Rishi, I don't have any news from DAVIC. here's some settop box commentary.......
techweb.cmp.com
Digital set-top's hard road comes into view
By George Leopold and Junko Yoshida
ANAHEIM, Calif. -- A fresh view of where the digital set-top box needs to go and the challenges it will meet in getting there emerged at the Western Cable Show last week. The Internet--rather than PC operating systems or microprocessors--will be the defining feature of the platform, cable-TV executives said. But just how the set-top will support the Net's requirements or the advent of HDTV broadcasts is still being debated.
Companies involved with the OpenCable initiative, which seeks to define specifications for a set-top that handles digital data and video, expect to complete their work by the second quarter of 1998, said Richard Green, president and chief executive officer of CableLabs Inc. (Louisville, Colo.), which is leading the initiative. The resulting set-top "will have to be operating system-independent and microprocessor-independent," he said.
Green's comments reflected widespread concern here about the intentions of PC players like Microsoft Corp. and to a lesser extent Intel Corp. regarding the set-top. From senior executives down to program engineers, there was seeming unanimity that Microsoft, which is pitching its Windows CE operating system as the basis for a digital set-top design, would have to wait in line with other potential bidders for the OpenCable standard.
"Beware of closed environments," warned Leo J. Hindery Jr., president and chief executive of TCI Communications Inc. "We want to be [Bill Gates'] partner, but we don't want to be [his] download."
Others were more blunt. "Beware of Bill Gates," said Barry Diller, chairman of HSN Inc. Microsoft's chairman, Gates, wants to play the same role in the technology convergence of the cable industry that he did in making Windows the dominant PC operating system. "That's a closed architecture," Diller said.
"We're not going to let one maker of hardware or software control this industry," Ted Turner, vice chairman of Time Warner Inc., said to a round of applause. "We will not turn over our future to Microsoft."
Since today's PCs are already equipped to receive both video and data, both Microsoft and Intel are in position to influence the set-top's future. Lately, however, the two companies appear to be following diverging road maps in terms of accomplishing that goal. "We absolutely don't care if [an Intel-proposed] advanced set-top computer runs Windows or not," said Claude Leglise, vice president of Intel's content group. "When you first fire it up, the set-top computer must do TV first. Having an operating system in the set-top isn't a basic requirement."
Intel has been publicly sending a message to both broadcasting and cable communities that their Intel architecture is no longer tied to Microsoft. Microsoft, meanwhile, is also busy evangelizing the same communities, letting them know that "we are very cognizant of the basics of TV," according to Steve Guggenheimer, group product manager of Microsoft's DTV strategy. Microsoft is promoting the microprocessor-independent Windows CE as a basis for a range of boxes, including TVs, Web TV-based set-tops and TV/PCs.
The friction between cable's leading lights and Microsoft illustrates the cable industry's uncertainties as it begins to offer digital video over its networks and prepares to offer data services next year and Internet telephony in the near future. However, in steering clear of a Wintel-only world, the OpenCable initiative seems to be opening new doors for non-PC set-top vendors who are upbeat about their future.
Robert Van Orden, a director at Scientific-Atlanta Inc., said "three barriers that hampered the development of digital set-tops have finally started to crash through." The cost of a set-top box is coming down, agreement on standards is falling into place, and content--whether already available on the Web or newly created in HTML and JavaScript--is finally emerging to generate service revenue, he said.
Scientific-Atlanta announced here that it has signed a letter of understanding to work with Network Computer Inc. (NCI; Redwood Shores, Calif.), which is owned by Oracle Corp. and Netscape Communications Corp., to provide enhanced interactive TV applications for cable subscribers through NCI's DTV navigator ported to Scientific-Atlanta's Explorer 2000 digital set-top. The "Internet is a great equalizer," said David Limp, vice president of consumer marketing at NCI, referring to the move to design set-tops around the Net rather than Windows.
