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BEIJING, Feb. 18 (Xinhuanet) -- TV mobile phones,
dubbed as the "Fifth Media," have not yet seen an opportunity for its rapid
growth in China. Experts say it will take some time for TV mobile phones to
enter the people's lives in the country.
A report released by IMS Research
says that by 2010 there will be 120 million subscribers viewing TV programs on
mobile phones and TV mobile phones would become the "Fifth Media", besides
newspaper, radio, television, and computer network (or web). Analysts say Asian
subscribers more readily accept new mobile phones than other users.
In face of the lucrative market, Chinese companies
have arousedto start this business. Before the May Day holiday in 2004, China
Unicom launched a service to provide TV programs for mobile phone subscribers.
Not long after that, China Mobile started a TV mobilephone service through GPRS
network.
Despite a promising future, TV mobile phones are
still at its early stage of development in China due to limited broadband
capacity, limited choice of handsets, much higher price and lack of standards
and policies.
China's TV programs are currently transmitted to
mobile phones through 2.5 or 2.75 generation networks, which are not
sophisticated enough to convey high-quality TV signals.
The download speed of GPRS is only 25 kbps and that
of China Unicom's CDMA1X is 60-70 kbps, which is far from the 128 kbps as
required for high-quality TV program broadcast.
High price has also bottlenecked China's TV mobile
phones. China Unicom subscribers have to pay at least 200 yuan (24 US dollars)
for one hour's TV program on mobile phones.
Reports say some operators are in negotiation with
China Mobileon providing TV service for mobile phone subscribers with a fixed
monthly fee of around 100 yuan (12 US dollars), aiming to cut the price of
watching TV on mobile phones.
At present, handsets that can receive TV signals sell
at approximately 5,000 yuan (some 600 US dollars). This makes them unpopular
when most other handsets cost 1,000-2,000 yuan (120-240 US dollars).
The short lifespan of their batteries also limits the
use of TV mobile phones. Handset batteries can last three days to a week
forgeneral use, but just one hour for watching TV.
Industry insiders worry that subscribers may not
accept the newfunction and service easily. Just like visual telephones, Europe
and Asia have offered this service, but few people use it, said ananalyst with
Gartner.
China has not worked out unified, concerned policies
and the operation of TV mobile phone service is proceeding under various
standards.
Experts hold that companies rushed into this immature
sphere partially for the third generation mobile technology (3G). Mobile phone
TV broadcast has been deemed pivot product of 3G and China Mobile and China
Unicom launched the service to be early players in the market.
As voice business is getting increasingly
competitive, visual service could bring new profits for telecom operators.
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