SBC and Microsoft to Provide HDTV Over IP 267
This comes in response to an FCC ruling which shields IP-based networks from traditional telecom regulation. Speeds are expected to reach 15-25 Mbps, enough for HDTV: "To take advantage of this new network, SBC companies and Microsoft have begun testing an IP-based switched television service based on the Microsoft TV IPTV platform. This infrastructure would enable features such as standard and high-definition programming, customizable channel lineups, video on demand, digital video recording, multimedia interactive program guides and event notifications. IP-based television services will also allow TVs to interact with other devices in the home, including computers and PDAs." More details available here and here"
The real question is... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The real question is... (Score:3, Funny)
As much as they're willing to pay pluss a dollar.
Re:The real question is... (Score:2)
Oh, so it's $2? I'll grudgingly pay that...
The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:2)
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:3, Interesting)
streaming video like this is set up only on one provider, where they can control all the variables, down to the box they put in the person's living room.
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:3, Funny)
Given that MS even has a reboot button on their latest mouse, I can see this MS-HDTVoIP scenario being what one might call "sub-fun". Sounds like there are going to be a lot more non-TV-watchers in the future.
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:2)
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:3, Interesting)
Pity Linus isn't keen on adding an RT foundation - is his objection based on principle or just the offered code?
Re:The other question: how crap will this be? (Score:4, Informative)
HDTVoIP with its far bigger hunger for hbandwidth.
(disclaimer : I spent 3 years as the dev lead/manager for a large streaming media company)
The bandwidth for streaming is never as high as people think. Once you start to control the whole network it gets a lot easier. If you can place caching servers in each major subscriber area and most importantly enable multi-case (which you can finaly do because you control all the routing and switches) it will drop a lot. Sure movies that are truely "on-demand" will have to be served on an individual basis, but again, local caching servers would reduce bandwidth requirements to just the last 1-2 hops.
Re:The real question is... (Score:3, Funny)
The upfront cost won't be too bad at first.. about $400 per TV and an additional $500 per TV if you want "premium" content. The trouble is that you will need a dedicated sysadmin to to keep up on the security patches and maintain the active directory servers. All in all you should squeeze your HDTV over IP in at just around $5500 a month for 2 sets. A steal for a Microsoft solution!
Before or after the monopoly? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Before or after the monopoly? (Score:3, Funny)
Not to mention... (Score:5, Interesting)
Do you really have to ask? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not to mention... (Score:3, Interesting)
Cable and satellite are totally DRM'ed today, so DRM'ed TV over IP is not really any worse.
Glad I gave up on tv... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Glad I gave up on tv... (Score:2)
Stale DRM'd virus? Wouldn't you guys be happy if viruses used DRM to provide copy restriction to other machines?
Ahh, I see... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ahh, I see... (Score:2)
Re:Ahh, I see... (Score:2)
Re:Ahh, I see... (Score:2)
Re:Ahh, I see... (Score:2)
Already /. (Score:5, Funny)
Too much TV (Score:4, Insightful)
Hurray for the 'turn all TVs off' device!
Re:Too much TV (Score:2)
I don't watch any TV (no reception :-)), but I can see a similarity to those people who said "But why would I want CD quality? Tape or LP is fine!". I guess after watching HDTV for a while, going back to old NTSC/PAL will be hard on the eyes.
Re:Too much TV (Score:5, Funny)
Posted on
'Nuff said...
Re:Too much TV (Score:2)
Re: Productivity- Uh, doesn't just about any form of entertainment fall in here?
Re: Social Interaction- TV is part of social interaction. Don't tell me you've never had a face to face discussion about last week's Star Trek.
Re:Too much TV (Score:2)
PVBC&(*#$@
80-100Mbps in Japan and Korea (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:80-100Mbps in Japan and Korea (Score:2)
Re:80-100Mbps in Japan and Korea (Score:2, Interesting)
But it doesn't seem to be the case.
Re:80-100Mbps in Japan and Korea (Score:3, Informative)
Re:80-100Mbps in Japan and Korea (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:80-100Mbps in Japan and Korea (Score:3, Informative)
-- Fuck the grammar police.
