Tuesday 23 October 2007

High Def kicking off on terrestrial in Singapore

MediaCorp has launched its well-flagged HD5 service on the DVB-T network in Singapore. The service, which has been in trial for about a year, is a simulcast of Channel 5, the main English language channel that carries major drama series, movies and sports events. The service uses MPEG-4 video coding. Not much word yet on STB availability. One model that's getting a lot of mention on discussion boards is the Draco HDTV 3900...seemingly it's available for about Sing$ 300 - that's just over €140.

The MediaCorp site suggests that the main retails are selling receivers, bundled with an indoor antenna for about Sing$560 - about €265. That price seems a little steep compared to prices reported previously in Estonia and Norway. Presumably prices will fall as more HD content (rather than upconverted SD stuff) is added to the service.

Sunday 21 October 2007

ALDI selling cheap HD STBs in Oz



Budget retailer ALDI is currently selling an HDTV (DVB-T, MPEG-2 video) set-top box, with HDMI output, for AUS$ 119. That's about €75... It's a Tevion box - the black and pink boxes in the middle of the photo above.


Wednesday 3 October 2007

Brazilian STB to cost more than US$350

A report on a Brazil-based website quotes the president of the National Association of Manufacturers of Electronic Products as saying that the first set-top boxes to be used for terrestrial DTV in Brazil will be priced at around BRL 700, which equates to around US$ 380 or €UR 270 at today's rates. He attributes this high price to the fact that volumes will not be high enough to make prices fall - in fact, he doesn't expect prices to fall until five years after services launch.

Of course none of this should be surprising - the Brazilians chose to adopt the Japanese ISDB-T system and create their own local variant of it, called SBTVD. The Japanese system isn't used anywhere other than Japan, which means it doesn't benefit from the economies of scale that DVB-T (or even ATSC) does. (A basic DVB-T STB has been available recently for about €UR 15 in the UK!)

It looks like the average Brazilian person is going to have to postpone joining the DTV revolution until well into the next decade.