and CEO Brandon Burgess says mobile DTV lets stations "think beyond the living room and bring live television and real time information to consumers wherever they may be."
The Advanced Television Systems Committee started work on mobile DTV standards in May 2007, and manufacturers and sellers have worked quickly to make the new technology a reality. The OMVC persuaded LG and Samsung to work together starting in May 2008 so that differing systems (possibly a self-destructing format war) would not delay or kill the technology.
Early in July 2009, the ATSC Technology and Standards Group approved the ATSC-M/H standard for mobile DTV which all members green-lighted October 15. The public could be using the new devices by 2010, though watching TV on cell phones seemed unlikely in the near future since telephone manufacturers did not yet include that capability. The technology was expected to be used for polls and even voting. Paul Karpowicz, NAB Television Board chairman and president of Meredith Broadcast Group, said
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