Related news roundup - June 6
Link-worthy news from the past week from the world of TV, VoD, IPTV:
- Sky announced it’s Sky+ Anytime capabilities - true pull VoD over the internet - will be switched on in Q4, with staff trials currently underway. Telegraph article.
- A deal between Sky & Virgin Media was announced, in which Sky will buy the latter’s TV channels including Virgin 1 (to be re-branded or closed), Living, Bravo & Challenge. Carriage of Sky 1 and Sky Arts on Virgin were also part of the deal, as was some on demand content from Sky. Broadband TV News article here.
- PaidContent UK has it that YouTube is considering linking out to the VoD sites of broadcasters, in a similar way to the feature BBC iPlayer announced last week. The article notes it’s all very early days though.
Related news roundup - 09 May
A few noteworthy news items from the world of VoD and IPTV from the last couple of weeks:
- 08 May - YouTube is said to be looking to offer content owners a mechanism whereby they can charge for access to their videos in a self-service manner (CNET article). Understandably it will only initially be available to those who are already content partners.
- 04-06 May - Some of the latest stats around VoD consumption: Virgin Media saw 200 million VoD views across 2.1 mill homes (TechRadar); time-shifted TV consumption is at 6.9% of all Tv viewing (& 13.7% in households with PVRs) says TV marketing body Thinkbox (MediaWeek); Five served 51mill total VoD viewers online in 2009, with 1.3mill long-form videos per month (PaidContent UK); ITV served an avg 16.4 million views per month to 8.7 million unique viewers per month over Q1 (ITV release).
- Not directly related to VoD yet, but Sky announced record growth in its HD boxes - adding almost half a million of them in Q1 (Broadband TV News). This is important because the Sky+ HD box has the ethernet connection that will allow for Sky’s true-pull VoD offering to be launched to the entire HD install base later this year.
- 04 May - Robert at PaidContent UK has a post showing some of the BBC iPlayer’s socialised aspects out in the wild (on Twitter). ‘Version 3′ of iPlayer has long been touted by Huggers & Rose as the social version, but as far as we are aware, there’s not been any publicly discussed launch/roll-out date.
- 27 April - Hulu has reportedly ‘abandoned’ plans to launch in the UK. Emma Barnett at the Telegraph has this article. We say reportedly however because - like all the past Telegraph pieces about how close a Hulu dea/launch was claimed to be, there is still no official statement from any party including Hulu - just the “sources close to…”. For the record, the reasons for Hulu’s withdrawal are the oft-repeated ones: ITV is not syndicating it’s VoD content, and C4 and Five want to sell ad inventory around their content in any syndication deals they’re striking.
- Bill Scott at Easel.tv has a piece on what a good app store could mean for TV.
Project Canvas news roundup - 11 March
- 11 Mar - It was mentioned in our tweet-round-up of last week’s DTG (Digital TV Group) Summit, but Will at Broadcast has an article about the tensions between Canvas and the DTG.
- 4 Mar - Virgin Media has again objected to Project Canvas, as well the BBC Trust’s actions. From this Telegraph article:
- “Mr Berkett objects to proposals to force all broadcasters to use a single ‘Project Canvas’ brand controlled by the BBC and its partners, which he claims will penalise commercial rivals.
“The BBC Trust has stubbornly ignored all requests to address our concerns by imposing safeguards to prevent the BBC emerging as de facto gatekeeper of the digital world.” he will say at the Cable Congress conference in Brussels. “This is a blatant demonstration that the Trust is incapable of regulating the BBC’s activities in an objective way.” - 2 Mar - The Project Canvas site has published a “your questions answered” post. Questions included cover openness, how the EPG will work, & whether/how it Canvas clashes with HbbTV. The answers to the questions don’t cover too much though.
- 1 Mar - Talk Talk - already one of the six partners in Project Canvas - is looking to that involvement to become a quad player in the media-comms space. An offering off the back of Canvas, and a MVNO launch later this year, will cement Talk Talk in the TV space (remember it already owns Tiscali), and get them into the mobile space. The FT has the article (while The Reg has it for non-FT subs). A few days earlier on the CPW earnings call CEO Dunstone said it is (was?) too early to say exactly how they would make use of Canvas c.f Tiscali (PaidContentUK article) (Also worth noting, the plan was revealed during details of the demerging of Carphone Warehouse - from March 29 there will be two separate listed companies - New Carphone Warehouse, and Talk Talk. )
- 25 Feb - Broadcast point out the split screen interaction that Project Canvas will provide, for things like tweeting and other social network activity. Their article talks about the demo shown at trade show BVE. It’s not definite, but it sounds like the demo Erik Huggers has shown previously, including at a conference in Salford - this video on Yotube of the talk given before Christmas was posted earlier this week. Canvas-related info starts 14mins 20sec, while the demo itself starts at the 17mins 40sec mark.
And now a few bits of news from the vault - these were from back in late December last year, just after the BBC Trust gave its conditional approval to Project Canvas:
- Canvas is being given extra leniency by the BBC Trust with regards to costs incurred by the BBC. One of the approval conditions was the BBC exec would have to get approval from the Trust if it realistically expected the BBC costs to exceed 20% more than budget. Marie Bloomfield from Screen Digest says the normal approval figure is anything over 10%.
- Sky’s full statement against the Trust approval of Canvas can be found here at Paid Content UK. It includes “The key concern with Canvas is the leading role that the BBC wants to take in the project. … There is no need for public money to be spent on replicating what’s set to be delivered through commercial investment. …Yet again, this is nothing short of BBC mission creep”
- Geek.com has a post saying that the Trust’s approval of Canvas could led to BBC-branded set top boxes, but the source is as vague and uncredible as “industry watchers” speculating.