iSuppli Survey Finds
In line with consumers' desires, home networking is migrating beyond its PC-centric beginnings to incorporate a variety of entertainment-oriented consumer-electronics devices, including DVD recorders, cable modems, Digital Televisions (DTVs), multi-room Digital Video Recorders (DVRs), digital media adapters, set-top boxes and video game consoles. Shipments of these network-equipped devices, along with consumer PCs and home network bridges and gateways, are expected to rise to 732.9 million units by 2011, more than triple the 225.3 million that were shipped in 2006, according to iSuppli. "The awareness and demand for media home networking is growing rapidly among consumers," said Steve Rago, principal analyst, networking/optical communications for iSuppli. "According to iSuppli's first-quarter 2007 consumer-demand survey, 61 percent of respondents 'agreed' or 'strongly agreed' that they wanted the ability to network the Internet to their televisions. Male respondents were even more favorable, with a 71 percent 'agreed' or 'strongly agreed' response." The figure below presents iSuppli's unit shipment forecast for network-equipped consumer-electronics and related products. By 2011, Wi-Fi will be the most common network physical interface for such products, followed by Cat 5, power line and coax. The interface technology of choice will be significantly influenced by geographic region. By the end of 2006, 76 million home LANs were deployed worldwide. Yet, there is plenty of room for growth left in this market, with only 3 percent of global homes now having a LAN. iSuppli also found:
· Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) and multi-room DVR demand is driving cable, satellite and telecom operators to consider a variety of new high-speed home networking technologies, ranging from coax (Moca, HPNA, Hana), to power line, to Wi-Fi (802.11n). · Makers of televisions and other consumer electronics devices are incorporating Internet Protocol (IP)-based connectivity to enable access to both user-created content and to new Internet-based media portals. · Emerging regions, including India and South America, will experience only a slight expansion of home networking usage, despite having strong broadband growth. When deployed, home networking in this region will primarily be used to link notebook PCs to broadband gateways.
iSuppli's report, Home Networking: In Search of a Killer Connection, profiles Internet connectivity for select computing, consumer electronics and consumer networking devices. The research includes segmentation by networking technology and by geographic region, including North America, Europe, Japan, China, Asia, and the Rest of the World. The report provides market sizing for equipment units, ports and semiconductor revenue. For more information, please see http://www.isuppli.com/catalog/l3_bbdh.asp?sr=BBDH&se=106 Journalists, please respond to this e-mail for a free press copy of this report.
For more information, please contact:
Jonathan Cassell Editorial Director and Manager, Public Relations iSuppli Corporation Office: 408.654.1714 Mobile: 408.921.3754 www.isuppli.com
iSuppli Corporation____________________ is the global leader in technology value chain research and advisory services. iSuppli provides market intelligence services for the EMS, OEM and supplier communities in addition to servicing consumer electronics and media concerns. Services afforded by iSuppli range from electronic component research to device-specific application market forecasts, from teardown analysis to consumer electronics and from display device and systems research to multimedia content and services. More information is available at www.isuppli.com Reader Commentaryn2ubp • Jul 12, 5:14am
My family must me the odd one out.. Typical evening is HD TV on, watching show via OTA HD, TIVO, DVD, or DTV, family members passively watching while each doing their own Internet things on their own wireless Thinkpads. I would be bored to tears any other way.... More in Category: Business & Investment
About Dale CrippsDale Cripps is a professional journalist who has focused two thirds of his career on the subject of high-definition television. Upon completing his education in business and service in the military he formed Cripps and Associates, South Pasadena, California, in 1964, which operated as a market-development company for aerospace services. In 1983 he turned to television and began what has become a 20 year campaign to pioneer HDTV. For fifteen of those years he published the well-regarded HDTV Newsletter (an international monthly written for television professionals). During much of this same time he also served as the HDTV-Technical Editor for "Widescreen Review Magazine." On November 16, 1998 he launched the Internet distributed HDTV Magazine, which remains the only consumer publication devoted exclusively to high-definition television. In April of 2002 he co-founded with Tedson Meyers of Coudert Bros, the High-definition Television Association of America, which is presently based in Washington DC. Cripps is the president of this organization. Mr. Cripps is a charter member of the Academy of Digital Television Pioneers and honored by that organization with the DTV Press Leadership Award of 2002. He makes his home in Oregon. |
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