Distribution

The new digital ways content was becoming distributed

  • BT Wins Northern Ireland Broadband Deal

    BT have just won a contract that roll broadband out to the 1.7 million inhabitants of Northern Ireland

    Out of the twenty-seven companies who responded to the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment (DETI) invitation to tender, BT had already looked to be the favourite for some time.

    Enterprise Minister Ian Pearson said “This will allow all our businesses, even those in the most rural locations, to avail of broadband services to compete in the global market.”

    DETI’s objective is to offer every business and household in Northern Ireland at least a 512kbps connection by the end of 2005. This would make the region the first in the UK to offer 100% coverage. Coverage is currently 60%, with takeup of 10%.

    BBC News on the deal

    The Register

  • UK Broadband Goes Up a Notch or 20

    We have long been envious of broadband users in Japan who have access to the Yahoo’s 45Mps broadband service, but some who live in Central or West London could have the chance of getting to near to half those speeds when Bulldog DSL launch their 20Mbps service in the fourth quarter of 2004. The cost of the service is rumoured to cost around £300 per month.

    This announcement comes hard on the heals of Bulldog talking about a 4Mps service for home users priced at £72.99 per month (inclusive of VAT). Richard Greco the Bulldog CEO was reported as saying he expects other areas of the UK could also be reached as the network coverage is expanded.

    Prior to this announcement, the faster broadband service in the UK was from EasyNet, who currently provide a 6Mps service for £199 per month.

    Speed to 5Mps are significant as they allow the transfer of broadcast quality video, held in MPEG2 video to be displayed TV resolution.

    We hope this kind of announcement will embarrass BT into upping the speed of their offering, particularly as most DSL customers in the UK run at a barely acceptable 512Kbps. Frankly we are not hold out much hope.

    Bulldog

    ADSLGuide on Bulldog

  • EMI Deal Helps Peer to Peer Go Legit

    With 60,000 recordings from 182 record labels, Wippit is a new attempt at a legal, profitable P2P network. Their business model is based on subscription – currently priced at US$49, the one year pass allows you unlimited downloads of all material on the service. The client guarantees no spyware or RIAA lawsuits, which is refreshing. Amongst the material available on the network are tracks from Underworld, the Stereophonics and FC Kahuna. They also have the Cheeky Girls.

    The EMI deal includes artists like Radiohead and Pink Floyd, but excludes The Beatles, whose music is not available for download currently.

    Fans of Shazam can forward Shazam SMSs of ID’d tracks to the Wippit Wireless number, and have the track forwarded to them for downloading later, if Wippit have the track.

    Wippit are based in London, and led by Paul Myers, formerly of X-Stream.

    The client is currently Windows only, but they’re considering Linux and Macintosh ports if there is enough demand.

    About Wippit

  • MovieLink Offer Re-rental

    MovieLink, the on-demand film service that delivers films via broadband Internet connections, is experimenting with different pricing models. They have launched an offer that permits their viewers to re-watch films that they have downloaded, paid for and watched. They call it MultiPlay.

    If a viewer has the urge to watch a film again within 30 days of the original rental, they can pay a normally reduced price to have another 24 hours access to it and have the advantage that the film does not have to be downloaded again. Not all films that MovieLink carry are included, presumably because of licensing restrictions, and the cost of re-renting varies but start at 99c.

    MovieLink

  • MidemNet 2004 report

    By Paul Hosford, partner, New Media Law

    The fifth MidemNet 2004 opened the week long international music industry’s conference in Cannes. In heavily attended sessions this year, it appears, at least on the surface, that the industry is at last grasping on-demand digital distribution of music – the legal variety that is.

    MidemNet is the music industry’s international forum that attracts players from every corner of the business to get together and discuss the issues confronting an industry severely impacted by the illegal distribution of millions of copies of its product.

    Ted Cohen, EMI Music’ s senior VP of digital development and distribution, opened with the positive pro-industry message – commercial downloads represent the ultimate way forward for music consumers. He feels that it will come of age in 2004, and when legal battles are overcome and the consumer is empowered by commercialised P2P delivery, the industry’s bad reputation will begin to improve.

