Mobile DTV: State of the Business

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SBE Ennes Workshop: Mobile DTV & Beyond Meet the Challenge of an Industry Opportunity Mark Rushton, Roundbox March 10, 2011 Mobile DTV: State of the Business ReinventOver The Air Television 19.4 Mb/s DTV bandwidth per Station 100% 90 80 MDTV 70 60 50 Standard Def = ~3 5 Mbps 40 30 20 10 High Def = ~10 Mbps 0% A/153 Mobile DTV (MDTV) became an ATSC Standard in Oct. 2009 Completely backward compatible to ATSC A/53 DTV Standard. Broadcaster can use the available license without additional restrictions New ATSC Candidate Standard: Non-Real-Time Content Delivery (70+) Commercial call-letters on-air with MDTV today. (20+) PBS call-letters awarded CPB funding Mobile by June. Some key tech features of Mobile DTV IP based audio / video / data payloads Power management optimized battery Doppler compensation ensures reception in moving cars, trains, etc. A/V signal ~500 kbps focuses on 10 &below 3/11/2011 2 1

Mobile DTV: State of the Business Four industry entities have emerged with MDTV focus: Open Mobile Video Coalitions (OMVC) OMVC host a Broadcasters Technology, Broadcast Business and Manufacturers forums. Model Stations DC Showcase Forums 3/11/2011 3 Mobile DTV: State of the Business Mobile Content Venture (MCV) & Pearl Mobile DTV, LLC (Pearl) MCV is joint-venture comprising 12 major broadcast groups dedicated to developing a national mobile content service that delivers live TV and ondemand video. Established MDTV content distribution agreement in the affiliate contract. Established business models based on Conditional Access technology requiring an opt-in from the MDTV viewer. Connected devices. By-passes Clear-To-Air for a Free-To-Air and Premium Subscription Model. Opt-in adds Audience / Service Measurement metrics. 3/11/2011 4 2

Mobile DTV: State of the Business The Mobile 500 Alliance Business alliance of leading television broadcasters to develop strong partnerships to accelerate the nationwide availability of a commercial mobile DTV Service. infra-structure & MDTV content. 3/11/2011 5 Mobile DTV: State of the Business CPB, NTIA PTPF & PBS Open CPB invitation to PBS stations to apply for MDTV funding: April & June. Open PTFP round not for mobile but it supports upgrades to adjacent infra-structure & MDTV content. 3/11/2011 6 3

Mobile DTV: Challenges Content rights for MDTV distribution Will all broadcast and cable networks come on-board? Devices it tcomes esdown toa BOM cost. OEM / vendor does not want to implement multi-cas products on a device. Can broadcast entities solidify on CTA/FTA/Premium play so device guys hit go? Is it big enough to become a check box when ordering a device? Education Overcoming the opt-out: Show me the business plan. Show me the content. Fixed & MDTV NRT Applications Browse and Download, Push, Portal Develop EAS, Education, Interactivity, Coupons, PPV, VOD applications. Who shows up with the back-office? How will Premium channel billing happen? Can the service roll-out work across multiple go-to-market entities? 3/11/2011 7 Mobile DTV: Opportunities Opportunity for Broadcast Industry to Cooperate Agreed upon a set of services. Does that mean support for FTA, CTA, Premium on Devices? What is the right kind of user experience? Does device support ATSC and ATSC MDTV? Does this mean a neutral 3 rd party for Key Management & Audience / Service Measurement metrics? Opportunity for Broadcasters really see the OEMs need to differentiate User experience blends live broadcast with NRT Widgets and interactivity on a integrated receiver. Device OEM embrace broadcast model. Device supports 3G, 4G, Bluetooth, th WIFI and MDTV. Device OS supports middleware and middleware supports applications. 3/11/2011 8 4

