Distribution

The new digital ways content was becoming distributed

  • Tens of Thousands View World Cup On Vodafone Mobiles

    Tens of Thousands View World Cup On Vodafone MobilesVodafone Netherlands got in touch with us to tell us how wildly popular the World Cup has been on mobile phones on their service – breaking previous records of simultaneous viewers.

    They have two ways to access the football. Total World Cup, a bargain 5 Euro service that allows subscribers to access four minute packages for each of the matches as often as they like during the World Cup up to 9 July; and the Goal Alerts service that delivers edited highlights, not surprisingly the goals, direct to subscribers handsets via MMS.

    The on-demand Total World Cup service is the one that really lit up at 5pm on the evening of last weeks match between Holland and Serbia Montenegro.

    When we first asked, Vodafone Netherlands followed the now-normal approach of mobile operators of shyness of exact figures. We probed a little deeper for the actual viewing figures and found out that there were tens of thousands of people view it simultaneously.

    Tens of Thousands View World Cup On Vodafone MobilesThis would have been a big test for their mobile network, delivering something as bandwidth hungry as video all at the same time. Without any reports to us to the contrary, we can only assume it all went smoothly.

    Previous viewing peaks were the friendly match against Mexico on 1 June, the day of the London bombings in July 2005 and some undoubtedly dull rubbish about Big Brother.

    Flush with the success, and no doubt in a way of trying to get subscribers hooked on MMS delivery, Vodafone are, as of today, offering the Goal Alerts service ‘without extra charge.’ Those without the handsets to handle video MMS will get a still photo delivered.

    Mobile TV is now the 3rd most popular service on Vodafone Netherlands – behind voice and SMS – for those with capable handsets.

    Vodafone Netherlands

  • HowTo: Stop BBC World Cup Football

    HowTo: Stop BBC World Cup FootballAuntie Beeb has been very nice and decided to make all of the World Cup matches it broadcasts simultaneously available through the wonderful Interweb thang.

    This sounds like good news, as companies no longer have to worry about employees calling in sick or mysteriously disappearing for meetings (in the pub). Everyone can watch the matches on their PC’s while pretending to do some work.

    All sounds too good to be true, morale is high, productivity goes up and everyone is happy.

    Well, unfortunately not everyone is happy.

    Bandwidth, bandwidth and more bandwidth
    Unless the company has a special arrangement with the BBC (or another provider of streaming services) each PC that views a live stream is sucking the bandwidth out of the company’s shared Internet connection. For a large company with lots of employees, that can add up to a lot of bandwidth, so much bandwidth, that other services may just stop working (like email).

    HowTo: Stop BBC World Cup FootballMany companies will be using broadband, which is mainly ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line), meaning more bandwidth down to the company than from the company to their ISP. Great for streaming, but without clever equipment, those streams will even stop upstream traffic working properly. It’s entirely feasible that all the companies bandwidth will be hogged by employees streaming.

    Morale high, but for those that do want to do some work, or maybe even telework, forget it – all the bandwidth’s gone.

    Licensing – How they’ll track you down
    Even though you’re getting the match over the Internet, it still originates from a broadcast signal, meaning you need a TV license to receive that broadcast. More precisely, the company that the PC is situated in needs a TV license from the TVLA (TV Licensing Authority).

    The TVLA can find out who is accessing BBC content with relative ease. How does it work?

    The BBC already knows which ISPs use which IP ranges (there’s more to it, but it gets very techie), as ISPs have to sign a contract to be able to get BBC broadband content in the first place – to ensure content doesn’t leak out of the UK being one of the main reasons.

    The TVLA can just go to the BBC, request the IP addresses watching the streams, link these back to the ISP and even the ISP’s customer – especially if they’re a business.

    Be aware that they can do a lot of this without even having to go to the trouble of getting a court order for the ISP to release the customer details, as if a customer is using real IP address space it’s likely there’s a RIPE registration for them.

