
The three most important market barriers have been:
- The lack of free and simulcast local and national TV programs as a primer for fee-based premium content in most countries outside of Japan and South Korea.
- Limited analog-to-digital TV transitions in most regions that would allow broadcasters to simulcast mobile and terrestrial TV services. Most developed countries will complete that transition by 2012.
- 3G cellular service throughput and latency performance are inadequate for mobile TV. The deployment of 4G networks over the next few years will enable a significantly improved mobile TV experience.
A further disruptive influence on the direction of the market is the proliferation of new types of mobile devices with larger, high resolution displays and richer multimedia capabilities than cellular handsets. Says Jordan, "Since mobile TV won't be just the province of cellular operators but also of broadcast TV providers, we will see more TV-centric mobile devices: automotive infotainment systems, media tablets, MIDs, and netbooks. Mobile consumers won't be forced to go through a mobile operator and have to pay for voice, messaging, email and Internet plans first, just to get mobile TV."
A new ABI Research study, "Mobile TV Services" offers detailed examination of regional mobile TV services that are provided by various service providers to mobile TV users over mobile cellular TV and mobile broadcast TV networks.
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