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March 27, 2009 10:39 AM PDT

Report: BlackBerry maker to launch video service

by Marguerite Reardon
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Research In Motion, maker of the popular BlackBerry smartphones, reportedly is preparing to announce a new video download service for its BlackBerry phones at the CTIA trade show next week in Las Vegas.

(Credit: Research In Motion)

The blog NewTeeVee, which reported the news earlier this week, said that the service will be offered as an unlimited monthly subscription service. And it adds that RIM has already signed several broadcast and cable partners to offer up content. But instead of streaming the video over the 3G wireless network, RIM is planning a service that will allow the videos to be downloaded using Wi-Fi connections, the site reported.

News of the TV service is expected to be announced Wednesday when Mike Lazaridis, co-CEO of RIM, is slated to give a keynote address on the opening day of the trade show and conference. The company is also expected to announce the availability of its new application store, called BlackBerry App World.

Representatives declined to comment about the launch of the BlackBerry App World and the new video service.

There are already several services available for watching video on cell phones. Qualcomm's MediaFlo has built its own broadcast network that streams live TV directly to handsets. The service is offered through AT&T and Verizon Wireless, but it requires special handsets. And to date, RIM's BlackBerry phones do not offer this service.

MobiTV also offers a streaming mobile video service. This service provides content from more than 40 channels, including several major networks, such as ABC, CBS, NBC, ESPN, and Discovery Networks. It also offers made-for-mobile videos and video-on-demand clips to more than 5 million subscribers on over 350 mobile devices. The service, which costs $10 a month, is currently offered on AT&T and Sprint Nextel networks the day after CBS broadcasts them on TV.

But instead of streaming video to handsets, RIM plans to allow users to download entire episodes over a Wi-Fi connection to the devices, the NewTeeVee blog said. Apple also requires videos from its iTunes store to be downloaded instead of streamed. But unlike RIM, which will use a Wi-Fi connection for downloading, iPhone users must download the video via their computers and then sync it to their iPhone.

Because video files are large, it makes sense that RIM would offer the service over Wi-Fi. But it does limit the usefulness of the service. If users can download video over the 3G cellular network, they can access video anywhere. Wi-Fi is limited to smaller hotspots and is not ubiquitous. What's more, not every BlackBerry device on the market offers Wi-Fi.

In fact, the BlackBerry Storm, offered exclusively by Verizon Wireless, does not support Wi-Fi. The Storm is RIM's only touch-screen device, and it offers the largest screen that would be ideal for viewing video.

But other hot BlackBerry models do offer Wi-Fi. The BlackBerry Bold and the BlackBerry Curve 8900, both of which have good screens, support Wi-Fi.

There are other BlackBerry devices, primarily offered by AT&T, T-Mobile USA, and Sprint Nextel, that support Wi-Fi. Here's a list of Wi-Fi-enabled BlackBerry devices and which carriers offer them.

•  BlackBerry Bold (AT&T)

•  BlackBerry Curve 8900 (T-Mobile)

•  BlackBerry Curve 8320 (AT&T and T-Mobile)

•  BlackBerry 8820 (AT&T and T-Mobile)

•  BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220 (T-Mobile)

•  BlackBerry Curve 8350i (Sprint Nextel)

•  BlackBerry Pearl 8120 (AT&T and T-Mobile)

CNET Reviews editor Bonnie Cha contributed to this article.

January 21, 2009 3:39 PM PST

FLO TV gets high marks on Inauguration Day

by Marguerite Reardon
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About 1.5 million people showed up for President Obama's inauguration, clogging cell phone networks.

(Credit: Marguerite Reardon CNET News/CBS Interactive)

I must admit, I never really saw the point in having TV on my cell phone. That was until Tuesday.

I was one of the lucky people who was able to get to my ticketed-spot on the National Mall to see Barack Obama become the 44th president of the United States. I trekked more than two hours through a sea of people along the streets of Washington, D.C., to make it to the "Silver" gate for a standing-room view of the inauguration. And I withstood the freezing temperatures throughout the rest of the day to watch the historic swearing-in ceremony and the parade that followed.

Like the rest of the 1.5 million or so people on the mall and lining the parade route for the inauguration, I was trying to text message and call family and friends to share the moment. I also tried to access mobile Web sites to get updates on what was happening. And of course, being the reporter I am, I wanted to update my Twitter feed to let others know what I was experiencing.

But for most of the day, I had only spotty service on my AT&T iPhone. I couldn't text or make phone calls at all from the Mall before or during the ceremony. And forget about Twittering or checking Web sites for updates. My sister, who uses a basic Verizon Wireless flip phone, also had trouble sending and receiving text messages during the inauguration ceremony.