    The final piece in the Jigsaw? The TVLA just checks to see if the company has a license. If not, bingo, a £1,000 fine.

    The need for a license also covers TV tuner cards and dongles that plug into PCs.

    Are there any exceptions?
    There is a get-out, but it’s quite specific. If the employee happens to be watching the footie on a laptop and it isn’t plugged in (i.e. working on batteries) AND the laptop owner has a valid TV license at home – it’s then covered under the laptop owners home license.

    How to Block access to the World Cup
    If a company doesn’t want to risk a fine, they should probably have a clear internal policy about what employees can do (or can’t do).

    They can be draconian and block access to the streaming servers completely and Auntie Beeb has nicely provided a list of the URLs to block.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now6a_bb.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now6a_bb.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now6a_bb350k.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now6a_bb350k.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now7a_bb.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now7a_bb.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now7a_bb350k.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now7a_bb350k.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now8a_bb.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now8a_bb.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now8a_bb350k.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now8a_bb350k.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now9a_bb.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now9a_bb.asx
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/rm/video/ukonly/sol_now9a_bb350k.ram
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsa/n5ctrl/sport/live/bb/wm/video/ukonly/sol_now9a_bb350k.asx

    Hope you enjoy your World Cup free days. It’s highly unlikely that everyone in the company will feel the same though.

  • Freeview TV Homes Exceed Analogue For First Time

    Freeview TV Homes Exceed Analog For First TimeWe wouldn’t normally bore you with tales of how many more percent of the UK population have joined the Digital TV-owning army, but this one is a significant one.

    For the first time, the number of households having the BBC-backed Free-to-Air service, Freeview, has exceeded their analogue cousins. Nearly 7.1m have Freeview and 6.4m are still analogue only.

    Freeview will also be pretty pleased that for the third successive quarter their sales have exceeded the 1 million mark, achieving 1.2m between January and March, up 40% over the same period last year.

    Digital satellite is still the Digital Daddy, with 7.7m homes subscribing to Sky and the remaining 645,000 receiving free-to-view satellite.

    There would have been relief at the recently-merged UK cable companies when they saw that there’d been an increase in the number of subscribers. The gain for NTL is only 5,000 subscribers in real terms as the additional new now-digital 70,000 digital cable subscribers were laid off against the 65,000 analogue subscribers who switched. These figures relate to the pre-merged companies.

    Interestingly there still around 500,000 analogue subscribers out of the 3.3m total cable subscriber-base. Changing these has got to be a priority if NTL want to start making the returns they need from subscribers.

    Freeview TV Homes Exceed Analog For First TimeTV over ADSL First
    For the first time Ofcom has reported separate figures for TV over ADSL services. Currently this is only London-focused HomeChoice, but they will be joined in short order by other IPTV companies like BT Vision. HomeChoice gained at a rate of 21.4% over the same period in 2005, ending with 48,545 subscribers.

    Breaking down Sky’s figures
    There’s some interest to be had comparing Sky’s Q4, 2005 figures with Q1 2006 – a couple of surprises lie in there.

    Churn (number of subscribers leaving the service) is up to 11.4% over 10.6% and ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) is down £5 to £392 from £397. This doesn’t sound like a lot until you look at it in terms of income loss – over £38m.

    On the positive front there was a gain of 87,000 households, with multi-room households gain 84,000 and Sky+ users up 149,000, now hitting 1,430,000.

    Freeview TV Homes Exceed Analog For First TimeAdditional TV Sets – Ongoing problems
    Ofcom are estimating that 38% of Freeview sales are intended to secondary TV sets which will start to allay a lot of fears.

    The big hurdle for the UK digital switch-over gang is the replacement of the non-primary TV set, the bedroom TV & video, little Johnny’s TV and the spare that the babysitter uses. When the analogue-broadcast lights go off is when these people start to yell.

