IPTV vs. Internet Television: Key Differences

What is the difference between IPTV, the Internet Protocol-based TV paradigm heralded by major telecom providers and large media groups (Microsoft included) and the Internet Television painted by the Long Tail phenomenon, Ourmedia, the Internet Archive, Brightcove, and the availability of amazing new technology opportunities such as faster and faster net connections, free unlimited storage space, BitTorrent, MPEG4 and powerful low-cost hardware and software production tools?

Are they two opposite and diverging forces or are they the different aspects of the same media phenomenon portrayed in different ways?

If you ask these questions around today, few people will be able to answer in a clear and articulate way. Even those executives working for would-be IPTV ventures would give no credit whatsoever to the idea that an alternative way of leveraging Internet strengths for the commercial delivery of video content exists. Most of the time they see only theirs.

So, what are the key differences between these two radically different approaches to distributing video content via IP and which the related-issues that make them important to me and you?
The choice, for those who can see it, appears to be between a universe of highly diversified and dynamic independent production and one dominated by secure dedicated private delivery networks distributing more traditional types of video-based content largely provided by Hollywood and other established big media conglomerates.
IPTV is represented by a profile of closed, proprietary TV systems such as those present today on cable services but delivered via IP-based secure channels representing a sharp increase in control of content distribution.
Internet Television is instead an open evolving framework in which a very large number of small and medium-sized video producers contribute highly innovative niche content alongside with offerings from more traditional retail and distribution channels.
Nonetheless key differences, being able to appreciate the true nature of these two models remain a challenging task for the uninitiated reader unless she starts to look a little deeper into the differentiating details.

   

 

 


What is IPTV
IPTV Issues
What is Internet Television?
How Does the IPTV Work?


IPTV A Look from the Outside

IPTV is an emerging technology at the time this is being written. Both the software and hardware required for broadcasting IPTV is in it's infancy when looking at the "big picture". It is predicted that by 2008, 20 million homes worldwide will subscribe to IPTV services.

Read more    Part 2    Part3   

The Future of IPTV

  The forecast by market professionals is by the year 2007 there will be more than 200 million digital TV homes subscribers with 25% global market penetration. Worldwide subscribers to cable VOD (video on demand) services will increase from about 5 million at the end of 2003, to almost 14 million in 2007. Broadband penetration in the United States and Europe will grow from 25 million in 2002 to 290 million in 2008. By 2008, 20 million homes worldwide will subscribe to IPTV services.

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IPTV is an emerging technology and will evolve into a completely interactive experience in the future!

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