Cable Industry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Cable Industry

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First Superstation. Inspired creation of new cable channels (CNN, MTV, ESPN) Nature of Cable ... Cable has taken lead in delivering high-speed online data services ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cable Industry


1
Cable Industry
  • Richard Craig
  • Telecommunications Technologies

2
Chapter 2 Cable Television
  • Cable delivers Multichannel high-quality video to
    subscribers for monthly fee.
  • Can also provide two-way services for data
    telephony

3
Cable System
  • Cable System Consists of
  • Headend- point at which all program signals are
    received, assembled processed for transmission
    by the distribution network
  • Distribution network- carries the program signal
    through the community, using coaxial or fiber
    optic cables.
  • Consist of 2 elements
  • Trunk- large cable that leaves the headend,
    travels thru the community, and splits at various
    points, stops at the end of service areas

4
Cable System
  • Feeder-smaller cable running along the streets in
    a neighborhood to which subscribers connect.
  • Bridge amplifiers-spread throughout trunk to
    maintain strong signal.
  • Subscriber Drop-then takes the signal from the
    feeder system to the sbuscribers home, where it
    is picked up by television reciever.
  • Entire system makes sure the original signal
    stays strong.

5
Cable Television (Background)
  • Original purpose of cable to extend the reach of
    regional broadcast stations
  • First deployed in the 40s for rural locations w/
    bad broadcast reception
  • Early predecessors include
  • Community Antenna Television (CATV)
  • Parsons Experiment

6
Cable (Background)
  • 1949 Robert Tarlton Developed the Lansford
    System-building a master antenna at the base of
    the Allegheny Mountains to amplify televison
    signals.

7
Nature of Cable
  • Changed in the 70s
  • with new software in programming
  • no longer an extension for broadcast stations
  • 75 HBO makes first communications satellite
    network exclusively for cable companies.
  • Cable operators now could offer multiple channels
    of unique programming to customers.

8
Nature of Cable
  • Ted Turner
  • Uplinks signal of his small, independent Atlanta
    television station (then WTCG, now WTBS) to the
    same satellite carrying HBO signal.
  • Allowing any cable system distributing HBO to
    distribute his station as well.
  • First Superstation
  • Inspired creation of new cable channels (CNN,
    MTV, ESPN)

9
Nature of Cable
  • Opens up Niche Market Capabilities
  • Cable companies needed to upgrade system to offer
    more channels
  • Number of available cable channels sparked
    interest in cable from consumers in urban areas
  • Growth in urban areas caused of cable
    subscribers to increase drastically

10
Cable Milestone
  • 1999 Emmy Awards milestone for Cable Industry
  • Cable programs had 134 nominations
  • HBO winning more prime-time Emmy awards than
    broadcast networks

11
Early Cable Regulation
  • Local regulations
  • Local governments claimed authority over cable
    systems. Regulated prices, channel line-ups and
    more.
  • Cable Act of 84 removed most of these
    restrictions.
  • Late 80s investment poured into industry
  • of systems subscribers increased
  • Profitability led to consolidation
  • Small systems purchased by Multiple System
    Operators(MSOs)

12
Early Cable Regulation
  • Price Deregulation
  • Led to rapid rise in cable rates
  • By early 90s cable experienced significant
    regulatory and competitive problems.
  • Complaints from consumers about increasing
    subscription fees.
  • Deteriorating services

13
Early Regulation
  • Complaints led to the Cable Television Consumer
    Protection Competition Act of 92
  • re-regulated cable industry
  • imposed price control
  • customer service requirements
  • Delivered major victory to broadcast television
    stations.
  • Allowing them to dictate to local cable systems
    whether they had to be included on cable
    line-up(must carry).
  • Or whether the cable operator had to negotiate
    for permission to carry the station
    (retransmission consent)

14
Competitors to Cable
  • Experiments with alternative technologies to
    deliver cable
  • Wireless Cable
  • Multichannel Multi-point Distribution Service
    (MMDS)
  • Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS)
  • has experienced significant growth in past
    several years
  • Now has local-in-local capabilities
  • Video Dial Tone (VDT)
  • Competition Act required cable program networks
    to sell their services to competitors

15
Cable Expands
  • Bandwidth upgrades begin in the 90s
  • went from coax to Hybrid Fiber/Coax (HFC)
  • optical fiber backbones deliver greater bandwidth
    better signals to feeder networks the nodes
    in local neighborhoods
  • Two-way interactive capacity also engineered into
    new systems.

