Verizon and Microsoft Partner for IPTV 242
benore writes "According to the AP, Verizon joins other baby bells SBC and Bellsouth in choosing Microsoft to provide TV content over high speed internet. IPTV, whose technology will deliver TV content in much the same way as VOIP delivers phone service, relys heavily on fiber optic speeds. According to SBC, Microsoft's IPTV technology will allow a home to receive 3 standard TV signals, 1 HD channel, and high-speed Internet access all at the same time."
Trendy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Trendy (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft's been trying to move beyond just PCs for years. The only thing Apple did that was new or surprising or different from Microsoft was that they tried to move beyond just PCs and succeeded
Re:Trendy (Score:2)
Re:Trendy (Score:2)
Not really (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not really (Score:2)
Yes because everything they touch becomes a monoply. IIS, XBOX, PocketPC, MSN...
Re:Not really (Score:2)
No, but they tried like hell on IIS and MSN. Both were shot in the foot by MS themselves (IIS is a security nightmare).
XBOX and PocketPC are still being worked on. I do not give PocketPC better than a 25% shot at it (linux is moving up and ipod is a prelude to a pocket PC), but XBOX is well on its way. I am in hope that the cell can stop it, but that is simply trading one monopoly for another. I am tired of that. Back in the 80's, I pushed MS as a way to fight IBM's monopoly. T
Re:Not really (Score:2)
Duh. It's called bidness.
"XBOX and PocketPC are still being worked on. I do not give PocketPC better than a 25% shot at it(linux is moving up and ipod is a prelude to a pocket PC)..."
Eh. Linux on it's own isn't going to replace the PocketPC. Microsoft's not only working on the OS, but on making apps that are useful as well. For example, PocketPCs work really well with Office. Also, Microsoft's moves to make WMP a more widely adopted video standard are
Re:Trendy (Score:2)
You left out HP and Sony. But, yes, Microsoft is obviously following Apple's every move even though any company in their position would diversify, too.
Re:Trendy (Score:2)
Yeah, it's about time that Sony and Hewlett-Packard made something besides computers :-)
But.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But.... (Score:4, Funny)
A conjecture so well supported by the latest reality TV craze.
Re:But.... (Score:2)
With IPTV, only the desired channels are transmitted to the home. In theory, that allows the company selling programming through an IPTV system to offer a limitless choice of channels.
Pay for the 3 or 4 channels worth
Re:But.... (Score:2)
Re:But.... (Score:2)
Re:But.... (Score:2)
People love to jump onto new technology when its free, how many people do you know that have the dvr cable boxes, these have only been popular for what about 18 months, maybe more, and sience you can have one for only $xx.xx dollars per month, everyone got one.
Re:But.... (Score:2)
You mean they want to be numbed and they want to be brain-dead now.
If MS could come up with IPTequila, then they would have something customers want.
Re:But.... (Score:2)
Read the fine print (Score:3, Insightful)
While simultaneously allowing Microsoft to spy on your TV viewing habits, not to mention which shows you tape. Oh sorry, I thought I was reading the WMV license terms. But you get the idea. Let Microsoft in your living room and you never know what you are agreeing to.
Oh well, just a little baseless paranoia for a Friday night.
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Re:Read the fine print (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe I'm weird, but I honestly don't care who knows what I'm watching. Oh nohs they'll find out i watched Real Sex eXXXtra!
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2, Informative)
I see...so you can not run Linux [redhat.com] on said computer either?
Or MenuetOS [menuetos.org]?
I mean, I'm sure there must be some other choice for an x86 [dmoz.org] right? Or television [optimum.com] with Internet access [optimumonline.com] for that matter...
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Back under the bridge, troll.
Monopoly: Where the market has only one supplier.
Therefore, if you don't have several different competing companies offering the same (or similar) products, THE ONE COMPANY PROVIDING IT IS A MONOPOLY. (In fact, this situation can even exist when there is competition, if one company has such complete dominance over the market that it can squash or ignore any attempt at competition.)
Cable, likewise, is not a monopoly; you have a choice. You can pay your local cable MONOPOL
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
A monopoly, in the economic sense, is a vendor which can set its own prices without fear of competition. It really has nothing to do with the complete absence of competition -- just the complete absence of meaningful competition. In that regard, Microsoft is absolutely a monopoly in the PC-compatible desktop operating system market and the Office productivity suite market. The presence of Linux in the first and OpenOffice.org in the second, for instance, have a
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
-dk
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
I'm sure you'll be able to have as many as you're willing to pay through the nose for.
