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Virgin kills off mobile TV service

Link: Virgin pulls the plug on mobile video | The Register

Virgin Mobile have announced plans to pull the plug on their mobile TV service early next year. The service, in partnership with BT Movio, was launched in a blaze of publicity featuring ex-Baywatch babe Pamela Anderson. Since then, apparently only 10,000 Lobster 700TV handsets have been sold by January 2007 – which put the future of the service into doubt even then.

Virgin Mobile and BT Movio’s service used DMB technology, which in turn relied on bandwidth on GCap Media’s national DAB digital radio multiplex. Although BT’s contract with GCap runs until 9th June 2008, Virgin have advised that they’ll be canning the service shortly after the end of January 2008.

The news comes just weeks after the European Union chose DVB-H (an adaptation of the existing DVB-T terrestrial digital TV technology) as the standard for mobile TV in its member countries. However this is still a broadcast-based one to many solution – and does not, like the Virgin/BT service, provide video on demand services.

Commenting on the news, Bruce Renny from streaming mobile TV experts ROK TV said: “Expectations for the commercial uptake of full-length broadcast TV on mobiles as subscription services are over-optimistic and the demise of Virgin’s mobile TV service reflects that. After all, why pay a subscription fee to receive the same TV content on your mobile that you already get at home? Particularly when people don’t watch TV on mobiles for more than a few minutes at a time.”

“Most mobile TV viewing is for just a few minutes. To be commercially successful, you have to provide a combination of live news, sports updates and video-on-demand made-for-mobile content which is instantly engaging. Simply broadcasting linear TV to mobiles is not the answer.”

2 COMMENTS

  1. The BT Movio service didn’t use DMB, but used a proprietary implementation using a combination of IP streaming, Microsoft Windows Media and Microsoft DRM. The commitment to Microsoft technologies extended into the Lobster handset, which had to be based on Microsoft Windows Mobile, and using HTC for manufacturing. Ultimately, the restricted choice of a single Windows Mobile handset (which was quite bulky) probably impacted very heavily on uptake of the service.

    In contrast, DMB (which is also based on the DAB system) has quite a wide range of attractive mobile phones from manufacturers like LG and Samsung, as well as hand-held media devices from manufacturers like iRiver. DMB is the standardised implementation of Mobile TV on the DAB/Eureka 147 platform.

  2. Hello, for a long time I read your blog, thanks for that that write interesting and
    useful posts.I consider that blogers it is possible to name many journalists.

    Good luck

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