Skip to main content

China is the Largest TV & Broadband Market

According to In-Stat, there's a growing trend where Internet TV sets can download or view video content from the Internet in China. In fact, China has become the largest market for both TV and broadband access in the world.

There are 400 million household TV Sets in the China market; 160 million Cable TV households in the China market, with 30 million DTV users at the end of 2007; and more than 70 million fixed broadband subscribers, with more than 250 million Internet users.

Internet video-related activities are fast becoming the most popular among Chinese Internet users. The total number of Internet video viewers in China -- by In-Stat's definition, anyone who watches video from Internet sources or downloads video content via the public Internet -- reached 98 million in 2007.

Accordingly, the content, especially the latest videos on the Internet, has been spreading widely and there are now many Internet video portals. Motivation to download or view video from the Internet on TV sets in China is strengthened by the following:

TV viewers have to receive the programs and advertisement on their TV sets, passively, without any control. Even though some cable operators are testing VoD, time-shifting TV and other two-direction services, all these pre-commercial services are in their infancy and are not expected to experience fast growth over the next 3 years due to the high cost of two-way network reconstruction.

The importance of TV content has not yet been recognized in China. Premium channels have not attained market traction. Chinese content providers often receive a minimum for their content -- for premium pay-TV channels, typically a 5:4:1 revenue split is applied where the cable network owners get 50 percent, TV stations 40 percent, and content suppliers only get 10 percent.

Due to the insignificant sales of pay-TV channels, Chinese content producers would rather sell quality TV programs to public TV to attract advertisers first, and thereby viewers second.

Popular posts from this blog

How WLAN Transforms Industrial Automation

The industrial sector is on the eve of a wireless transformation, driven by an urgent demand for greater network capacity, reliability, and deterministic performance. Historically, manufacturers and mission-critical operations have relied on wired networks — favoring their predictability — because spectrum congestion in legacy 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands limited confidence in wireless for operational technology (OT) environments. However, with the introduction and rapid adoption of the 6GHz spectrum, compounded by significant advances in Wi-Fi standards, industrial facilities are now poised to embrace wireless LANs as the backbone for automation and digital innovation. Industrial WLAN Market Development Recent research from ABI Research forecasts that over 70 percent of industrial-grade wireless LAN access points (WLAN APs) shipped in 2030 will support the 6GHz band. This is a leap from 2 percent in 2023, highlighting a rapid and profound technological shift. The market for ruggedized indust...