The global market for mobile video services offers great potential, but is in
a state a flux and will take "quite a few years" to settle down, according to
researchers.
In-Stat
noted that the potential commercial opportunities of mobile video are huge, but
that fragmentation in the industry, and in the markets, may make it difficult
for any one firm to reach the economies of scale required to make mobile video a
worldwide phenomenon.
"We are more likely to see geographic regions developing their own local
approaches, and we will even find some country-specific versions," said In-Stat
analyst Gerry Kaufhold.
"Each geographic region is developing differently, and all technology
approaches are in play."
The analyst firm's Mobile Video Infrastructure report said that mobile
handsets are only one way to receive mobile video services, and that PCs,
portable media players, navigation systems and other devices are all in the mix.
According to the study, all competing methods must still interoperate to
provide a profitable mix of broadcast, premium and pay-per-view TV, as well as
on-demand video.
In-Stat estimates that the worldwide value of the equipment used by
transmission sites for broadcast-specific overlay networks will have a worldwide
value of about $216m during 2011.
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