Thursday, December 20, 2007

UK Leads in Digital TV


The U.K. is well ahead of most other European countries in its use of digital media, by some measures. By the start of 2007, more than 76 percent of U.K. TV households were receiving digital TV services, a rate higher than other Western European countries, Japan or the United States, for example.

According to Ofcom, U.K. adults also spend more time on social networking sites than other Europeans. Two in five U.K. adults regularly log on to these sites, clocking up an average of 23 visits and 5.3 hours each month.

In the U.K. market, 33 percent of users send picture messages via their mobiles and 16 percent use them to connect to the Internet. About 10 percent of U.K. adults use mobiles for e-mail.

Ofcom also believes that online advertising in the United Kingdom accounted for 14 percent of total advertising revenues in 2006, passing magazine advertising for the first time and registering more than total spending on outdoor, cinema and radio advertising combined.

Advertisers in the U.K. market also spend more money per consumer on Internet advertising than any other country, at £33. According to Ofcom, this is twice as much as France, Germany and Italy combined.

Online advertising revenues generated in the U.K. market in 2006 also beat the combined totals of Germany, France and Italy at £231 per head.

More Online Video Viewing, in All Age Segments


More viewers are turning to the Internet to supplement their traditional entertainment viewing habits, says Harris Interactive. In the past year, YouTube has widened its lead as a one-stop site for online video viewing.

Search and content providers, as well as online community sites, also have gained some ground on the video viewing front while TV network sites are holding their own as well.

While the incidence of online video viewership has increased overall in the past year (81 percent versus 74 percent), YouTube is by far enjoying the greatest increase.

Approximately two-thirds (65 percent) of U.S. online adults say they have watched a video at YouTube, compared to 42 percent at the same time last year, with the strongest gains among those over age 25.

Over 42 percent of YouTube viewers say they visit the site frequently, up from 33 percent last year. Just over two in five U.S. adults have watched videos on a TV network site (43 percent vs. 41 pecent).

While online video viewing declines with age for most sites measured, including YouTube, the incidence of online viewing on TV network and news sites remains consistent across age groups ranging from 18 to 64.

While interest in online video viewing is becoming more commonplace across older age groups, it is virtually ubiquitous among the under 30 set.

Yahoo, America Movil 143 Million Sub Mobile Search Deal


Yahoo and Latin America's top mobile phone company America Movil said on Thursday they have struck a deal to provide mobile Web services to 16 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Yahoo's oneSearch service will be the default on America Movil's wireless carriers' portals. Yahoo plans to offer localized versions of oneSearch for each region, and said other Yahoo services may be added in coming months.

The partnership is the largest of the 21 search deals Yahoo has announced this year with mobile phone operators, the Sunnyvale, California company said.

Mexico City-based America Movil has 143 million wireless subscribers. Yahoo's broadest previous deal was with Spain's Telefonica SA, covering up to 100 million subscribers in several European and Latin American markets.

HD-DVD Format Wars Continue, Prices Drop


The good news for consumers is that high-definition DVD prices are falling. The bad news is that the format war still isn't over. As was the case with BetaMax and VHS in videotape recorders, consumers now have to choose between incompatible formats. Personally, I'm just going to wait until the war is over. I've been through enough of these technology standard battles to instinctively avoid buying "eight track," "BetaMax," or just about anything proprietary in the consumer electronics space. Of course, I don't care enough about video to adopt early, in any case, so I might be odd in that regard.

Sony's "Blue-ray" players are selling for under $300, while Toshiba's "HD-DVD" player is available for $200.

The edge right now seems to be on Blu-ray's side. since Thanksgiving in the U.S., Blu-ray discs account for 72 percent of the high-definition discs sold, while HD-DVD has 27.4percent of the share over that same time period. So maybe Sony can win a major format war for once.

Right now, Walt Disney, 20th Century Fox and Metro Goldwyn Mayer support Blu-ray DVDs, while Universal (GE) has sided with HD-DVD. Warner Bros. supports both players.

Studios obviously hope the new format will spark higher DVD sales, which are highly profitable, but whose sales have started to slide.

We shall see. The download market and on-demand video streaming have to be taken into account, this time around. And with users opting for increased mobile or PC screen video, it isn't an absolute certainty how big the market might be for high-definition DVDs. It's great for big screen displays. But lots of viewing now takes place on all sorts of screens where the advantage is small, if much of an advantage at all. For downloaded video, in fact, less information, which means faster downloads, probably is more important.

New Truphone Supprted Devices

Truphone's mobile VoIP service now is supported on five new handsets: the Wi-Fi-equipped Nokia N95 8G, Nokia N81, Nokia N81 8G, Nokia N82 and Nokia E51 models. Truphone also is freezing its rates until the end of February, so Truphone calls will be free to landlines in 40 countries, and to mobiles in the U.S., Canada and elsewhere, until March.

Mobile Web: Not So Useful Yet

The mobile Web might be the future for a goodly portion of user activity in the future. But it isn't quite there yet, Accenture says.

Japan Mobile Market: Different than Europe



The Japanese mobile market long has been seen as a trend-setter for mobile applications elsewhere in the world. As Accenture looks at the market, that remains the case. Japanese users simply do different things, with different levels of intensity, than users in Western Europe, for example.

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