Friday, October 31, 2008

Today's High-Def Headlines

Double the Viewers, Double the TV - Hollywood Reporter
Here's a classic dilemma: You are home for the evening. You wish to watch, say, a comedy, on TV, but your family member would rather watch something else. Texas Instruments, the maker of the DLP Cinema chip, is developing technology that might reduce the common problem by allowing two people to simultaneously view two different programs -- on the same TV.

Sharp, Panasonic, Toshiba Step Up CE Recycling - TWICE
Panasonic, Sharp and Toshiba said Thursday they will join a nationwide recycling initiative designed to give purchasers of each companies’ products the ability to have those items recycled at a growing list of collection centers around the county. The companies said their nationwide consumer electronics recycling program, which is being coordinated by Electronics Manufacturers Recycling Management (MRM), will provide a free means of recycling old televisions and other consumer audio and video products.

Plasma Panel Shipments See Q3 Growth - TWICE
Plasma panel makers continue to report strong growth with third-quarter 2008 plasma panel shipments rising 18 percent quarter to quarter and 37 percent year to year to nearly 4.2 million units, the second highest quarterly shipment total ever and 6 percent higher than expected, according to the latest DisplaySearch Quarterly Global TV Shipment and Forecast Report, Plasma and LCD TV Panel Shipment Module. Demand continues to be strong for plasma TVs worldwide due to attractive price points and increasing availability of high-definition content, and the 2008 shipment target of 15.5 million units is on target.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Today's High-Def Headlines

AT&T Revs Up HD Lineup With 30 New Nets - MCN
Trying to outdo cable’s HD offerings, AT&T Monday said it was adding more than 30 new HD channels to its U-verse TV lineup, as well as new international programming packages for Chinese, Polish, Russian, French and European-sports audiences. Beginning Nov. 3, U-verse TV customers will receive up to 30 new HD channels at no additional charge as part of their existing HD service subscription, depending on their programming package. With the additions, U-verse TV offers more than 75 HD channels—exceeding the HD channel lineups offered by the major local cable providers in every U-verse market.

Verizon Adds HD Mass In Boston Market - MCN
Verizon has taken its high-definition lineup in Massachusetts into triple digits, announcing that FiOS TV customers there now have access to more than 100 HD channels compared with Comcast’s lineup of 66 HDs. The telco recently added 16 HD channels to its Massachusetts TV lineup, including Animal Planet, TLC, Science Channel, Smithsonian Channel, FX, The Biography Channel, Superstation WGN HD, Fox Business Network, Fox News Channel, MGM HD, the Hallmark Movie Channel, QVC, the Travel Channel, Planet Green, Disney Channel, Toon Disney and ABC Family. Verizon also launched three new HD sports channels: ESPNews HD, The Tennis Channel and Speed HD.

HDTV Prices May Be As Low As They Can Go - PC Magazine
The price OEMs are paying for the panels used inside LCD TVs is approaching the cash cost the panel makers themselves pay for them, a display industry report said recently. What this means, essentially, is that TV OEMs are paying just about cheapest possible price for the panels, which in turn make up about 70 percent of the cost of a typical LCD TV.

Mitsubishi LaserVue Arrives in Stores - Dealerscope
Mitsubishi's LaserVue 65 laser-powered television, introduced in January at International CES, has arrived in stores, the company announced Tuesday. The product, which the company says boasts a crisper picture while losing less energy, will be available "select speciality stores," with a price tag of $6,999.

TV Pricing Promos To Drive Holiday Sales - TWICE
The stock market and banking industry may be on a roller coaster headed for a crash of 1929 proportions, but the flat-panel television market appears to be entering the holiday season in relatively good shape, vendors and analysts told TWICE. Vendors noted that TV sales have softened somewhat since Labor Day, but not enough to warrant many unplanned price cuts. Yet, display market analysts told TWICE they are still calling for very aggressive holiday price promotions, whether planned in advance or forced by the recent turn of events, starting as soon as early November.

September TV Pricing Down 22% - TWICE
Global TV internet pricing for television sets declined an average 22 percent at the end of September from the year-ago period, according to the new DisplaySearch Monthly Global TV E-Tail Pricing & Specification Database. According to the study, average PDP TV e-tail prices fell 27 percent year over year in September 2008. CRT TV e-tail prices, on the other hand, rose 4 percent year over year.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Today's High-Def Headlines

MSNBC Sees High-Def Debut Next Spring - MCN
MSNBC, having missed the window to launch in HD for this year’s election season, expects to have its high-definition simulcast ready for affiliates in the second quarter of 2009. The news network had been aiming to launch its HD offering in the fourth quarter of 2008. That turned out to be “a little aggressive,” MSNBC president Phil Griffin said.

