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Monday, March 05, 2007

T-Mobile CZ selects U-Turn for music portal

The U-Turn Media Group, a provider of high-quality video content for mobile phones, has been selected by mobile operator T-Mobile in the Czech Republic, to deliver its T-Music Videozona streaming music portal to subscribers.

U-Turn said its VIZGO mobile media delivery solution was chosen by T-Mobile for the recent introduction of its portal, enabling subscribers to access 100 constantly updated streamed audio and video clips from international music acts.

The portal is incorporated into the handset's menu structure and can be accessed with just one click, providing subscribers with a user-friendly music portal and ensuring content features the t-music videozona branding. T-Mobile is using VIZGO's built-in reporting feature to track user behaviour, such as the average time spent in the portal, the average length of stream or download per day and the most popular content accessed.

Big Bucks Back Next Mobile Frontier: Broadcast TV

SAN FRANCISCO (Billboard)—Want to watch TV on your mobile phone? The wireless industry is betting billions that you do.

And they're not talking about just downloading or streaming on-demand videoclips to your phone. Efforts are afoot to broadcast TV programming nationwide to a new generation of mobile phones that can tune in, just like an at-home TV.

Despite the billions of dollars U.S. wireless operators have spent upgrading their networks to offer such multimedia content as videos and music, they are insufficient for the job.

The problem is that they are designed for two-way, on-demand access. To broadcast programming on such networks would require that each show be sent to each subscriber separately—an impossibly time-consuming and expensive proposition.

"It's very difficult to offer high-definition TV on a handset through existing networks," says Andrew Cole, an analyst with A.T. Kearney. "You have to offload that through a separate network

BUILDING THE NETWORK

Leading the charge in the United States is wireless bellwether Qualcomm, which has invested $800 million to date in its vision for mobile broadcast TV.

Called MediaFLO, this effort requires Qualcomm to act much like a cable company, such as Comcast. It must build its own content-delivery system, consisting of an entirely new network of wireless transmitters, on airwaves paid for by the company.

Additionally, it requires a new receiver—also built by Qualcomm—that manufacturers will have to incorporate into future phone models if they want their customers to be able to receive such broadcasts. Finally, the company is negotiating airing rights to programs from major media outlets.

Once MediaFLO is operational, Qualcomm hopes to sell the service on a wholesale basis to wireless operators, who would provide it to their subscribers as a complement to their own mobile video services.

The result is a service that offers 15-20 channels of real-time broadcast TV displayed on a mobile phone at 30 frames per second in HD resolution, on par with standard TV. That is twice the frame rate of Verizon's current VCast high-speed video service, with three times the picture quality.

In addition to the broadcast programming, the MediaFLO system supports a feature called "clipcasting." Users can select content they would like pushed automatically to their phone and replaced when new installments are created, much like a podcast. Content can be refreshed hourly, daily or weekly, and can consist of video and audio programming.

UNIVERSAL SERVICE

Qualcomm is positioning MediaFLO as a service for all carriers; wireless subscribers, regardless of their carrier, will have access to the same MediaFLO programming.

Carriers could then offer exclusive, on-demand, premium programming of their own to set themselves apart. In addition, carriers could incorporate the MediaFLO stream with such applications as a music store or ringtone store. So a user listening to or watching a music channel via MediaFLO can use the carrier network to buy the ringtone or full-song download of any given track.

"It's like gluing your TV and Internet together," says Jeff Lorbeck, VP and general manager of Qualcomm's MediaFLO division.

As usual, the testing ground for such a dedicated multimedia system is in Asia. Korean operator SK Telekom currently offers a wireless multimedia service using a satellite-based adjunct delivery system called Digital Media Broadcasting.

Since its April launch, the DMB service has attracted more than 100,000 subscribers with seven channels of video and 20 of audio. A similar system has been operational in Japan for years.

Also making a play is another wireless giant—Nokia. Its Digital Video Broadcast-Handheld technology is being tested across Europe by several wireless carriers and in the United States by partner Crown Castle Mobile Media.