Tech
Virgin's cable service "bandwidth constrained"
Published Thursday, Nov 1 2007, 09:48 GMT | By James Welsh

Malcolm Wall
Wall told Brand Republic that Virgin Media is planning to launch more linear high definition channels - Virgin TV currently only carries BBC HD - but explained: "We are bandwidth constrained. We have enhanced head ends for HD channels. But the main focus with HD is [video on demand] and it’s our belief there is an appetite for HD film. However, we hope to add HD channels on a selective basis."
Before NTL and Telewest merged into what was subsequently renamed Virgin Media, NTL had planned to offer high definition services using the more efficient MPEG-4 compression technique, and delivered to a new fleet of MPEG-4 multi-room digital video recorders. However, post-merger, the combined firm opted to continue using Telewest's TV Drive DVR - now known as the V+ - which is capable only of receiving MPEG-2 channels, and as such the high definition services take up vastly more bandwidth than if they had been encoded in MPEG-4.
Cable operators in the US are already moving to MPEG-4 and switched video - where bandwidth for linear TV channels is allocated on an on-the-fly, on demand basis - in order to deliver HD services ranging from HBO's 26 premium film channels to high-def simulcasts of CNN. The technology was adopted by HomeChoice, now Tiscali TV, in August 2005, and forms part of Ofcom's HD migration plan for Freeview.
More: Tech, Cable TV and Broadband
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