What benefits does IPTV offer (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What benefits does IPTV offer (Score:2)
Re:What benefits does IPTV offer (Score:2)
Re:What benefits does IPTV offer (Score:2)
Re:What benefits does IPTV offer (Score:2)
And charge non-card-users a 60% penalty on their food.
the language of the Internet... (Score:5, Funny)
Finally we'll be able to get the news in 1337 - and I never throught I'd live see the day.
Can't wait to see (Score:4, Insightful)
But then something interesting started happening, and we see the beginnings of the final stages of it with this Verizon/Microsoft partnership. Now the Cable companies are all trying to do exactly what the telephone [now dsl] companies do, and the telephone [now dsl] companies are all trying to do exactly what the Cable companies do, and they're both getting good enough at it that anything having to do with satellite dishes will be entirely marginalized pretty quickly.
I can't help but think it won't be too long before your area's one telephone company does, in fact, compete with your area's one cable company, and your area's one cable company does compete with your area's one telephone company, but neither of them compete with anyone else in any fashion. When this happens I don't think it will be too long before collusion between the cable and dsl companies becomes an absolute standard. Why not? Duopolies are good for business, and what's good for business, at the expense of consumers or no, is apparently good for America.
I Pee TV? (Score:3, Funny)
...receive 3 standard TV signals, 1 HD channel... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:...receive 3 standard TV signals, 1 HD channel. (Score:2)
Prefixes (Score:2, Interesting)
Who did Microsoft buy this time? (Score:2)
What company caved in and let Microsoft buy them, so Microsoft can add "IPTV" to their product portfolio?
Because regular TV (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Because regular TV (Score:2)
I'm not so sure this is a great idea... (Score:5, Funny)
"Hi! It looks like you are watching Fear Factor. Would you like me to help you lower your IQ furthur?"
"TV update has detected 14 new updates, 5 of them critical. Install now?"
"You have changed your PVR, stereo, and snackbowl. You must re-register your TV before you continue."
"J00 5uk3r! PW3N3D!"
"Program JSPRINGER.EXE has causes an exception in GOODTASTE.DLL..."
Re:I'm not so sure this is a great idea... (Score:2)
"To change the channel, please edit chnnl.conf and restart the IPTVstrm deamon."
Television and Cable TV are DYING ! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Television and Cable TV are DYING ! (Score:2)
The municipals can string fiber through already existing pipes or near overhead phone lines.
I am not against Verizon . I just think that they shouldn't be shutting out REAL competition from municipals who want to install Fiber the home .
I was the IPTV demo at CES (Score:5, Interesting)
It looked awesome. I was also suprised at the quality of the streams and the speed at which channels could be changed. Since there is no TV tuner it had multiple Picture-in-picture capabilities.
I can't wait for Verizon to install fiber in my area.
I will be subscribe to this from day one.
DVD's (Score:2)
can you name a non-porn dvd that uses it? and for bonus points- do you own any?
the fact that different angles are available- means squat.
Re:DVD's (Score:2)
As well as the "Myterious Mysteries" pre-ANH DVDr laserdisc transfer. You can use the angle button to switch between the restored 1977 opening crawl and the 1981 "A New Hope" crawl.
The Angle feature, is really multiple simultaneous video streams. And it is used fairly frequently.
Re:I was the IPTV demo at CES (Score:2)
Are you sure it wasn't a "it should be like this" demo, not a "this is actually IPTV running on stage, right now" demo?
Re:I was the IPTV demo at CES (Score:2)
Re:I was the IPTV demo at CES (Score:2)
Re:I was the IPTV demo at CES (Score:2)
With only 3 channels (and 1 HD channel), even with one level of P-in-P, you're watching half the channels. Just 3 channels sounds kind of weak. Often said: "500 channels and nothing's on." With 3 channels, it better be offering something completely out of the box, not just the same old teevee.
I wonder how using it for TV watching sucks down the bandwidth for other things, like dowloading huge files. Or vice versa.
Reboot my TV? (Score:3, Insightful)
The article doesn't say, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Even so, that's probably the way they'll go. They have to, if they are to reach the number of consumers they'd need to be profitable. This is where there's a problem, though. ISPs don't provide multicast to the home. Microsoft would have to force a radical shift in attitudes amongst ISPs, if this plan is to have a hope of working.