    Keynote interviewee Eddy Cue of Apple’s Internet services announced what everyone suspected, the iTunes Music Store would launch in Europe at some point. iTunes throws into relief these challenges for the music business. Launched in April 2003 as a proprietary platform download service, the Music Store leverages Apple’s existing back-end infrastructure to offer a flat fee of 99 cents per track, and now offering 0.5 million tracks, made available by the Major record labels under recent licensing, but only available to US consumers. The delay in the European launch has been put down to resolving licensing across countries.

    Setting out to develop “a better Kazaa” by 5 January 2004, iTunes has sold more than 30 million tracks in all kinds of genres, predominantly to an over-21 demographic. This has moved the Majors on from a proposition that only 2 and a half years ago was not on their list of potential licensing opportunities.

    Whilst we all know and covet that beautifully packaged piece of must-have hardware that is the iPod, the reality is that Apples share of the 99 cents may not, in isolation, be sufficient to rev-up their share price. What is clear is that sales of iPod are going through the roof.

    There has been a lot of discussion here about iTunes downloads not being platform-independent and that ultimately this may become a sticking point for the device-rich consumer who wants the flexibility to listen to their paid-for music on any device they own. In the meantime, iTunes sales still represent small numbers when compared to the world of illegal P2P sharing.

    The European iTunes delay has highlighted a major problem. What will remain firmly as the principal challenge for any pan-European initiative is an industry with differing product release dates, differing licensing and rights collection mechanisms across the European territories – and differing price models. The message is clear – the industry must push through change in these licensing and publishing practices across the major markets.

    In the panel sessions representatives of OD2, EMI Music, RealNetworks, French ISP Wanadoo and mmO2, debated the very real technical problems of delivering to consumers a single product where the industry’s marketplace and accounting mechanisms are territorially divergent and a very long way from uniformity. Whilst EMI’s goal is obviously, to sell more music by making it available in multiple formats on any platform, corralling all the various rights holders that share in recorded music remains the Major Labels most immediate challenge.

    For the content aggregators, the ISP’s mobile networks and digital music intermediaries, the problems are different, but equally complex. They must deal with multiple payment mechanisms, differing pricing regimes and a complex value chain that makes it very challenging to deliver cost effective alternatives to paying consumers demanding of quality content. What will be critical to delivering a successful consumer experience is cross-platform transferability of the downloaded track that is paid for once.

    In the meantime, the disc media formats are very much alive and kicking representing over 90 percent of music bought today. Your correspondent for one is looking forward to experiencing SACD recordings – real surround sound.

  • Wireless Broadband Week

    UK telco, BT, is offering free Wireless Internet access for a week starting today Monday, 26 January 2004.

    Simply sign up on the BT Openzone site and cost-free WiFi access is available at their 1,700 hotspot venues around the UK.

    Many sites already offer either permanent cost-free (consume.net), or free-if-you-buy-stuff (benugo) wireless access, but do not have the marketing budgets BT have.

    Openzone recently launched a Pay-as-you-go service, which they say caters for the occasional WiFi user. Bundle of credits can be bought in advance of usage and access prices start at 20 pence per minute.

    BT have been pleased with the increased usage of with WiFi hotspots and they report a 300 per cent increase in the number of minutes of activity on the BT Openzone network over the past three months. They plan to have 4,000 sites operating by this summer.

    BT Wireless Broadband Week

  • Stratospheric Broadband Floated

    A new European Union funded research project, called CAPANINA, was started in November 2003 to investigate the viability of providing broadband coverage to rural areas using High Altitude Platforms (HAPs). HAPs are solar-powered airships or planes that fly between 17 – 22 km above the earth, higher than normal plane flight but below satellites.

    CAPANINA is an example of what is being called Stratospheric Broadband and is aimed at bringing access speeds of up to 120Mbp/s to static small office and home users as well as mobile users, such as those on trains. Mobile users will use “smart” antennas that will point themselves at the HAP.

