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Mobile Television Business & Technology Platforms, DVB-H, Operator Roles T-109.4300 Network Services Business Models 15.2.2006 Eino Kivisaari
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Why mobile TV? ”Because it is there…” People watch TV a lot… …It has become technically possible to deliver the experience of TV watching in mobile terminals… So, why not..?
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Why mobile TV? (Contd.) Terminal manufacturers are looking for new, significant factors of differentiation Advanced (new) features with real benefits are a means to avoid terminal price decline Mobile operators are looking for new succesful applications as well Mobile TV is a new channel for content providers to re-sell their existing content
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Technical Challenges 1) Mobile Reception An antenna inside a terminal, a terminal inside a building.. Terminals are moving fast (inside cars, trains..)..Compared to a stationary roof-top antenna (DVB-T) 2) Battery Consumption Receiver always on in DVB-T Constant rendering of a 4-5 Mbps stream (DVB-T, MPEG2) Lot of processing power needed
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Network Capacity DVB-T: ~24 Mbps (64QAM) 3-6 Mbps / TV channel Appr. 5 channels per multiplex DVB-H: 5-11 Mbps (QPSK…16QAM) 250-500 kbps / TV channel Up to tens of channels Raw DVB-H bandwidth depends on the Modulation used (QPSK or 16QAM), Guard Interval, and Code Rate Guard Interval: ”air-clearout-time” between OFDM symbols Code Rate: ratio of payload and error correction data
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New in DVB-H Time Slicing For power consumption Terminal RF receiver is off 90% of the time Time slicing makes smooth handover possible 4K Subcarrier Mode 2K: Tolerates high speed terminal movement, but only small cell size ( costly network) 8K: Big cell diameter (up to 80 km), but cannot handle terminals moving too fast 4K: Good compromise between 2K and 8K
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IPDC Protocol Stack Source: http://www.tml.hut.fi/~lstaffan/MScThesisStaffans.pdfhttp://www.tml.hut.fi/~lstaffan/MScThesisStaffans.pdf Referenced 14.2.2006 RTP AV stream (H.263, H.264, AAC, etc.)
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IPDC Encapsulation Source: http://www.tml.hut.fi/~lstaffan/MScThesisStaffans.pdfhttp://www.tml.hut.fi/~lstaffan/MScThesisStaffans.pdf Referenced 14.2.2006 eg. H.263 & AAC DVB Transport Stream, Protocol Data Units (PDUs)
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Example IPDC Architecture Stream Encoder Mobile TV Management Server DVB Modulator IP / MPE Encapsulator Mobile TV Billing & Charging Multicast IP Network DVB-H Terminal DVB-H Transmitter GSM Stream Encoder Stream Encoder (IPDC = Internet Protocol DataCasting)
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Service Announcement ESG = Electronic Service Guide ESG in DVB-H mobile television is a program guide + a lot of technical information for the terminal ESG is needed for opening a program stream: what channel’s content is coming from what IP multicast address / port, using which codec, etc… ESG also supports the paid services
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Conditional Access Paid services for mobile TV? Conditional Access (CA) methods needed In terrestrial TV there are many many options… Open Interface, Nagravision, Conax, etc... In DVB-H systems, IPSec and OMA DRM are used No security by obscurity Standard-based solutions No proprietary algorithms / associated fees as in the terrestrial TV case
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Single-Frequency Networks Source: http://www.dvb-h-online.org/PDF/DigiTAG-DVB-H-Handbook.pdf Referenced 8.2.2006http://www.dvb-h-online.org/PDF/DigiTAG-DVB-H-Handbook.pdf Amount of transmitter stations: Cellular >> DVB-H >> Terrestrial Digital TV
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Mobile TV Operator Roles Network Operator Operates the DVB-H network Modulators, Transmitters, Repeaters… Owns & operates the multicast (intra) network IP / MPE encapsulators Owner of the frequency Datacast Operator Orchestrates the mobile TV technical platform between content providers (TV channels), service operators (cellular operators), datacast operator and DVB-H network operator Generates ESG (which is then filecasted to terminals)
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Operator Roles (Contd.) Content Provider Eg. a TV Channel (such as BBC, YLE, MTV3 or Nelonen) Owner (or aggregator) of the content Produces a digital content stream by encoding (an existing) the audio/video signal for use in mobile TV Service Operator Eg. a mobile cellular operator ”Owns” the end-user Takes care of mobile TV service marketing & branding, pricing, end-user support, billing & charging
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Service Operator 3 Operator Roles in Providing (Paid) Mobile TV Services Network Operator Datacast Operator Service Operator 1 Content Provider Mobile TV Terminal Content Stream broadcast over DVB-H GPRS Information about purchasable services Purchase requests Digital Rights Generates ESG Operates a content stream encoder Content Provider Content Provider Content Provider Service Operator 2
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Competing Standards DVB-H UHF (470-750 MHz) Up to 11 Mbps DAB VHF ~ 1 Mbps DMB VHF ~ 1 Mbps ISBD-T Only in Japan ~ 1,5 Mbps MediaFLO UHF, VHF Up to 11 Mbps Qualcomm (proprietary)
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Recent Developments Nokia Open Air Interface 1.0 (OAI 1.0) http://www.mobiletv.nokia.com/solutions/openair/ Contains specifications for ESG functionality, service protection and purchase etc… Aimed to speed up DVB-H terminal availability from various manufacturers, to make the overall DVB-H market bigger Sony Ericsson and Nokia collaborating for DVB-H interoperability http://www.sonyericsson.com/spg.jsp?cc=global&lc=en&ver=4001&template=pc3_1_1&zon e=pc&lm=pc3_1&prid=4702
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Conclusions Mobile TV is finally coming Commercial launches 2006/07…? Commercial success… remains still in the end-users’ hands An important point: Mobile terminal is the first device to include both a Broadcast Receiver (TV & Radio Channels) and an Internet Connection (GPRS) & Browser What business consequences can this have? A wave of new interactive services? Mobile TV shops? Purchase of media clips? Pay-per-view programs? Mobile TV as a ”must-have” terminal feature by 2009…?
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