Multicasting would solve one of the other concerns mentioned by Slashdot users - privacy. Because routers only know the next link in the chain, it would be impossible for Microsoft to determine who was listening to the multicast transmission.
However, this creates a problem for the cable companies. Anyone can set up a multicast feed. It's easy. This means that anyone can set themselves up as a TV station, virtually unregulated by the FCC (which has next to no authority on Internet matters), with none of the licensing issues "real" broadcasters have to endure.
Although Joe Average is unlikely to offer serious competition any time soon, start-up channels which start entirely on the Internet would have significantly lower overheads and therefore have more money to produce quality output. Those start-ups may very well be dangerous to existing TV stations.
TV-over-IP, because it would be unregulated, completely bypasses all ownership rules. This means that newspapers and radio stations that are looking to muscle into TV would have an advantage as they could get into IPTV without restriction, whereas TV companies are limited in what they can do in other media.
Multicasting is already supported across the Internet backbone, which means overseas operators could transmit to US homes. As it stands, several European sports channels are already relayed over the Multicast backbone. Those channels stand to reach a lot of extra homes, if this is the method Microsoft adopts, which would likely be very interesting news to their sponsors.
Of course, if the F/OSS community could pressure Internet Providers to switch multicasting on now, it would preempt Microsoft's strategy, which in turn means that our favorite monopolist would not gain total control over the entire televised media industry.
Re:The article doesn't say, but... (Score:2)
Yeah but, well, Verizon is an ISP. They could start.
Re:The article doesn't say, but... (Score:2)
That's what the DRM is for, probably. But if they can't tell if anyone's breaking the DRM...
It's Microsoft. I'm sure they'll find a way to fuck it all up.
Re:The article doesn't say, but... (Score:2)
Oh yeah, the edge routers can log multicast joins so they still know what you're watching (although "they" is the ISP, not Microsoft).
Re:The article doesn't say, but... (Score:2)
Since this is Microsoft we're talking about, you will probably be forced to use DRM-encumbered software that reports back what channel you're watching.
Of course, if the F/OSS community could pressure Internet Providers to switch multicasting on now
To do this, we'd need a killer app.
Verizon? Fiber? It's doomed (Score:2, Interesting)
Verizon can't even provide decent (>768Kb/s) SDSL service in New York, which is one of its core markets. When I called them 2 months ago, SDSL was still a "new technology" to them. Go speak to someone in IT who deals with Verizon on daily basis, they'll tell that Verizon and incompetence go together.
Read the Verizon Fios reviews ... (Score:2)
(it's available in my area so i might get it soon)
Fight Club quote (Score:2)
"When deep space exploration ramps up, it will be corporations that name everything. The IBM Stellar Sphere. The Philip Morris Galaxy. Planet Starbucks."
Re:Fight Club quote (Score:2)
Props
Re:Fight Club quote (Score:2)
"When deep space exploration ramps up, it will be corporations that name everything: The IBM Stellar Sphere. The Microsoft Galaxy. Planet Starbucks."
Re:Fight Club quote (Score:2)
Imagine if... (Score:2)
IPTV (Score:2)
That stands for Intellectual Property Television, right?
bandwidth...... (Score:3, Insightful)
3 SD TV channels = 3Mbit/s each, 9Mbit/s total
Internet variable, probably at least 1-2Mbit/s
Total BW: 30Mbit/s.
Different pipe, same crappy content (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, more competition in the service provider space might keep prices down, but since it will be the same garbage programing, I can't get very excited.
Although I'd rather not see Microsoft's proprietary technology used in the transmission protocol, I'm not too worried. TV streams from the Baby Bells are still a long way off for most people. The vast majority of their outside plant facilities need backhoe-style upgrades to get that fiber to your house.
I know they are claiming these services are just around the corner, but they have been saying that for about 15 years now. How many of you can't get a DSL line because you are on a long line? Of those who can get it, how many get more than 1.5 Mbps? Yeah, thought so.
They need at least 10 Mbps to each house for this roll-out. It's gonna be a while.
Re:Different pipe, same crappy content (Score:2)
The problem is that there are lots and lots of people on lines longer than that. Once you get over 8 Kft, the performance isn't any better than regular ADSL.
If it were just a matter of upgrading the electronics in their network, they could easily offer these services. As it stands now, they
Triplicate. (Score:2)
And when a server goes down (Score:2)
I have nothing, becuase someone installed something he shouldnt have.
