Release date: 11
June 2004
ntl press release ref: 106
ntl and Microsoft mount UK
datacasting trial using Visionradio content
• Long-term trial of broadcast multimedia delivery using DVB and DAB
• Hand-held and fixed reception with ‘sync-and go’ file sharing
• Digital Rights Management to help protect content
ntl’s Broadcast
division and Microsoft Corp. have mounted a long-term industry trial
of multimedia datacasting in and around Cambridge. The trial
demonstrates the capabilities of terrestrial DAB and DVB
broadcasting platforms for delivering video, audio and text-based
information services to mobile devices.
The trial includes a mixture of live ’streamed’ audio and video for
fixed, mobile and handheld reception and data file transfer for
video clips, audio compilations, images and web pages. A broad range
of content, from sports to documentaries, can be delivered directly
to mobile devices or through ‘sync-and-go’ file sharing with a PC.
In addition, a voting application illustrates how end users can
interact with a broadcaster or a content provider using a mobile
phone return path.
The IP-based technology is a real-world implementation of
demonstrations given at the NAB and IBC broadcast industry
exhibitions last year and makes full use of the compression
efficiencies of Microsoft Windows Media 9 Series. The trial is also
using the latest version of Windows Media Digital Rights Management,
enabling content to be delivered more securely to mobile devices.
An ntl transmitter at Milton near Cambridge broadcasts DVB-T and DAB
data-streams that can be received by fixed roof-top antennas, mobile
or hand-held devices over a wide area.
Content originated by ITV, British Eurosport, Capital Radio and
Visionradio is processed at ntl Broadcast’s main offices at Crawley Court near
Winchester and is delivered to the transmitter via the ntl fibre
network.
New business models in datacasting are likely to involve a
relationship with mobile telephone operators, as ntl’s head of media
business development Terry Howard explains: “Using the broadcast
network to deliver one-to-many content while the mobile operator
provides one-to-one connection plays to the strengths of both
parties. In addition the broadcasters have the content while the
mobile operators provide the interactive return path and the
all-important customer/billing relationship. Handset manufacturers
are beginning to produce integrated devices with colour screens and
DVB/DAB receivers.“
Erin Cullen, lead product manager in the Windows Digital Media
Division at Microsoft, commented: “We’re very excited to expand our
research with ntl, working alongside leading content owners,
technology companies and broadcasters in the UK. This trial is
designed to reveal more about potential content delivery models
using the compression capabilities of Windows Media 9 Series in
conjunction with standards-based DAB and DVB networks. Ultimately,
this research will help a wider range of consumers enjoy digital
content by making it available on demand to low-cost mobile
devices.”
In mounting the trial, ntl and Microsoft acknowledge the generous
assistance of the following organisations: British Eurosport,
Capital Radio, Imagination Technologies, ITV; MobileInvent,
RadioScape, Rohde & Schwarz, SkyStream, TANDBERG Television, UBS,
Unique Interactive and Visionradio
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