Reduced regulation = improved services? (Score:2)
Re:Reduced regulation = improved services? (Score:2)
Now don't be pulling a Bill Gates, in 10 years 15-25mbps will seem like 56k dial-up.
Two times the yay factor (Score:2, Funny)
1. Yay! Now SBC will have another reason to call me at home 5 times a week and ask me if I'd like fries with my telephone service.
2. Yay! Is Microsoft in control of fucking everything now?
Re:Two times the yay factor (Score:2, Funny)
Greeeeeaaaat. Nimda and CodeRed meet reruns of Seinfeld and Friends. Just what we all need.
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Re:Two times the yay factor (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think SBC is bigger in the DSL area than Verizon (who also partners with MS) and it (SBC)is a smaller company as well.
Remember the Dot-Com Bust? Well just before that companies layed fiber all over the damned place. It's all sitting down there with the earthworms being sold off for pennies on the dollar, so everyone in the "Comm" industry had "big plans" for how to use it. Remember w
dont want to ba$h but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
While no corporation is altrusitic, I wouldn't immediately jump to the "how are they going to screw me on this one" conclusion.
Sad state of affairs.
Re:dont want to ba$h but.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, if they replaced MS in the article with, say, EFF or the Mozilla Dev Team, I would get excited. ;-)
Re:dont want to ba$h but.. (Score:2)
Why people think Sony is any better than Microsoft in terms of greed and desire for control is really beyond me.
HDTV over IP? (Score:5, Interesting)
ok IP TV how about makeing that IP wireless (Score:2)
I mean IP on your CELL / Mobile phone and TV images streamed to that
jack it in to watch on a normal screen... simple
in order to make money from this you need custom channels
not like they cell/mobile phone networks are doing now e.g. Orange just putting a digital TV reciver in the phone you need to stream custom content
regards
John Jones
This is good for me... (Score:3, Interesting)
I think that a decent phone, with some basic web/email/chat features, as well as the cell and wifi connectivity would be worth about $150 (with contract discounts) and $60-70/month (with free long distance all the time, unlimited VoIP service, 500 or so 'anytime' cell minutes, and voicemail, call waiting, etc) to me.
Is there any sign of this in the near future!?
Re:This is good for me... (Score:2)
Re:This is good for me... (Score:2)
I want it now (Score:3, Interesting)
Broadcast is dying, I think this year is the tipping point (at least it is for me). With the exception of live events like Sports and News why would you need simultaneous broadcast over the air? Storage is large and cheap and getting more so. Download your favorite programs and watch them at leisure on a portable player.
I had thought this was at least 10 years away, but inevitable. Perhaps it is now only 4 or 5 years away.
OH NO! More FCC corruption! (Score:2)
bandwidth (Score:2)
if SBC has a properly-installed multicast architecture, then it's possibly feasible, but do you have any idea the amount of bandwidth that's going to require?
Either they're running fibre to the door, and have datacenters full of the new clustering Cisco routers, or they're going to run into some hardware limits REAL fast.
Re:bandwidth (Score:4, Informative)
Re:bandwidth (Score:2)
Re:bandwidth (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Japan is non-sequitir...er... (Score:2)
What I find insane is the amount of hand-waiving (again) in this article by people who are declaring "the end of competition" and "stifling of deployment" even as the companies involved are declaring their intent to roll out BECAUSE of these freedoms from regulation these coal mine canaries are yapping about.
With regulation: nothing happens because it costs a fortune to deploy this stuff a
Re:Still so slow (Score:2)
The USA is HUGE. Many states are larger than most countries. It is thus incredibly expensive+slow to roll out anything land-based like fibre.
The regulatory maze doesn't help either, but the primary factor is the geography.
So it's starting (Score:5, Interesting)
I really look forward to getting rid of the old standard twisted-pair copper wire infrastructure that we're currently using and moving towards a "one connection for everything" system. Assuming we don't run into issues with monopoly-dictated pricing and/or start revisiting the old problems with massive telecoms, I'd love to get all my services through a single cable and a single provider, not to mention a kickass Internet connection.