    Ofcom UK Digital TV Q1 2006 report (PDF)

  • LCD TVs To Rule The Roost By 2009

    LCD TVs To Rule The Roost By 2009In a few years time, kids will be clutching their sides and laughing at the thought that their parents used to watch TV on massive great boxes that filled up half the living room.

    We know this because a new report tells us that LCD TVs are the future, with worldwide ownership of the slimline goggleboxes overtaking lardy CRT TVs in 2010.

    According to a new analysts iSuppli, sales of LCD TVs are positively hurtling along, with shipments expected to rise by 74 per cent to 46.7 million units this year – way up on their original estimate of 41.9 million units.

    After wheeling out their extrapolation-o-meter and pulling assorted levers and flywheels, the company predicts that LCDs will account for 48 per cent of TVs shipped in 2009, while chunky old-school CRTs will struggle with just 42 per cent.

    By the next year, the report predicts that LCDs will account for a hefty 56 per cent of all TVs shipped.

    Sales of rear-projection TVs and plasmas look set to remain a small part of the overall market, claiming just 3 percent and 7 per cent of the market respectively in 2009.

    LCD TVs To Rule The Roost By 2009Style over picture
    Although punters are happy to plunge headlong into the lithe, angular world of the LCD TV, many still believe that the ‘umble CRT TV still provides better picture quality – and what’s more, they cost less.

    However, declining LCD TV prices brought about by improvements in manufacturing continue to bring the once stratospherically-priced TVs into the economic reach of your average punter, with the average price of 32-inch and 40/ 42-inch LCD TVs falling by 17 per cent and 14 per cent respectively in the last five months.

    LG.Philips remain the raging King Kongs of the LCD TV manufacturer jungle with the biggest slice of the market, followed by Samsung, China’s Chi Mei and Acer-owned AU Optoelectronics.

    In the fourth quarter, South Korea produced nearly 45 per cent of the world’s LCD TVs, with Taiwan grabbing 40.1 per cent.

    iSuppli

  • N-Gage Online Game Purchase Launched

    N-Gage Online Game Purchase LaunchedNokia took a step into the world of online content delivery today with the launch of a new Website specialising in downloadable games for its N-Gage device. Gamers can download time-limited demos of games such as One and Pathway to Glory before purchasing at between 19.99 and 29.99 euros.

    The shop, is a significant step for the company allowing them to deliver games directly to customers, an achievement not always matched in stores. It could also pave the way for online games downloading services, perhaps the gaming equivalent of Apple’s iTunes?

    The process? All that is needed is to identify the game that you’re interested in, pay for it, download it to your computer, then load it on to a spare memory card to your N-Gage.

    The N-Gage has not had an easy time. The first version was launched to widespread derision due to its ‘unique’ side-talking feature, which forced users to speak into the side of the device, instantaneously transforming them into raging doofuses. A succession of model changes followed, culminating in the more sensibly configured, 7710, or N-Gage QD as it’s more often known as..

    N-Gage Online Game Purchase LaunchedWhile the concept of side-talking may fuel nerd in-jokes for some time to come (see sidetalkin) Nokia are determined to develop the N-Gage platform to create a multi-player, mobile gaming community which can connect via a variety of devices. The N-Gage platform for multiple devices was announced at the E3 trade show in Washington last month and will roll-out in early 2007.

    “As we move forward with our next generation of mobile gaming, we continue to offer N-Gage owners easy ways to get games,” said Jukka Hosio, Director, Global Sales, Multimedia, Nokia. “The N-Gage platform is recognized worldwide for its high-quality mobile gaming content. By making these games available for download over the internet, we’re making it easier for N-Gage owners to find and purchase new games.”

    Gameshop

  • Nokia’s M-tickets Go Mainstream With Guns’n’Roses

    Nokia's M-tickets Go Mainstream With Guns'n'RosesDandruff shakers looking forward to some geriatric rocking with Guns’n’Roses at the Hammersmith Apollo tomorrow night can forget all about keeping their tickets as a memento after the show.

