Hdtv the tipping point--from fortune magazine

rang1995

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Sep 30, 2003
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Bergen co NJ
HDTV in Fortune's Top 10 Tech Trends to Bet On
This article is in this month's fortune (cover story)...

7. HDTV Comes Into Focus
Clear, cheap, and federally mandated.
By Peter Lewis


Janet Jackson's breast may someday be credited with spurring the adoption of high-definition television, but the adoption rate of HDTV was already building long before the Super Bowl halftime incident earlier this month.

After years of teasing, it appears that HDTV is finally ready to deliver. The first piece of the HDTV puzzle—converting the nation's TVs to digital—is supposed to be complete by 2007. This is arguably the most significant TV upgrade since the medium's inception, greater even than the shift to color. Digital signals are less susceptible to interference, make more efficient use of the airwaves, and enable new types of applications, like data services and interactivity.

But the real star of the digital show is HD. The actual shape of the image changes from today's boxy width-to-height ratio of 4:3 to the widescreen 16:9, allowing the viewer to see, for example, all four bases of a baseball game or Hollywood movies as they appear in theaters. HDTV screen resolution can be up to ten times greater than that of analog TV, resulting in much sharper, almost film-like pictures. Sound quality is also improved to DVD quality. Although only two million U.S. homes currently subscribe to HDTV channels, the number should rise to more than 40 million by 2007.

What's driving the shift? On the hardware side, the Federal Communications Commission endorsed a digital cable "plug and play" agreement, which will eventually permit consumers to plug a cable line directly into their digital TVs, bypassing the annoying set-top box. The first digital-cable-ready sets will appear later this year. And the FCC is leaning toward the adoption of copy protection "flags" that will ease the nerves of content providers worried about the Napsterization of HD shows.

For consumers, the attraction will be price. Dozens of companies are entering the market to compete with big Japanese and Korean setmakers, driving prices down; new players include Gateway, Dell, HP, and Intel, which says it has a processor that will soon bring the cost of a thin, 50-inch HDTV set to under $1,800—still expensive, but less than one-third the price of just a year ago.

Meanwhile, HD programming is proliferating. Cablevision just launched an HD-only service called Voom, which carries 25 HD channels. More than a dozen HD channels, including HBO, Showtime, and Discovery, are now transmitting on cable and satellite, with a dozen more soon to launch. All the big broadcast networks, with the notable exception of Fox, already send out their prime-time lineups in HD. The last big hurdle for HDTV is customer confusion over the new technologies and salesperson mumbo jumbo. But when it comes to HD, seeing is believing.
 
also this tid-bit
from another sourse
HEADLINE:
A Little Room for Voom?

BODY:

Has Voom run out of real estate? Its retail contract with Sears expired
at the end of Jan, but the nascent satellite service is in discussions with
retailers ... although reps won't provide names. Meanwhile, the free service
window has been extended through the end of March. Voom says the timing of its
carriage agreements is part of the reason for the extended freebie, but adds the
no-pay period also allows new customers to test the product. To date, Voom
offers 30 HD channels, 9 short of the number it had hoped to rack up at launch.
 

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