How much federal regulation will eventually need to come into play to prevent history from repeating itself as with the telecoms? Should something as huge and important as the nation's information infrastructure be regulated directly by the government as the railroads were for a time?
Re:So it's starting (Score:2)
Maybe. But what if the medium gets cut? No "phone", no "TV", no "IP", until somebody patches the fiber. (The quotes are because with convergence you'll have fuzzy boundaries between the traditional services)
MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2, Informative)
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:3, Funny)
I dunno . . . maybe 60 billion dollars of cash ; )
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:3, Funny)
You forgot to hold your pinky to your mouth as you said that.
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:3, Funny)
ah yes, pardon.
[holds pinky to mouth]
MUWAHAHAHAHA!
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2)
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2)
I would think a project like this would actually be easier if it is digital the entire way through. Microsoft also has plenty of experience with streaming media these days.
I'm not sure how much this tale impacts expectations of this project.
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2)
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:3, Interesting)
The TV station learned one valuable lesson: Microsoft can't deliver what they promise. That's why I can't identify the station, MS forced them to keep quiet under an NDA. With
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2, Funny)
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2)
Re:MS failed at this before, with plain old NTSC (Score:2)
I gave sufficient info for anyone inside the biz to verify the story and find out the rest of the dirty details (but it won't be easy). I'll have to leave it at that.
SBC will still be too expensive w/o Naked DSL (Score:3, Interesting)
Good News, Bad News (Score:2)
Bad News: All this bandwidth will be wasted on fancy TV and Trusted Computing (TM) instead of your favorite Bit Torrent seed.
I'll wait for whatever cable does to compete with this, and then use that instead.
umm.. bandwidth issues (Score:2)
speaking of which (Score:2)
They are in the process of wiring several states with Fiber lines to the home to provide phone, internet, and in the future, television (most likely provided by some form of DirecTV due to verizon's recent dealings with DirecTV).
I believe service is already live in a few cities with reported speeds of 50mbps down/15mbps up. All for about $60/month.
This regulation should speed up deployment in a few states such as NJ, whi
Re:speaking of which (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www22.verizon.com/fiosforhome/channels/f i os
Verizon plans to cover 3 million homes next year, which probably requires a bit more fiber than SBC's 40K miles! Plus, while speeds are limited to about 20-30Mbps per home today with the electronics Verizon is deploying, the fiber in place will support MUCH more, 1Gbps / house is being worked on in the labs. Sort of makes DSL and wireless s
Evil, meet Evil. (Score:2)
However, there is no way in hell I'm going to buy into HDTV via IP if I'm forced to use MS Media Center or the like. I don't have to use Windows to get to the internet. I sure wouldn't put up with having to buy XXX brand television to watch TV now, and I certainly wouldn't by XXX brand phone to place a land line call. Why should HDTVoIP be any different
Re:Evil, meet Evil. (Score:2)
(Of course the box will be proprietary, but so are cable boxes.)
Doesn't SBC use PPOE (Score:2)
SBC announces this every year. (Score:5, Informative)
And they announced it back in 2003 [fibers.org] "We plan to hit about one million lines by the end of 2003".
And they announced it back in 2002. [misa.bc.ca]
Stay tuned for another announcement in 2005.
This time they're paying back the Bush adminstration for the FCC deal that permits them to keep third-party ISPs from using their lines. The telcos have been lobbying for this for years, so that consumers don't have a choice of ISPs. It's an election year move, not a new development.
SBC has talked up a few fibre-to-the home trials, but even the small scale trials never seem to happen.
This is why Microsoft is so damn rich... (Score:4, Funny)
It doesn't matter if Linux can do HDTV over a network and do it better (as if it could). It doesn't matter because Microsoft will be there first for the most people. They'll be there the most. They'll have all the deals locked in from server to client. They'll totally shut out HDTV over IP competition before it gets born. If you read Cringely [pbs.org] at all then you know that at least one if not a few Linux hackers have done this type of thing in the small.