    That’s because the gig is set to be a high-profile trial of the new fangled mobile ticketing technology, where paying punters are sent barcodes to their phones instead of getting scrapbook-friendly paper tickets.

    The m-tickets are disappointing looking affairs too, taking the form of a boring barcode and some text with event details.

    Powered by technology provided by Nokia spin-off Ticketrush.co.uk, headband-toting rockers arriving at the gig will have to form an orderly queue to get their barcode tickets scanned by door staff.

    It sounds nice and modern, but we’re already fostering fears of long lines of disgruntled rockers waiting in line as the door staff try and work out where the reset button is on their scanners.

    Nokia's M-tickets Go Mainstream With Guns'n'RosesMoreover, we don’t even like the idea of having tickets on our mobiles. What happens if your battery runs out, or if you delete your text message by accident?

    It may save promoters printing costs and make the process of booking tickets all sleek, modern and Metropolis-like, but there are a lot of memories in old ticket stubs and, to misquote Johnny Thunders, you can’t put your arms around an m-ticket.

    You can, of course, attempt to grab a personal record of the gig and annoy the people behind you all night by waving your glowing phone in the air.

    With luck, you’ll end up with a blocky, distorted set of unrecognisable moving blobs in the far distance obscured by a forest of glowing phones in front of you.

    Nokia's M-tickets Go Mainstream With Guns'n'RosesRegardless of what punters want, The Man is pressing ahead for a bright virtual ticket future, with O2 working with technology provider, Mobiqa to provide m-tickets to this month’s O2 Wireless Festival in London – and in their first week, they managed to shift a hefty £100,000 worth of the things.

    For kids too poor to get into gigs – and crafty freeloaders – the new m-ticketing may raise the bar for sneaking in free, but a part of us hopes that some clever nerds find a way to beat the system.

    Otherwise they’ll never know the joys of our misspent youth, where we managed to get into a gig by the mighty Thin Lizzy by drawing a ticket.

    The band were so impressed by our cheek that they signed the well-dodgy tickets after the gig. Try doing that with a chuffing m-ticket.

    Ticketrush

  • TalkTalk ‘Free’ Broadband Hits Problems

    TalkTalk 'Free' Broadband Hits ProblemsThere’s been some deep rumblings of discontent from tens of thousands of customers trying to sign up to Carphone Warehouse’s offer of “free” broadband.

    It seems that the Talk Talk calls/broadband package has been the victim of its own popularity with a slipping launch date and Carphone Warehouse CEO Charles Dunstone admitting that callers faced delays in getting through to the company’s call centres.

    TalkTalk 'Free' Broadband Hits ProblemsThe TalkTalk offer gives punters unlimited landline telephone calls and broadband access for £20 per month, with a one-off £29.99 connection fee.

    Carphone Warehouse had announced customers could sign up immediately to the service, which would be made available to “nearly 70 per cent of the UK population.”

    Despite a promised connection date at the start of July, new customers applying for the offer have been told that they can forget all about their freebie surfing until August at the earliest.

    TalkTalk 'Free' Broadband Hits ProblemsThe Independent has reported that chatrooms have been “inundated” with punters venting their frustration over their attempts to sign up to the service, with the TalkTalk website offering a rueful apology on their website:

    “Your free broadband might take a little longer to go live than we would like. There is huge demand for this amazing offer and there are lots of local difficulties to deal with, so even with our engineers going full tilt, there’ll be some customers we can’t connect immediately”

    TalkTalk

  • Silver Surfer Week 2006

    Silver Surfer Week 2006Crumblies all across the UK are being given the chance to try out the new fangled interwebby thing thanks to Age Concern’s ‘Silver Surfer Week.’

    Co-sponsored by BT, Intel and Microsoft, the initiative aims to help old folks understand the benefits of using e-mail and the internet as well as improving their technical skills.

    More than 1,500 IT taster sessions have been set up with old ‘uns being shown how they can order shopping and services from the comfort of their own favourite chair.

