SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : IATV-ACTV Digital Convergence Software-HyperTV -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ed doell who wrote (2218)4/18/1999 8:18:00 PM
From: mike.com  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13157
 
biz.yahoo.com

Sunday April 18, 5:23 pm Eastern Time

Broadcasters seeking
answers for digital
transition

By Aaron Pressman

LAS VEGAS, April 18 (Reuters) - Radio
and television broadcasters are looking for
answers as digital technologies sweep
through their industry, opening new
opportunities for revenue and programming
but also putting at risk some of their existing businesses.

More than 100,000 broadcasters have gathered here for their annual
meeting with a focus on finding strategies and products to profit from the
digital wave without veering into untested money-losing ventures or
being overtaken by Internet and cable-based programming.

For the television industry, the conversion of analog broadcast signals to
digital signals means the same amount of airwaves can carry a lot more
information.

By going digital, each current channel can carry as many as six ordinary
shows or a single high-definition program with theater-quality pictures
and CD-quality sound. Or, part of a channel can be devoted to carrying
Internet traffic or pay-per-view shows.


At the current early stage, only 57 television stations nationwide are
airing any digital broadcasts at all and most of those show only a few
hours a week. Viewing the digital shows requires a special television set
that costs about $7,000 or converter boxes that are not widely available
yet.

By the end of the year, 100 or more stations should be live with digital
programming, notes Chuck Sherman of the National Association of
Broadcasters. And prices for digital sets are falling and should be under
$3,000 in late 1999. ''We've really accomplished a great deal,'' Sherman
said.

Aside from the equipment costs, a dearth of programming is also
deterring consumers. ''There are not enough programs and we all would
like to see more,'' Sherman said.

CBS Corp. (CBS - news) has shown football games in high- definition
and Walt Disney Co.'s (DIS - news) ABC has offered a few shows
digitally as well.

Later this year, General Electric Co.'s (GE - news) NBC is expected to
start broadcasting the Tonight Show with Jay Leno in digital. News
Corp.'s Fox network is leaning more towards sending multiple standard
quality shows in digital instead of using high-definition.


''The dearth of programming is a real problem,'' said Susan Ness, a
member of the Federal Communications Commission who has been
actively involved in digital television issues.

Ness recommended that broadcasters create special programs to
showcase the benefits of high-definition just as the Bonanza show in the
1960s spurred the popularity of color television.

''We've seen a revolution of epic proportions in the growth of digital in
the Internet,'' Ness said. ''The same can be true of digital television.''

Many of the high-tech companies profiting from the growth of the
Internet and digital computers are in Las Vegas this week, hoping to help
broadcasters make the transition.

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT - news), Hewlett Packard (HWP - news) and
Sun Microsystems (SUNW - news) are present to hawk their latest
digital television-compatible wares. And executives from Internet
broadcasting pioneers like Broadcast.com and RealNetworks Inc.
(RNWK - news) are prominently featured offering their advice.

According to a recent survey of 300 television stations, that advice could
be useful as very few TV stations are using the Web to distribute live
video and audio or offer much interactive content at all.

After reviewing Web sites of the 300 stations, University of Florida
professor Sylvia Chad-Olmsted found just 1.3 percent were Webcasting
entertainment programming and 7.3 percent were sending news shows,
although half the news was audio only. About 10 percent were allowing
visitors to interact with the Web sites and 14 percent were collecting
demographic data about Web visitors.

The focus on news Webcasting ''is a good beginning for establishing
Web credibility but they need to go forward,'' Chad-Olmsted said. More
interactive and lively content will lead to greater opportunities for
advertising, electronic commerce and other unrealized revenues, she
said.