Content providers are the real problem (Score:2, Insightful)
So what (Score:2)
Are people reading the article wrong? (Score:3, Informative)
This doesn't mean only ONE channel in the service is HDTV, it means that you can only receive 1 HDTV channel at a time. If I only have 1 TV in my house that is HDTV complaint - thats fine, I can watch any of the HDTV channels on it, however, if I have more than ONE HDTV in the house, they are both going to have to be tuned to the same channel. Also, if you have more than 4 TVs in the house going at the same time, 2 of them would have to be watching the same show. While maybe the assume that many people wouldn't have more than 1 HDTV and 3 SDTVs it almost sounds like a step back to the days of pre-multiswitch satellite, when you had your 1 receiver feeding all the tvs in the house the same show.
I'll keeo my DirecTV and TiVos thanks.
Re:no thanks... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:no thanks... (Score:2)
So instead of your 500+ channels its really an umlimited number, from around the world from any station that is conected to the internet, instead of just the channels your provider has choosen for you.
what about digital cable? same deal? (Score:2)
i have no idea how many tuners can run at a time, but i am pretty sure if you have mor
Re:what about digital cable? same deal? (Score:2)
I don't know if bidirectional digital does this -- but I *do* know that in my house, analog cable piggybacks on the digital (we only have 1 digital cable receiver, but we get cable channels on every TV) so I'm willing to bet,
Re: (Score:2)
Re:what about digital cable? same deal? (Score:2)
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:3, Informative)
Baseless attacks and disinformation regarding anti-trust law in this country helps no-one.
It is not a crime to hold a monopoly position in the market. It is a crime to do certain things with that monopoly position. Such things are called anti-trust violations. When you violate them are are not convicted of being a monopoly, you're convicted of anti-trust violations.
Nowhere does anti-trust law say that once you have a monopoly in one area that you can't enter business into a new area. Anti-trust
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:2)
This is not a court. It is a discussion board.
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:2)
Apparently you missed the bit earlier in the discussion where the original poster said that Microsoft should be prevented from doing this because they are a convicted monopoly.
So yes, we're talking courts and law and stuff - not just people posturing on a bulletin board.
Next time, consider reading the whole thread before replying.
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:2)
But that is not the post you were replying to. And if I'm reading the thread right, it appears the post you were replying to outright said the original poster was wrong if they were considering Microsoft's current actions in this area illegal.
So I see it as a little odd you're complaining about people not reading the thread.
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Monopolist expanding (Score:2)
Re:Performance (Score:3, Informative)
So the proformance is better, but at the cost of "loading" times each time you make a requst for a different channel, station, website, etc.
Re:Performance (Score:3, Interesting)
Done right, you won't notice a difference between what you have now with digital cable, and this new system. The only additional delay will be that for the request to change the channel - and that may end up being masked by the fact that you already have to wait for the I frame to arrive before you can switch to a new channel with existing digital receivers.
Re:Performance (Score:2)
Oracle used to do this (had 3 divisions, sold the whole mess to nCube and someone else in IIRC 2000), MS had an ITV division, that got sucked under their streaming server group, SGI did... there were a bunch.
I'm just impressed that these guys are finally getting off the pot and impleme
Re:Performance (Score:2)
I just got a TWC brochure in the mail today that offers me the chance to upgrade my cable internet service to also include 8 million crappy tv channels and their tivo-like box all for just $125+tax (so $145) a month. FSCK that. I'll just watch my free air TV thank you.
Re:DRM ahead! (Score:2)
This is insightful?
Please, go ahead, show me the Linux solution that allows you to take all of your TV shows from your MediaCenter PC and watch it on your Creative Labs Nomad Media player wherever you want to. Or rebroadcast it to anywhere you want.
You probably forgot to deselect the "Add copy protection" checkbox on your Windows Media Play
Re:DRM ahead! (Score:2)
I already did. As I said, use your MediaCenter PC, and watch your recorded video on your Creative Labs Nomad Media Player wherever you want to. Or rebroadcast it to whereever you want.
Here - read this link - Microsoft's Media Center top 10 features list [microsoft.com] - and stop complaining about things you're obviously ignorant about.
Re:Compression (Score:2)
Most fast motion HD 1080i videos encoded in WMV9 format don't require any more than 10 Mbps. Low motion videos require even less.
The bandwidth on Verizon's FIOS service is more than adequate.
Re:Compression (Score:2)
-- angry father, user of the experimental service
Wouldn't you love that ?
Re:Compression (Score:2)
Yeah, because it'll be successful regardless of video quality.
Re:-1st Post (Score:2)