Indeed, cable operators have a strong interest in parlaying their investment in an infrastructure for cable modems based on the Internet Protocol by using it for interactive digital set-tops as well. Beyond the minimum requirement of delivering digital video on MPEG-2 streams with an electronic program guide, the basic cable set-top will need to have some level of Internet connectivity so that users can surf the Web and send e-mail, according to many set-top vendors and cable operators at the show. It will also be able to download through IP-based network-interactive applications written in HTML and JavaScript.
Observers at the show here said the OpenCable spec will have to deal with several issues swirling around the merger of the Net and the digital set-top. These include choosing one of the many flavors of HTML in use by industry and resolving communications issues related to return-channel protocols.
CableLab's Green stressed a key "middleware" layer as the place where issues such as different versions of HTML will be resolved. But the middleware issue is clearly a sticking point, according to some people in the industry who are not entirely sold on how successful the OpenCable spec might be. The spec lacks a definition of how to launch a program or call a program on a platform in a remote client-server environment, some said.
In a related issue, others are concerned whether their set-top system will use a "skinny channel" as a return channel, using either DAVIC-based protocols or the Next Level-defined protocol, or a back channel that's compliant with the Multimedia Cable Network System (MCNS) spec for cable modems. The issue here is cost. If a system vendor needs to make its box MCNS compliant, the box may have to incorporate two tuners--one for digital video delivery and another for MCNS--which could make it more expensive.
Green acknowledged that the OpenCable initiative faces several tough choices. While Intel's Intercast, Wink, WorldGate, NCI and WebTV all offer their own solutions for data delivery, many of them have different extensions or different variations of HTML. Choosing one and making a clearly defined API is one task the OpenCable initiative needs to finish.
Another big question is how cable companies will handle the transition to make their boxes compatible with terrestrial digital TV signals. Regulatory issues may have a significant impact on that issue for digital set-top designers. For instance, regulators must still decide whether cable operators will be required to carry digital signals transmitted by local broadcast affiliates.
The so-called DTV "must-carry" rules, which will be debated soon by the Federal Communications Commission, "obviously are a very big issue for us," said Jerry Yanowitz, vice president of the California Cable Television Association. Cable operators in the Los Angeles area, for instance, face the prospect of having to offer/carry programming from as many as 20 broadcast stations that are scheduled to begin digital TV transmissions next year, Yanowitz said.
The FCC expects to take up the must-carry issue as early as this winter, said FCC Commissioner Susan Ness. The FCC will have to consider the inquiry's implications for a range of technical parameters, including resolution formats, the number of programming streams that converters will have to carry and whether broadcasters and cable operators should be allowed to work out these issues on their own under local agreements, she said.
"Part of the problem is that it's transitional," Ness said. "What do we do in the interim?" The FCC must initially focus its inquiry on the top ten U.S. markets where broadcasters are required to begin offering digital TV programming next year, she said. The FCC wants a "rapid transition from analog to digital TV."
Regardless of the FCC's decisions, lawmakers have made it clear that they want HDTV to get a fair shot in the marketplace, Ness said.
All of these issues have implications for set-top designs, but observers here said the OpenCable spec fails to fully take them into consideration. Indeed, CableLabs' Green downplayed the significance of HDTV as a factor in the evolution of the set-top spec.
Green noted that OpenCable's DTV solutions include a family of boxes, one of which translates HDTV signals into SDTV at the head-end, since it has to modulate VSB-based DTV signals into QAM-based signals anyway. "A cable can carry twice as much information as that of terrestrial broadcasting, because it's a much cleaner environment. It would be foolish for us not to remodulate," Green said.
Nevertheless, industry analysts predict set-top converters will play a key role on the success or failure of HDTV. Multimedia Research Group Inc. (Sunnyvale, Calif.) estimates that there will be 36 million digital-TV viewers by 2006, including 22 million using set-top converters on existing NTSC sets and 16 million watching HDTV receivers. |