Sunday, April 28, 2024

TV now 55% digital as analog broadcasting switch off worldwide

A new research from the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) has revealed that the world has witnessed a massive shift from analog to digital television, with over 55 percent of households with a TV now receiving a digital signal compared with just 30 percent in 2008.

Incidentally, the Philippines is among the latest batch of nations that have migrated to the digital TV platform after the government finally approved the adoption of the Japanese digital TV standard, ISDB-T, in the country.

ITU figures show that, globally, the halfway mark for digital penetration was passed in 2012. In the developed world, an estimated 81 percent of total households with a TV now receive a digital signal.

But the digital switchover is also moving forward apace in the developing world, where the number of households receiving digital TV almost tripled in the four-year period from 2008 to end 2012, reaching 42 percent.

The number of pay-TV subscriptions worldwide increased by 32 percent between 2008 and 2012, overtaking free-to-air TV in 2011. There were a total of 728 million pay-TV subscriptions by end 2012, meaning that 53 percent of all households with a television had a pay-TV subscription.

The new report notes that traditional multi-channel TV platforms, such as cable and direct-to-home (DTH) satellite, are facing increasing competition from IPTV service providers and even digital terrestrial TV (DTT) channels.

At the same time, TV delivery over the Internet is becoming increasingly popular, particularly through over-the-top (OTT) audio-visual content providers such as YouTube, Netflix, and China?s PPLive service, as well as the many traditional broadcasting stations that now offer online streaming or downloading of TV and video content.

The steady decline in analogue TV technologies is being counterbalanced by strong growth of digital technologies. Digital cable subscriptions more than doubled between 2008 and 2012, as did the number of households receiving DTT.

The technology with the highest relative growth was IPTV, with total subscriptions increasing more than fourfold over the four-year period. In absolute terms, however, IPTV still represents a marginal share of total households with a TV, accounting for just 5 percent in 2012.

?New technologies are creating a plethora of new platforms for content sharing, which in turn is making television much more accessible over a wide range of devices,? said Hamadoun Tour?, secretary-general of the ITU. ?This is very important in the developing world, where TV continues to play an important role in education and knowledge sharing.?

Globally, ITU figures show that there were an estimated 1.4 billion households with at least one TV set by end 2012. In the developing world as a whole, 72 percent of households had a TV, compared with 98 percent household penetration in developed countries. In Africa, fewer than one third of households had a TV at end 2012.

Subscribe

- Advertisement -spot_img

RELEVANT STORIES

spot_img

LATEST

- Advertisement -spot_img