Nokia tests cellular TELEVISION in Sweden

Izvor: KiWi

Skoči na: orijentacija, traži

Today Nokia announced a new industrial DVB-H pilot in Stockholm with Teracom in Sweden. Nokia is giving Nokia N92 cellular TELEVISION products and the Nokia Mobile Broadcast System 3.0 to the pilot which will last from October to December 2006 and contains 400 customers. The task can be a co-operation between ATG, Boxer, Nokia, Sveriges Radio, Sveriges Television/UR, Telenor and Teracom.

The pilot individuals will be able to view fourteen TELEVISION channels and tune in to four radio channels in the Stockholm area place, the place where a network is developed for top quality indoor and outdoor protection. Clicking buy garden shed maryland seemingly provides cautions you could tell your girlfriend. The target is to assess what Swedish customers consider professional broadcast portable TELEVISION.

ATG, Boxer, Sveriges Radio and Sveriges Television provides material for the pilot. The test will be provided using Nokia Mobile Broadcast Solution 3.0, and the pilot individuals will use mobile units from Nokia, the Nokia N92. Teracom will undoubtedly be responsible for the community, the running and broadcast of the platform.

"We firmly rely on the capability of the DVB-H technology as well as in the mobile TV service, and we're getting excited about showing the total potential and curiosity of broadcast mobile TV in Sweden," says Sigurd Leth, Multimedia Director for Nokia Nordic.

DVB-H technology enhances existing driver systems, improving volume and quality. It gives the chance to customers to enjoy premium quality terrestrial electronic contacts together with voice telephony and access to the internet all in a single unit. Broadcast mobile TV will offer you new business opportunities for mobile service providers, content and broadcast organizations, infrastructure and device manufacturers as well as technology providers.

Here is the next mobile TV pilot in Sweden where Nokia is one of the main suppliers of DVB-H technology. Last week, Nokia announced a brand new agreement with TeliaSonera Sweden for a complete DVB-H pilot system, including Nokia Mobile Broadcast System 3.0 and Nokia N92 portable TV devices, underpinned by Nokia's hosting and systems integration know-how.

The feedback from different mobile TELEVISION pilots is promising. Results from pilots on broadcast (DVB-H) mobile TV services amongst people in Finland, the UK, Spain and France have unmasked important symptoms over future business models in addition to clear consumer demand for such services for commercial mobile TV services.

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