Posted on November 8, 2017 in ATSC News
Action will bring Next Gen TV one step closer for TV broadcasters and consumers
By Phil Kurz, TV Technology
WASHINGTON — The television broadcast industry took another important step in its quest to introduce Americans to next-generation television on Oct. 26, with the Federal Communication Commission’s release of a Report and Order (R&O) and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (FNPRM) aimed at authorizing a voluntary transition to ATSC 3.0-based over-the-air broadcasting.
“This will open the door to a very exciting future for broadcast television in the United States,” said Advanced Television Systems Committee President Mark Richer.
The commission is tentatively scheduled to take up the R&O and FNPRM at its Nov. 16 Open Meeting. The Report and Order would:
Further, the R&O would apply A/322 only to a broadcaster’s primary video stream. The agency would sunset the requirement after five years from the effective rules date unless the agency chooses to extend it. The sunset provision is the way the agency chose to balance the competing interests of broadcasters, who sought to be free to innovate, and CE companies, which wanted to nail down A/322 to make it certain that consumers buying next-gen TVs will be able to receive ATSC 3.0 signals.
The FCC does not propose to incorporate any other individual standard making up the ATSC 3.0 suite of standards into its rule. At their own choosing, individual broadcasters are free to choose, but not required, to use other standards in the 3.0 suite.
The R&O also would exempt LPTV and translator stations from the simulcasting requirement and allow case-by-case waivers if a station has no viable simulcast partner, according to an FCC fact sheet on the agenda item. Additionally, no next-gen TV tuner mandate will be imposed on new TV receivers.
In its FNPRM, the agency will seek comment on exceptions and waivers to the requirement that ATSC 3.0 broadcasters partner with a local TV station to simulcast ATSC 1.0 as well as whether full-power TV stations should be allowed to use vacant TV channels to encourage next-gen TV use. The Further Notice also tentatively will conclude that local simulcasting should not change the “significantly viewed” status of a next-gen TV station for the purposes of cable and satellite carriage.
The proposal applies to a commercial TV station that relocates its 1.0 simulcast channel. These channels would not be allowed to seek significantly viewed status in new communities or counties. Nor would such a station lose significantly viewed status for counties and communities it qualified for before its move to a 1.0 simulcast channel, according to the FNPRM and R&O.
The Advanced Television Systems Committee is “dotting the i’s and crossing the last few t’s” and expects to have the ATSC 3.0 suite of standards complete by the 2018 CES in Las Vegas, said Richer. Both the ATSC A/321 and A/322 are already approved and completed standards.
The FNPRM and R&O reflects a recognition that for the broadcast industry to thrive in the future it must not, by rule, be confined simply to delivery of video programming over the air, said Mark Aitken, VP of Advanced Technology for the Sinclair Broadcast Group. “It totally leaves open opportunities outside of those seen as traditional TV broadcasting. Automotive, IoT [the Internet of Things], broad based alerting and messaging all are possible,” he said.
NAB released a statement from President and CEO Gordon Smith about the FCC ATSC 3.0 proposal: “NAB thanks Chairman Pai and FCC staff for supporting a new, voluntary transmission standard for broadcast television. Next Gen TV will reinvent free and local TV, offering tens of millions of viewers ultra HDTV, live and local broadcasting on mobile devices, emergency alerting that will save lives and targeted advertising that will grow U.S. jobs and commerce.
“Notably, a transition to Next Gen TV requires broadcasters to use no additional spectrum. Just as American broadcasters led the world in a consumer stampede to high definition television two decades ago, we are ready to usher in a new era of broadcasting that will be pro-consumer and pro-innovation. NAB thanks the bold vision and tireless work of countless broadcast engineers and consumer electronic advocates involved in the ATSC process. We look forward to working with the FCC to ensure that broadcasters have maximum flexibility to bring the historic benefits of Next Gen TV to consumers.”
“This has been a major effort by the industry – lot of extremely smart people and a lot of investment by the companies who supported those people – to make this happen,” said Richer. “It’s exciting personally, and ATSC members are thrilled about where we are.”
Reprinted with permission from TV Technology.
Posted in ATSC News
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