EU edict be damned: Germany looking more and more like a DVB-T house
The problem with selling licenses for spectrum -- any kind of spectrum -- is that there's an implicit assumption that the investment a company's going to make into buying the airwaves and building out the infrastructure necessary to take advantage of it is eventually going to pay off. For the winners of Germany's DVB-H license, though, the economics simply don't make sense; the country's carriers stone-cold gave up on the concept once they lost the license bid, instead turning to bundling DVB-T receivers to steal free signals designed for plain ol' TV reception. The winning bidder, Mobile 3.0, had intended to sell users on packages costing a handful of euros a month -- but "free" is a pretty powerful word, so even if there's a marginal battery performance disadvantage with the DVB-T setup, it's going to be virtually impossible for any pay service to fight it, especially when carriers are putting zero effort into making sure DVB-H tuners are on board their handsets. As best as we can tell, T-Systems' DVB-H trial wrapped up in December, so yeah, that pretty much spells the death of the so-called standard in Bavaria. What say you, EU?[Via mocoNews]












Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
latze @ Aug 1st 2008 7:43PM
That was pretty much foreseeable imo as most Germans (me included) don't have that Japanese my-mobile-entertains-me-24/7 (or at least on long everyday tube rides...)-approach towards their "Handy" (yeah, that's how we call it here...). Especially when it comes to paying a premium/extra-fee for something, the large majority's focus is reduced to texts and speech. Internet-packs are slowly making their way to above-average Hans' (that's for your like prejudice that Bavaria equals Germany -.-) mobile, but it's going to take a while and supportive mass-media events like football worldcup / eurocup are not on the timetable for the next 2-3 years.
identitycrisis @ Aug 2nd 2008 12:52AM
Similar case has already been happening since some while ago in Korea, where free T-DMB prevailed but S-DMB almost died out.
Aside from that, I take this as a failure of EU's unifying effort... Clever Germans, aren't they?
tom @ Aug 2nd 2008 5:13AM
Having a single European standard for mobile TV just doesn't make sense except for manufacturers. For voice calling yes but does a person living in Norway really have a need to watch TV on their mobile in Spain???