Comcast Launches MSG HD in New Jersey - MCN
Comcast is adding MSG HD and MSG Plus HD for its digital cable customers in Northern New Jersey, officials said Thursday. Sports fans can now watch more than 300 live sporting events in high definition annually on MSG HD and MSG Plus HD, including exclusive coverage of the New York Knicks, New York Rangers, New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders and New York Liberty.

DirecTV Adds Three Local HD Markets - MCN
DirecTV Wednesday began offering local high-definition programming in Colorado Springs-Pueblo, Colo., Davenport, Iowa-Rock Island/Moline, Ill. and Dayton, Ohio. The nation’s largest satellite provider now offers local HD programming to nearly 85% of U.S. TV households.

Ion Media Promises HD by First Quarter - TV Week
Coupled with a rebranding in May, Ion Media Networks announced Monday the network is going HD beginning in the first quarter of 2009. Ion Media encompasses Ion Television, formerly Pax TV, as well as qubo and Ion Life. Ion Television will be the first to jump to HD in first quarter ’09, with qubo and Ion Life following later in the year, the company said.

DisplaySearch Sees Flat-Panel Maturity - TWICE
Shipments of panels used in flat-panel TV sets (LCD and plasma) are likely to continue to slow down beyond the current economic crisis as the HDTV market begins to mature, DisplaySearch warned Wednesday in its latest Quarterly Worldwide FPD Forecast Report. From 2001 through 2008, flat-panel display shipments grew at a compound annual rate of 10 percent. From 2008 to 2015, the compound annual growth forecast is 4 percent due to market maturity, as flat-panel displays have captured most of the market previously served by cathode-ray tubes (CRT), the report indicates.

DISH Adds 21 MPEG-4 Markets - TWICE
DISH Network said Thursday it has expanded the transition to its MPEG-4 platform by 21 markets, to a total of 52 markets in the eastern half of the United States since the transition began in August. New customers in 52 designated markets in the eastern half of the U.S. who sign up for any DISH Network HD package will receive the system on all televisions connected to DISH Network service, the company said. This includes all standard- and high-definition programming broadcast in MPEG-4 via the service provider’s MPEG-4 HD and HD DVR receivers.

Samsung BD Update Brings Netflix Access - TWICE
Samsung said Wednesday that the Netflix and Pandora online entertainment content services are now available for current Blu-ray Disc player models. Access to the Netflix streaming movie/TV program service is made possible through a firmware update available starting today to current owners of Samsung models BD-P2500 and BD-P2550.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Comcast Expanding Its Stable of HD Networks

Comcast is the nation's largest cable company and as such it's easy to forget that it's also a major programmer. The company's family of networks is in the process of making the leap to high-def, beginning with the E! channel, which launches today in HD on select cable systems. The company's other networks, including Style, G4, Tennis Channel and Versus/Golf, have high-def plans of their own: Versus and Golf Channel will separate into two distinct HD channels in December, while Tennis Channel is already in HD. Style and G4 will launch HD simulcasts later this year as well. More from MCN.

More HD Channels for Cablevision in NY

Cablevision this week is adding five new high-def channels to its lineups in the New York/New Jersey/Connecticut region. The new additions are CMT HD, Fuse HD, MTV HD, NHL Network HD and VH1 HD. More from MCN.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

DIRECTV, DISH Add More Local HD Markets

DIRECTV and DISH continue to roll out local HD broadcast channels in smaller markets around the country. Yesterday DIRECTV added Columbia-Jefferson City, Mo and Evansville, Ind. to its roster while DISH today added five: Florence–Myrtle Beach, S.C.; Fort Myers–Naples, Fla.; Greenville–New Bern–Washington, N.C.; Madison, Wis.; and Wilkes Barre–Scranton, Pa.

DIRECTV now offers HD locals in 100 U.S. markets while DISH is in 70.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Stick a Fork in Mojo HD

Confirming weeks of industry speculation, the nation's major cable companies said today that Mojo HD will soon be shut down. Formerly known as INHD when it launched back in 2003, the channel was rebranded when sister channel INHD2 went dark in early 2007. Mojo featured a variety of high-def programming that served a useful purpose in the early days of HD when there was little HD content available. Now that there are nearly 100 national high-def channels, the market for standalone high-def variety programmers without a specific genre like Mojo appears to be lessening.

I don't normally like it when we lose high-def channels but in an era of limited bandwidth, I'm all for separating the wheat from the chafe to free up space for better HD programming.

More on this story from TV Week.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Versus/Golf HD Now 2 Separate Channels?