    There’ll also be a bus loaded with computers touring the UK.

    Silver Surfer Week 2006Silver Surfer Clubs
    The campaign marks the start of a three year partnership between Age Concern England and BT, with a (rather miserly) budget worth £240,000 helping to turn Age Concern’s 150 nationwide computer “drop ins” and access points into a unified network of “Silver Surfer Clubs”.

    The initiative comes on the back of BT research which found that 9.7 million people over the age of 60 are currently ‘digitally excluded’ in the UK.

    Age Concern’s own research found that a total of 44% of over-50s are without internet access, but of those already hooked up to t’Web, most thought the benefits far outweighed the costs.

    Silver Surfer Week 2006Frankie’s story
    Booking holidays and tracing family histories were the some of the most popular uses of the Web for OAPs, with Age Concern director general Gordon Lishman adding that the internet also enabled silver surfers to pursue hobbies or meet new friends online.

    Take old Frank Jones, 74, for example.

    A bonkers budgerigar nut all his life, Frank popped into a computer clinic run at his local church drop-in centre to learn some digital skills.

    Before you know it, Frankie had learnt how to use a digital camera and was soon sending hardcore budgie porn all over the world to new mates he’d made in places like Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Pakistan and Indonesia.

    “I never dreamt my budgerigars would help me find friends all over the world with the same passion,” says Frank.

    With his new found skills, Frank was soon teaching others, notching up a level 2 City and Guilds qualification and bagging a nomination for an Adult Learner Award. Go Frankie boy!

    Silver Surfer Week 2006“Before I began the courses, I’d never even switched a computer on,” says Frank. “I’m now planning to create my own Website that my family and friends can visit to see my latest photographs and exchange messages. It’s a great way to share experiences and keep in touch.”

    With a report last year by the Independent Consumer Panel for the UK communications watchdog Ofcom revealing that older folks felt alienated from digital life, we naturally warmly welcome Age Concern’s drive to get silver surfers online.

    Just so long as they don’t start posting up on forums to whine on about how things were “much better back in the old days…kids today, no respect…look at the price of that… etc”

    Silver Surfer Week 2006

  • Microsoft Launch Pay-As-You-Go PCs

    Microsoft Launch Pay-As-You-Go PCsIn a novel venture to bring personal computing to everyone, Microsoft has hooked up with laptop manufacturer Lenovo and chip makers AMD and Intel to launch a ‘pay-as-you-go’ service for buying PCs.

    Using a model similar to prepaid mobile telephone services, consumers can get their hands on a Lenovo desktop PC by paying about half of its street price up front, and then paying the balance over time by buying prepaid cards from Lenovo.

    The ‘pay as you go’ deal is made possible through a new Microsoft technology called FlexGo, with users owning the machine outright once they’ve bought a predetermined number of usage hours via the prepaid cards.

    The FlexGo machines use a fully-fledged version of Windows XP that comes with a timer counting down the hours in the upper right-hand corner of the PC screen.

    As the timer runs down, the PC delivers a series of alerts before limiting access to programs and features, and ultimately ceasing to work altogether until more time is purchased (by prepaid card or online).

    Microsoft Launch Pay-As-You-Go PCs“Today there are already more than 1 billion prepaid mobile phones used around the world, so we know FlexGo enables a familiar and comfortable pay-as-you-go model that works for people with variable or unpredictable income”, said Will Poole, Microsoft’s senior VP of the Market Expansion Group.

    Microsoft has already been running trials of the program in Brazil for over a year and will be expanding to other selected, markets like India, Russia, China and Mexico.

    We half expected the trials to be using bottom end, cheap’n’cheerful computers, but it seems that punters were able to use high-quality, mid-range Lenovo desktop PCs.

    “Lenovo’s joint effort with Microsoft using FlexGo pay-as-you-go computing will bring high-quality PCs within the reach of millions of families for use in education, communications and entertainment”, continued Microsoft’s Poole.