The only mobile service that worked flawlessly on Inauguration Day for me was MediaFlo's FloTV service offered through AT&T. MediaFlo had let me borrow a Samsung FloTV phone specifically for the inauguration. And even though the public relations representative who lent me the phone hadn't charged it completely and forgot to give me a charger for the device, which greatly limited how much I could use it, the service itself worked without a hitch.

While I was very happy to be standing on the mall at all, it quickly became apparent that my sister, Amy, and I, were not going to see much from our vantage point. Not only are we both short. I am five foot four inches tall, and Amy is about five foot two inches. But we were also too far away to see anything but a tiny speck on the steps of the Capitol.

Standing between tall people, we were able to catch glimpses of the big JumboTron in our section. At first we watched as various congressional leaders and celebrities took their seats, Oprah and Beyonce, and then Sens. Ted Kennedy and John McCain. But we wanted to know where Obama was. So we tuned into live CNN coverage of the event. And sure enough, Wolf Blitzer narrated President-elect Obama's journey from the White House, where he was having coffee with President Bush, to the Capitol where the ceremony was set to begin.

After the swearing-in ceremony, Amy and I found ourselves on Constitution Avenue right near the Capitol. And we decided to continue braving the cold temperatures to wait for the Obamas to finish lunch and start the motorcade toward the White House. Again, I turned on the FLO TV phone to get updates. We had quickly made friends with the four or five people standing near us, including an MSNBC news crew. None of us thought much of the ambulance that barreled up Independence Avenue toward the Capitol. It wasn't until I tuned into CNN again on the FLO TV phone that we learned that Sen. Kennedy had collapsed at the congressional lunch. We then huddled together in the cold, watching and listening to President Obama's remarks after the lunch. And just before the phone ran out of battery power, we learned the motorcade was set to begin.

How the FLO TV signals got through
So why did AT&T's FLO TV service work so well for me while its regular phone, text, and data service on my iPhone performed poorly? Well, there's a very simple explanation. My iPhone operates over AT&T's regular cell phone network. And the FLO TV service operates over MediaFlo's owned and operated TV broadcast network. MediaFlo, which is owned by wireless chipmaker Qualcomm, has built a mobile TV broadcast network using wireless spectrum that is currently being used to broadcast analog TV signals in Channel 55.

The company has negotiated with broadcasters in certain markets, and is already offering the service in 56 markets. It will offer the service nationwide in February after TV broadcasters stop transmitting in analog and switch solely to digital.

AT&T and Verizon Wireless resell the FLO TV service, which offers between 11 and 13 channels of broadcast and cable TV programming for $15 a month.

Because MediaFlo's mobile TV network is built as a broadcast network, it can handle large volumes of people accessing content at the same time. The live TV channels are broadcast over the wireless spectrum and viewers "tune in" with their handsets. This approach, used in traditional broadcast television and radio, means that video clips are transmitted only once over the network, instead of being replicated and transmitted hundreds or even thousands of times.

By contrast, voice, text, and data services use AT&T's traditional wireless network, which is built for two-way communication. These networks are divided into cells. Users in a given cell share the available bandwidth. The networks are also designed to be "unicast," which means signals are transmitted between a single sender and a single receiver.

So If 500,000 people in the same cell decide to send a text message, access the Web, or make a phone call at the same time, the network becomes congested and delays text messages, drops calls, or refuses Web connectivity.

AT&T and other wireless operators spent millions of dollars upgrading their networks in anticipation of huge crowds for the inauguration. But because there were so many people packed into Washington, D.C., and in particular around the Capitol and National Mall on Tuesday, the traditional cell phone networks still became congested and didn't perform optimally.

Just to give a sense of the amount of traffic traversing the network on Tuesday, John Taylor from Sprint Nextel said that the volume of voice, text, and data traffic on its CDMA network had broken all previous records by 6 a.m. There was a 212 percent increase in traffic volume from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m., just before the inauguration ceremony began.

AT&T's spokesman Mark Siegel said between 11 a.m. and 12 p.m. text messaging volumes increased six-fold on AT&T's network. Mobile Web access was also way up during this period, Siegel said. But he admitted that there were some problems.

"We feel like the network performed great," he said. "Was it perfect? No, there were occasions when people couldn't get through. That really was no surprise given the number of people that were in such a small area."

Surprise or not, I was happy to have the FLO TV phone. And even though I still think $15 a month is too much to spend on top of my already pricey cell phone plan, I would be tempted to consider it. How about you? I'd love to hear reactions from readers. Would events like the inauguration tempt you to spend more money on a broadcast style mobile TV service?


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