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Comcast Launches Online TV Guide
04 Oct, 2007Comcast will launch Gemstar-TV Guide’s broadband TV guide on Comcast’s portal site. The online guide allows subscribers to search for online video content from 55 broadcast, cable network and other major entertainment-focused Web sites, as well as from “professional grade” user generated videos. Gemstar says they have indexed over 110K user generated content clips. Each distribution partner, which in addition to Comcast includes YouTube, AOL Video, Yahoo, Brightcove, and others, creates a customized broadbandTV portal, powered by Gemstar-TV Guide’s technology.
Mediacom and Insight to Launch Online TV Guide Listings
17 Aug, 2007
Mediacom and Insight will launch Gemstar/TV Guide’s Listing2Go online television guide application on their respective portal sites. The Listings2Go application is a part of TV Guide’s My TV Guide platform can be customized to present users with programming information for every channel lineup and service provider across the United States or just a certain channel lineup and fixed set of providers.
About Telecompetitor
- Study: Consumers Prefer Telco Bundles Over Cable
- $25/Month for 4G WiMAX from Xohm
- AT&T Reorganizes
- Clearwire: WiMAX is a Game Changer for Cable
- USDA Announces $342 Million in Rural Broadband, Telecommunications Loans
- J.D. Power: TelcoTV Beats Cable
- DigitalBridge Launches VoIP Over WiMAX
- Over 25% of Wireless Subscribers Indicate They No Longer Need Wireline
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Events
Upcoming events which offer competitive insight and analysis:
Mobile Internet World
Oct 21 - 23, 2008 - Boston, MA
TelcoTV Conference and Expo
Nov 11-13, 2008 - Anaheim, CA
NTCA Wireless Symposium
Jan 7-9, 2009 - Austin, TX
Featured Article
Time to Prepare for DOCSIS 3.0 is Now
07 Aug, 2008Second quarter results for broadband growth were a tad underwhelming. There are any number of factors which probably contributed to this slowdown, with the economic slowdown and housing crisis certainly towards the top of the list. But growth is also slowing because broadband penetration has grown considerably over the past few years, now ranging somewhere between 50% to 60% (depending on who you ask), and is beginning to slow down. There certainly is more room for growth, but at some point in the near future, broadband penetration will slow even more as it approaches saturation. It’s anyone’s guess what saturation is, but I would bet somewhere around 75% penetration of households (as a national average - individual markets will vary widely). From a service provider’s point of view, that suggests that posting continuing net adds of broadband customers will increasingly involve convincing a competitor's broadband customer base to switch service.

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