    It’s a cunning business plan too: in the Brazilian trial, consumers were able to buy pay FlexGo PCs for around $300 (about half the market price), but would typically end up owning the PC after spending roughly $400 to $500 more on access charges – making the total cost around $700 to $800.

  • The Wireless Event Recapped

    The Wireless Event RecappedThe Wireless Event took place on Wednesday and Thursday at Olympia in London, it’s an industry show that stands out for exhibitors trying to sell to other exhibitors – who probably outnumber visitors (well maybe a slight exaggeration).

    The theme of the exhibition is WiFi, WiMAX, 3G and VoIP and it comes with all the hype that surrounds them. There was little of anything new at the show, and wandering around upstairs, showed half the floorspace hadn’t been sold.

    Unfortunately for a wireless show, getting a working connection to a WiFi network was almost impossible, mainly due to the number of networks available all interfering with each other. Maybe it should have been called the Wire Event or the Wireless Less Event. If metro WiFi is going to succeed then all the access points better be smart enough to not ‘tread on each others toes’ or it just isn’t going to work.

    The Wireless Event RecappedThere were a lot of infrastructure companies trying to sell WiFi or WiMAX systems, some in the consumer space, but mainly for service providers. Of the mobile networks, only T-Mobile had a big stand, Orange had a small “business” services stand and O2 had a section of the Cloud’s stand.

    There were some interesting products, but only a few. Here’s the cream of the crop.

    Our pick of the show
    Ruckus sell a WiFi access point, however the guts of the Ruckus system is what Netgear use for their RangeMAX range, which uses multiple antennae to steer the radio signals. Ruckus’s own version is more advanced and they are supporting things like streaming video. As an example of use, you can connect a media converter to a Sky TV box and then get decent quality through the WiFi connection to a TV several hundred feet away. Here the stream is converted back to a TV signal with another media converter. The access point looks quite pretty too – good for home use.

    The Wireless Event RecappedUSR aka (US Robotics) have announced a USB handset that works with Skype. It’s really just a USB sound-device, but looks like a phone and has Skype integration (i.e. you can pull your contacts etc from Skype and they show in the phone’s display). They’ve also got a USB Skype conferencing device so several people sitting around a table can listen and speak on the call. Their ADSL/ADSL2+/Wireless routers are all now very simple to configure with wireless security turned on by default and basic ISP settings pre-configured.

    Nokia had their new E series phone, with the E61 standing out from the pack. It runs Symbian and has support for several push Email systems included (Nokia Business Centre, Blackberry, Visto, Seven, and others). It’s about the same size as the Blackberry, but thinner with a metal casing and very bright colour display. It’s also a nice 3G phone.

    The Wireless Event RecappedThe Cloud were there with a HUGE O2 Exec (aka i-mate JASJAR), anyone using the Exec can log-in to the Cloud’s homepage through WiFi, hit the O2 logo, enter their mobile number and the user will be phoned back. If they enter the digit 1 they’ll be granted access (and billed to that number).

    BT Openzone had just announced their Wireless Cities initiative whereby Birmingham, Edinburgh, Leeds, Liverpool, Cardiff and Westminster are being made into hotzones. BT Openzone have a roaming agreement with the Cloud, but this puts them in direct competition (The Cloud are also offering wireless zones in various cities). Let’s hope the zones don’t overlap or connectivity issues will be as big a mess as the exhibition coverage was.

    The Wireless Event RecappedZyxel had a their normal range of wired/wireless and security products. The star of their stand was their keyfob wireless hotspot locator. It works with all modes of WiFi (i.e. 802.11a/b/g) and supports unsecured and secure networks (WEP, WPA etc) showing what networks are available (at least 9 were available around the Zyxel stand).

    The best bit of the show by far was the massages provided by Urban Chill. After a day wandering around Olympia it was just what was needed (thanks Lucy). To be honest had the massage come first, the rest of the show would have been a write-off.