Versus HD & The Golf Channel HD have shared a single high-def channel since they were launched almost two years ago. We know that parent company Comcast's plans have been to split them up into their own separate HD feeds; it was just a question of when. Well it looks like "when" is now. Today I was on the website of RCN, a mid-size cable overbuilder that serves major markets like New York City, Boston and Chicago (welcome to my world) and I noticed Versus HD is now channel 691 while Golf HD is channel 693. I'll see if I run across this anywhere else, but if it's showing up in the lineup of RCN Chicago, odds are good we'll be seeing it elsewhere very soon.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Today's High-Def Headlines

MLB Network to Launch in 2009 - NY Times
Major League Baseball does not believe there is enough baseball on television. Not on local and regional TV. Not on Fox, ESPN, TBS or MLB.com. It wants ubiquity, a 24/7 home, so it is building its own cable channel, the MLB Network, in Secaucus, N.J., with opening day scheduled for Jan. 1.

DirecTV's Chang Dishes Out the High-Def - MCN
Satellite-TV provider DirecTV roiled the high-definition market in early 2007 when it disclosed plans to offer over 100 HDTV channels, touching off an arms race to add new content. More recently, it has continued to raise the competitive bar by launching a VOD service with HD content and setting plans to offer Blu-ray quality 1080p movies. DirecTV executive vice president of content strategy Derek Chang recently talked with HD Update’s George Winslow about the operator’s plans for HD and the role it plays in the competition between satellite, cable and the telcos for new subscribers.

Bright House Uses Switched Digital to Expand HD Content - MCN
Cable operator Bright House Networks has completed the switched-digital rollout in its Orlando, Fla., system and is now installing it in Tampa, Fla., and Indianapolis, with BigBand Networks providing the products and services for the upgrade. By using the bandwidth-saving technique, Bright House will be able to significantly increase its HD lineup and better compete against the telco video offerings available in various parts of its Florida footprint.

Comcast SportsNet Northwest Launches in Seattle Area (press release)
Comcast Cable and Comcast SportsNet Northwest, home of the most comprehensive local sports content, today announces the network is launching to sports fans in the Seattle region with coverage including 55 Portland Trail Blazers NBA games and 60 NHL games featuring the Vancouver Canucks or the San Jose Sharks. Comcast SportsNet is the 24/7 home of Northwest sports featuring live game coverage of 55 exclusive Trail Blazers games, including 33 in HDTV; approximately 60 NHL games, including 50 featuring the Canucks or Sharks; and college sports including the University of Washington, University of Oregon, and more.

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Today's High-Def Headlines

Vudu Takes High-Def Movies Higher - MCN
Startup Vudu this week will begin offering 65 feature movie titles in 1080p high-definition video format via its Internet-connected set-top, in a bid to peel home-theater aficionados from cable and satellite video-on-demand services. The movies, priced for a la carte rental, include Chronicles of Riddick, The Spiderwick Chronicles, In Bruges, Speed Racer and classics such as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Chinatown, and Saturday Night Fever.

Matsushita Renamed Panasonic Worldwide - TWICE
Matsushita Electric Industrial (MEIC) celebrates its 90th anniversary today in an unusual way — by changing its long-vaunted Matsushita name (which honored its iconic founder) to that of its better-known brand, Panasonic, to leverage a digital network product strategy to address the global market.

DirecTV Adds Local HD To Four Markets - MCN
DirecTV Wednesday added local HDTV programming in Charleston, S.C., Norfolk-Newport News, Va., Savannah, Ga., and Springfield-Holyoke, Mass. With the addition of those markets, the satellite provider now offers local HD broadcast channels in 98 cities, representing more than 83% of TV households.

Thin Still In At CEATEC - TWICE
Flat-panel TV designs at the 2008 CEATEC Expo, here, are compressing almost as fast as the banking industry, as virtually every major Japanese television manufacturer used the show to unveil their latest skinny flat-panel technologies. Many of the sets being unveiled here as breakthroughs were seen three weeks earlier at CEDIA Expo in Denver and the IFA Show in Berlin.

FiOS, U-Verse Tops In Customer Satisfaction: J.D. Power Survey - MCN
Verizon Communications Inc.'s FiOS and AT&T Inc.'s U-verse video services have jumped to the top of the regional customer satisfaction rankings, according to a J.D. Power survey, supplanting direct-broadcast satellite services as the traditional leaders and pushing incumbent cable providers further down the list. According to findings of J.D. Power's "2008 Residential Television Service Satisfaction Study," AT&T came in on top in three regions: north central, west and south. In the east, Verizon was the top scoring provider.

Senate Analog Nightlight Bill Introduced - B&C
A bill was introduced in the Senate that would allow broadcasters to continue broadcasting in analog for 30 days after the Feb. 17, 2009, date for TV stations to transition to full-power digital TV. Broadcasters would still transition their primary channel feeds to digital Feb. 17, but they could continue to broadcast DTV-education information and emergency information for that 30-day period. The analog cutoff is currently set, by statute, for Feb. 17.