16
New Cable Service
  • Tested cable-delivered telephony
  • Encountered problems
  • uninterrupted power to cable telephony systems
    when electrical outages occurred
  • needed to preserve for 911 and emergency
    services
  • Plus consumer acceptance was low.
  • Pilot studies suggested telephony could be
    delivered
  • State federal regulators slow to grant approval
  • Cable operators slow to make huge investment

17
New Cable Services
  • Broadband
  • Explosion of internet shifted calbe companies
    interest from telephony to data.
  • Driven by consumer demand for faster Internet
    service, to accommodate graphics and video.
  • Developed data transmission capability w/ HFC
  • Broadband link that provides much more speed than
    telephone lines.
  • Offers downlink data rates of up to 10 Mb/s,
    compared to 28.8Kb/s of telephone

18
New Cable Service
  • Cable companies also began to offer satellite
    delivered digital audio services in the late
    90s.
  • providing subscribers with high-quality music
    channels for home stereo.

19
TC Act of 96
  • Developed to encourage competition among
    Telecommunications Industry
  • Deregulated cable rates again
  • Prescribed conditions in which competitors could
    begin to enter the video distribution business
    freed cable companies to deploy telephony, data
    and other services.
  • MSOs were interested in telephony.
  • Became apparent other competitors such as
    resellers could enter market quicker with less
    investment, compared to huge capital cost of
    cable entrance.

20
Digital Conversion
  • Also in 96 FCC authorizes deployment of a
    digital over-the-air television service in the
    U.S.
  • Projected date of 2006 for the retirement of
    analog

21
Digital Conversion
  • Major Barriers to overcome for digital conversion
  • Have to address process of converting signals
    from one format to the other,
  • or cable systems converting to a different
    digital modulation standard
  • Agreement will need to be made between
    broadcasters cable companies whether the cable
    company will transmit a broadcasters digital
    signal, analog signal or both.

22
Digital Conversion
  • Cable argues that if they make room for two
    channels per broadcaster they will have to drop
    carriage of existing channels
  • Claim that such a demand constitutes an illegal
    takings

23
Current Status of Cable
  • By year 2000cable reached into approximately 70
    of American HHs
  • Distributing an average of 57 channels
  • approximately 600,000 residential subscribers to
    cable telephony services and 1.5 mil. with data
    services using cable modems.
  • Problem with data deployment is in the complexity
    and cost of installing cable modems.

24
Current Status of Cable
  • Most cable systems owned by MSOs
  • Traditional cable companies disappearing as large
    telecom. companies are purchasing them for
    broadband network access.
  • Acquistions tend to produce higher stock prices
    for the companies.
  • Yet have raised anti-competitive concerns amongst
    congress and regulatory agencies.

25
Future of Cable
  • Cable will continue to dominate residential video
    delivery.
  • May diminish a little with growth of DBS
  • And inability to convert to digital could worsen
    the churn of subscribers
  • Cable telephony will continue to grow
  • will be reliable and cost less than traditional
    wired and wireless telephony services
  • wired telephony will continue to be viable.

26
Future of Cable
  • Cable has taken lead in delivering high-speed
    online data services
  • greatly due to deployment of broadband network
  • some cable companies plan to offer their cable
    modem customers open access to there choice of
    competing ISPs, using their systems.
  • Digital Subscribe Line(DSL) service being offered
    by some LECs, competition to cable modem.
  • Combat competition w/ services at an attractive
    price and point-to-point data network services
    to businesses

27
Digital is Crucial
  • Currently cable is major residential broadband
    delivery system in the U.S. in order to maintain
    success must make conversion to digital. Offering
    services at prices below competitors, and
    continue to be a reliable telecommunications
    provider.
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