Time Warner Cable is bringing its TWC TV app to the Xbox One video game system, in an agreement with Microsoft, the cable operator said in a news release emailed Wednesday. TWC video subscribers who have an Xbox Live account can access 7,000 free and subscription on-demand titles, it said. Customers can download the TWC TV app at no additional cost from the Xbox Live Apps, it said. The app also is available on Xbox 360, it said. The app uses the OneGuide program guide and voice commands through Kinect, it said.
Five new channels were added to Verizon’s FiOS Mobile App -- FX, FXX, FXM, Nat Geo Wild and National Geographic Channel -- increasing the number of live, outside-the-home channels available on devices to 93, said Verizon in a news release Wednesday. It said TV consumption across devices grew 388 percent year over year, according to Adobe.
Cable One is increasing upload and download speeds on its Premier and Ultra plans starting in April “as a free upgrade" to new and existing Internet customers, the company said in a news release Tuesday. “Speed increases will be available across 99 percent of Cable ONE’s footprint by fall 2015.” Customers on Cable One’s Premiere 60 Mbps plan will be upgraded to 75 Mbps download and 5 Mbps upload speeds, while those on the Ultra 70 Mbps plan will be upgraded to 100 Mbps download and 10 Mbps upload, Cable One said. The speed increases are the results of “nearly" $80 million spent on infrastructure upgrades in 2014 and a planned $40 million in 2015, it said.
Comcast’s fourth annual report on its implementation of the conditions on its buy of control in NBCUniversal shows a “proud” track record, Executive Vice President David Cohen said in a blog post Tuesday. “Not a single multichannel video programming distributor or programmer has requested arbitration or filed a program carriage complaint" in the four years since the FCC approved the deal, Cohen said. Comcast reached content license agreements with Amazon, Crackle, Hulu and Netflix, he noted. Comcast “continued our fair dealings with online video distributors,” Cohen said. Comcast also has added more than 20 independent networks and “expanded the quality and quantity of diverse programming” on its on-demand and online offerings to more than 5,800 combined hours in 2014, Cohen said. That’s an increase of 94 percent over 2013, he said.
Charter Communications renamed its business services division Spectrum Business, Charter said in a news release Monday. Along with giving that part of the division a new name, Charter invested in improving its business broadband offerings, including doubling speeds, the release said. “Rebranding as Spectrum Business is a natural evolution for our company as we have elevated our focus on serving large customers with sophisticated communications needs,” said Executive Vice President Don Detampel.
The FCC's open Internet order won't be sufficient for safeguarding the Internet if the Comcast/Time Warner Cable deal is approved, said a campaign opposing the merger headed by Comptel, NTCA and The Independent Telephone & Telecommunications Alliance. "The merger would give Comcast far too much control over our nation's video and broadband markets and more power and incentive to harm competition and choice in a range of ways that are not restricted by the Open Internet rules,” said the campaign called Don't Comcast the Internet, in a statement Thursday. That includes limiting competitor access to programming, limiting set-top box innovation, and creating barriers to new entrants, the group said. Comcast didn't comment.
ReelzChannel supports Comcast's planned buy of Time Warner Cable as well as AT&T/DirecTV, it said in an FCC ex parte filing posted Monday in docket 14-57. ReelzChannel said the deals would serve the public interest as well as reduce business uncertainty and support growth of diverse voices offered by independent networks. The independent network said for an indie to be successful, it must get distribution from Comcast, DirecTV, Dish Network and TWC, at a minimum. ReelzChannel said Comcast hasn't changed its path for the network over the years, including that it would make meaningful investments in original programming.
CEA and NCTA urged the FCC not to add some rules on user interface accessibility, filings in docket 12-107 show. With a Further NPRM having been issued on the subject, CEA said the agency should stick to the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act in that CVAA doesn't allow any restrictions on how closed captioning display settings are accessed. Requiring makers of consumer electronics to post online information about display accessibility "could be reasonable," but the FCC shouldn't start a labeling requirement for equipment makers, CEA said its in-house and outside lawyers told staffers in the Consumer and Governmental Affairs and Media bureaus. NCTA members have made "significant progress" on CVAA, association attorneys told staffers in those two bureaus. New rules on accessing enhanced captioning display and navigation features beyond turning them on and off could "contravene" Section 205, NCTA said. The agency should "maintain a flexible approach as to what is considered a compliant mechanism for activating closed captioning," NCTA said. "Any requirement to integrate specific data about public, educational, and governmental (PEG) access programming in program guides would impose significant burdens on the industry."
The Media Bureau released a redacted transcript of a Jan. 30 workshop of economists held at the FCC to discuss Comcast's planned buy of Time Warner Cable. The portions redacted from the transcript include any references to highly confidential information and confidential information, said an ex parte filing from Bureau Chief Bill Lake. Those with access to confidential information in the proceeding can obtain access through the Office of General Counsel, the letter said. The workshop participants included FCC transaction review team economist Shane Greenstein and discussion topics included program access, interconnection and online video, the transcript said.
The growing use of IPTV devices will lead pay-TV middleware providers to create a unified, multiscreen experience for viewers, a Frost & Sullivan news release said Wednesday. In 2014, the IPTV market had $1.05 billion in revenue, said a Nov. 27 study on the global pay-TV middleware market from F&S, which develops growth strategies for businesses. IPTV revenue will increase to $2.03 billion by 2020, the study said. Rising subscriber churn and demand for over-the-top (OTT) subscriptions has put pressure on pay-TV operators, it said. Flexible consumption models using OTT and advanced pay-TV middleware are needed, it said. Pay-TV middleware providers will see more opportunities in emerging markets like Africa and India, which are moving toward pay-TV “IPfication,” it said. Markets in North America and Western Europe have hybrid cable and satellite deployments, it said.