But it doesn't matter now. Microsoft is a true kung-foo master. Unless the world changes radically and it becomes illegal to force people to use whatever EULA you want or to force out competition from your market place by using innovative and strategic business deals... Microsoft is unstoppable. It's like a dinosaur. What could stop the dinosaurs?
MS is late to the party (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MS is late to the party (Score:2)
Re:This is why Microsoft is so damn rich... (Score:2)
Ummm, the penguins maybe?
Re:This is why Microsoft is so damn rich... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This is why Microsoft is so damn rich... (Score:2)
You must be new hear.
Yes, this does have a potential to be very cool. But to say that this 'cool' announcement is on par for Microsoft is, at best, laughable. Microsoft is not rich because of it's ability to innovate. They are rich because of their ability to create an industry-wide vendor lock-in. From their, Microsoft is given the capital and userbase to evolve their software for a joke(win 3.0
HDTV on IP - no thanks, I'd rather surf the net (Score:4, Insightful)
Whether the program is interactive or on demand, or how it's delievered, doesn't matter to me so much as what I'm actually watching. and I'm getting less and less impressed every year.
I find myself watching less and less television, and using the Internet more and more. As for the phone, most people I know use it mainly to talk about television. I'm getting close to the point where I almost solely use email.
I'm not sure I follow their reasoning.... (Score:5, Interesting)
My predictions:
Re:I'm not sure I follow their reasoning.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Yuck (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's an example of SBC's customer service. I moved recently and was forced to go back to SBC for local phone service (I had Comcast Digital Phone in my old place and was pretty happy with it.) I just got my first bill from the Southern Boys Club: $322.69 for installation, and all the guy did was come in for ten minutes to make sure all the jacks worked. And at that, he got the two lines backwards. Then, to top it all off, I signed up for this "ALL DISTANCE(R)" plan, that is supposed to give me unlimited local and long distance anywhere in the U.S., and instead I got billed $34.27 for long distance. None of those numbers include the regular monthly service charges, either.
Sorry for the rant. This just really, really pisses me off.
hahahaaaa - SBC and MS doing HD ovr IP? (Score:5, Interesting)
I was BEGGING SBC to get DSL to my house since 1999. I live (literally) in the middle of San Francisco, and they refused to hook me up. "Too far".
Finally, about 2 years ago they got our neighbourhood wired up with DSL, but the fastest I can get is 384. (I live in a weird little neighbourhood just west of Twin Peaks. I have to drive just to get a cup of coffee.)
And now they say they're going to be putting HD over IP? If my previous experience is any indication, I'll be getting MP4 from them at a reduced framerate around 2012...
RS
15-25 Mbps? (Score:3, Informative)
Hopefully they are using multicast.. it would almost have to be, otherwise the network and server resources for streaming a huge number of HDTV streams would be immense.
Obviously, there is a possibility for a bunch of restrictions to be placed on what would otherwise be an incredibly powerful concept. But, they could also make really powerful changes that could change the competitive landscape.
If they look at it as a general communications platform, with additional services sold on top of it (Internet, VOIP, TV, PPV, etc.), ala-carte pricing might be more feasible. I would be very happy if I could just pay for HBO-HD, EPSN-HD, Comedy Central, and my locals. And, that would be a big blow to their cable/satellite competitors.
Two of my least favorite companies (Score:2)
I've worked hard to get both of them out of my life; HDTV over IP won't be enough for me to let them back in again.
Re:Michael Powell to change this ruling in 5...4.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Michael Powell to change this ruling in 5...4.. (Score:2)
Re:Michael Powell to change this ruling in 5...4.. (Score:2)
wow (Score:2)
Re:Michael Powell to change this ruling in 5...4.. (Score:2)
Re:Being a Republican is a mental illness (Score:3)
No, not true. I used to be a Republican. Voted for Reagan in 84, Bush Sr in 88. But over the last few years, I became a Leftist. I now see that the Democratic party is quite conservative, at least compared to most parties in other Western nations.
What Republicans are is ignorant and brainwashed. We are all brainwashed
Re:I'd like to see their BW calculation (Score:3, Informative)