Mobile DTV: MDTV vs. 3G / 4G Video FAQ: Won t 3G / 4G provide ubiquitous, mass market mobile broadband video? Answer: No - 3G / 4G is still too expensive 3G = ~$1 Over the Air (OTA) cost to deliver 5 min of 15fps QVGA video to a single user 4G = ~$0.10 for 5 min of 15fps video By contrast, Internet CDN = $0.002 for 5 min of video and decreasing 30-50% / year! Mobile DTV = zero marginal cost, unlimited consumption of very high quality video 3G / 4G has other strengths vs. Mobile DTV Mobile DTV = zero cost, mass market, limited # of broadcast channels 3G/4G = theoretically unlimited #, niche, personalized, on-demand, 2-way content Therefore, ideal mobile video strategy embraces a Long Tail approach Build an audience = use Mobile DTV for low margin, high volume, mass market content Upsell the audience = use 3G/4G for higher margin, personalized, on demand, content Cost for 5 Min of QVGA Video 5 FPS 15 FPS 30 FPS Bearer Tech Cost/MB* (~50 kb/s) (~150 kb/s) (~300 kb/s) GPRS $ 0.415 $ 6.23 $ 18.68 $ 37.35 WCDMA $ 0.069 $ 1.04 $ 3.11 $ 6.21 CDMA 1x $ 0.059 $ 0.89 $ 2.66 $ 5.31 CDMA EVDO $ 0.022 $ 0.33 $ 0.99 $ 1.98 WiMax / LTE $ 0.002 $ 0.03 $ 0.10 $ 0.20 Internet (CDN) $ 0.0001 $ 0.0008 $ 0.0023 $ 0.0045 *Based on QCOM & Roundbox estimates Mobile TV Hampered By Perceived Cost: Survey 58% of Respondents Who Have Not Tried Mobile Video Cite Cost as Factor Multichannel News, March 10, 2009 The perceived cost of mobile TV and video services continues to be the No. 1 reason consumers say they haven't tried them, according to a recent survey. 3G / 4G Cellular Video 3/11/2011 (c) 2009 Roundbox 9 Popularity Mobile DTV Personalization The Mobile Video Long Tail 9 Mobile DTV: MDTV vs. MediaFLO 2 Different Business Models MediaFLO = nationwide Mobile TV network Like Mobile DTV, it is an out of band broadcast distribution network to mobile devices Built by Qualcomm & MediaFLO USA, Inc (MUI) Currently covers > 100 markets Mobile DTV and MediaFLO are complimentary Similar tech... But different biz models Future, dual mode devices? Free, Mobile DTV can build the market base that could be up sold to MediaFLO in the future? Mobile DTV FM / Broadcast TV Model Free (with available, premium upgrades) MediaFLO Cable / Satellite TV Model Monthly subscription Ad supported content (ABC, CBS, NBC...) Channel lineup varies by market Clear-to-Air = open client architecture Reuses existing broadcast network Available to any device / operator Premium content (MTV, ESPN, CNN...) Uniform channel lineup coast to coast Encrypted signal + specialized client 100% new broadcast network Currently exclusive to specific ATT + Verizon phones 3/11/2011 (c) 2009 Roundbox Similar to ISDBT & DMB in Japan & Korea All rights Similar reserved. to DVB-H in Europe 10 10 5

Mobile DTV: Japan & Korea Examples Mobile DTV follows a pattern established by similar systems in Japan & Korea Bothlaunched in 2005 & generated massive penetration within just a few years Both anchored by Free To Air services Both support diverse devices including phones, car nav, game consoles, etc. Both countries are blanketed by high quality 3G / 4G networks Japan ISDB T 40 M devices vs. 125M population (2008) All 3 mobile operators have embraced & provide connected ISDB T experiences Customservice service guide +interactivity Softbank forced Apple to support an ISDB T receiver accessory for their iphone launch 62 min / day avg viewing Started with simulcast TV, added data + special, mobile only video afterwards Japan Local TV Network Map Korea DMB Service For the US to achieve a similar penetration rate to either Korea S/T DMB Japan or Korea it would have to sell over 100 million broadcast Mobile TV devices in the next 3 years... we 27M viewers vs. 50M population (2010) expect [ATSC] to rocket to half a million customers in its Satellite (pay) & terrestrial (free) distribution first full year. ARCchart, Feb 2009 3/11/2011 (c) 2009 Roundbox Up to 2 hrs / day viewing 11 11 Mobile DTV: User Experience Announcement Enabled Broadcast KRBX 25.6 Change Channels Signaling Only Announcement Announcement = A Richer User Experience Announcement is based on OMA BCAST s extensible, XML based metadata model More metadata = graphically rich, branded representation within aggregated guide Springboard for advanced services 3/11/2011 12 6

Mobile DTV: NRT Widgets Taking Broadcast Beyond TV Audio ATSC Mobile DTV currently focuses on Television services Mobile DTV Widgets add Non Real Time (NRT) data services to the mix Potential NRT content services include news, weather, sports, video clips, and/or web pages which are consumed by the viewer on demand 13 3/11/2011 13 (c) 2008 Roundbox Mobile DTV: NRT Widgets User Experience 1 When a user tunes to a supporting station, ATSC-M/H announcement data informs the receiver that a catalog of widgets are also available. The widget catalog provides widget icons and descriptions for the UI. 7

Mobile DTV: NRT Widgets User Experience II 2 When a user selects the Headline News widget, the user interface displays a list of currently available article headlines. 3/11/2011 15 Mobile DTV: NRT Widgets User Experience III 3 Selecting a headline brings up a detailed view of the associated news article with a fullsize image and article text. 3/11/2011 16 8

Mobile DTV: NRT Widgets Large Opportunity for Broadcast Rich Program Listings Horoscopes News Headlines Weather Forecasts Downloadable / Video Content Mobile DTV Widgets bring together the best of web + broadcast + wireless Uniquely combines web like on demand user experience with broadcast based content distribution Establishes a new data service within the Broadcasters home turf ; Google can t distribute widgets Provides broadcaster a new, powerful mechanism to touch viewers Creates a new, station centric, portal like experience driving brand awareness & stickiness Reach consumers outside of 24 hr linear TV constraints with random access, on demand consumption Drive new distribution, eyeballs & ad revenue from existing TV and web assets 3/11/2011 17 Mobile DTV: Broadcasters Possess Widget-Ready Content News Just as Mobile DTV easily leverages existing broadcaster DTV video... Weather Local Content Videos Mobile DTV Widgets easily leverages existing broadcaster web content Assures immediate synergies between widgets & existing content production operations Traffic Content available through broadcaster web sites is often already in suitable format for distribution RSS / ATOM new feeds Video clips Traffic images 3/11/2011 18 (c) 2008 Roundbox 18 9

SBE Ennes Workshop: Mobile DTV & Beyond Meet the Challenge of an Industry Opportunity Mark Rushton, Roundbox March 10, 2011 10