    The three year, €5.6M project is lead by Dr David Grace at the University of York, hopes to deliver broadband inexpensively and explore issues such as fast propagation of content and resource management.

    This reminds us of TeleDesic, the joint venture between Bill Gates and US cellular billionaire, Craig McCaw, that was a buzz in the Internet boom. They planned a constellation of hundreds of low-earth-orbit satellites (LEOS) flying less than 1,000 miles above the Earth, beaming broadband joy to the earth below. Looking at the TeleDesic site, the idea is clearly on the back burner, there are no working links on the site and the copyright is dated 2002 and we all know how keen Bill is on copyright.

    CAPANINA project

    Dr David Grace profile

  • Record 11m SMS’s Sent New Years Day in the UK

    A stunning 111 million mobile phone text messages (SMS’s) were sent person-to-person in the UK between midnight on 31st December 2003 and midnight on 1st January 2004, nearly double the normal daily average. New Year in 2002 set the previous record, which for the first time broke the 100 million level.

    The trend for SMS is still continuing to increase, as is illustrated by the 8% increase on the most recent New Year. Further examples of growth are October 2003 hitting a new monthly record, by reaching 1.8 billion messages sent, and 76 million being sent on the day of England victory in the Rugby World Cup.

    It has been know for along time that the younger generations are big SMS users and further proof of this was shown on 14th August 2003, when 67 million text messages were sent on the day that A-level (pre-university examinations) results were announced, which at that time was the previous highest number of message sent.

    The figures come from the Mobile Data Association (MDA) and were collected from the four GSM operators in the UK, O2, Orange, T-Mobile and Vodafone.

    Mobile Data Association

  • Multimedia over Coax Alliance Forms

    Getting digitised media moving around the home has remained a question without a fixed answer. CAT5 network cabling, powerline, phone line and wireless have all been tried with varying levels of success and ease of installation. A new approach has been floated by a collective of networking, cable and Consumer Electronics (CE) industry big-boys under the banner of the Multimedia over Coax Alliance or MoCA.

    They suggest that the coax cable routed around 70% of US homes, could offer considerable bandwidth, ideal for multi-use, digital video and data applications, while simultaneously carrying existing analog and digital cable as well as satellite services currently on the cable.

    Cisco Systems, Comcast, EchoStar, Entropic Communications, Matsushita Electric (Panasonic), Motorola, RadioShack and Toshiba, among others, have formed a non-profit, mutual benefit corporation to develop and promote the specifications. These will be used as the basis for the certification process to validate products as interoperable with other MoCA enabled products.

    MoCA plans to build on technology developed by Entropic Communications Inc, a closely held company in San Diego formed in May 2001, which designed chips to help send data over coax at up to 270 megabits per second. Expected to translate into a guaranteed bandwidth of about 100 megabits per second with a Quality of Service (QoS), provided by prioritised asynchronous services (802.1p), and what they describe as state of the art packet-level encryption, DES link layer baseline privacy. It will carry Ethernet (IP), 1394, MPEG applications.

    Coaxial cabling is already connected to over 300 million television sets and is the preferred in-home video distribution medium for 90+ million cable and satellite homes in the US today. It offers a number of positive drives for the current content producing and distribution worlds; the innate security of a shielded, wired connection and a long-standing familiarity – the cable companies buy the stuff by the mile.

    The MoCA technology is designed to be sold at retail, be as simple as a cable TV to install and be virtually transparent to the consumer. The final specification is expected to be available within 12 months.

    Multimedia over Coax Alliance

  • Philips Announces Digital Media Adaptors

    Philips have announced two wireless digital media adaptors that enables the playing of computer-stored content, be that films, photos or music, to be played on TV or in a traditional HiFi system.

    The SL300i and SL400i have both been labelled by Philips as a Wireless Multimedia Link can be used with a supplied remote control. Only the SL400i comes with an LCD display, so users can select music without having to have the TV on, and includes the 802.11b USB wireless adaptor.

    We feel with year will be the year of the Digital Media Adaptor (DMA) with products expected from many of the major players as well as new entrants.

    Philips SL300i

    Philips SL400i