By Sinead Carew
Verizon Wireless, the second-biggest U.S. cell phone provider, said it
launched the country's first commercial mobile television service in
20 states with full-length programs and picture quality similar to
regular TV.
The venture of Verizon Communications Inc. and Vodafone Group Plc said
on Thursday it is charging $15 a month for the service, which was
developed by Qualcomm Inc. unit MediaFlo and includes eight channels
broadcasting full-length TV shows to phones 24 hours a day.
Verizon Wireless and its rivals have been pushing services such as
video and music to boost revenue as the price falls for traditional
cell phone calls.
But cell phone video services have been slow to take off due to high
prices and poor quality compared with television at home.
The picture quality of the new service will be on a par with home TV
and roughly twice as clear as Verizon Wireless's existing Vcast video
service, spokesman Jeffrey Nelson said.
Cell phone video services, first launched in the U.S. in 2004, have
only about 7 million customers out of about 232 million cell phone
subscriptions, according to Ovum analyst Roger Entner, who said that
higher-quality pictures could change that.
"I think the impact in the beginning will be modest," since Verizon is
rolling out the service gradually, said Entner. But he estimated that
MediaFlo users could increase to 20 million to 30 million people
within about seven years.
CINGULAR TO FOLLOW
AT&T Inc.'s Cingular Wireless, the biggest U.S. cell phone service in
terms of subscribers, has said it plans to launch MediaFlo to its
customers later in the year.
The first phone to support MediaFlo, the U620 from Samsung Electronics
Co., is being sold for $199, or $149.99 for customers who sign a
two-year contract. Verizon plans to add an LG Electronics Inc. phone
in weeks.
Subscribers who also sign up for cell phone Internet access, for $5 a
month, and Verizon's existing Vcast service, which lets users download
short video clips for $15 a month, can add MediaFlo for $25 a month,
or $10 less than if they were to buy the three separately.
Entner said adding eight channels for another $5 could be attractive
for existing Vcast and Web subscribers.
The MediaFlo service became available on Thursday in cities such as
Chicago; New Orleans; Portland, Oregon; Seattle; Las Vegas; Tucson,
Arizona; Kansas City; Dallas-Fort Worth; and Salt Lake City.
Available channels include a live feed from MTV and programming from
CBS Corp., NBC, ESPN, Fox, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central. Some
programs are shown at the same time as regular TV, while others are
rescheduled to match the heaviest cell phone television viewing times,
Nelson said.
Viacom Inc. owns MTV, Comedy Central and Nickelodeon. General Electric
Co. controls NBC. Walt Disney Co. owns ESPN.
Wireless chipmaker Qualcomm plans to build a nationwide network for
delivering television to cell phones to kick-start the market. In that
way, established operators such as Verizon can offer additional media
services to customers without clogging up their own networks.
Modeo, a unit of Crown Castle International Corp., is also building a
network dedicated to cell phone television, but it has yet to name any
customers for its service, currently in trial in New York.
Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited.
NOTE: For more telecom/internet/networking/computer news from the
daily media, check out our feature 'Telecom Digest Extra' each day at
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/more-news.html . Hundreds of new
articles daily. And, discuss this and other topics in our forum at
http://telecom-digest.org/forum (or)
http://telecom-digest.org/chat/index.html
For more news and headlines, please go to:
http://telecom-digest.org/td-extra/newstoday.html