BT Vision - cheap video-on-demand, until you check the costs!

by Bob Crabtree on 5 December 2006, 22:15

Tags: British Telecom (LON:BT.A)

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The press release


BT Vision - passing you the control

Freeview and an extensive library of on-demand content
More choice, control and convenience
Free set-top box with 80 hour PVR
No monthly subscription required

BT today launched its next generation television service, BT Vision. This service puts the viewer in control by combining the appeal of TV with the interactivity of broadband. Customers will be able to watch what they want when they want and not be tied to TV schedules. The service does not require a regular monthly subscription.

BT Vision is the first widely available TV service of its kind. Customers will have access to an extensive library of on-demand content via their broadband and will also receive more than 40 Freeview channels through their aerial. The library will enable people to watch programmes at their convenience rather than the schedulers’.

BT Vision is delivered through a new set-top box, the V-box. This contains a personal video recorder (PVR) able to store up to 80 hours of content, pause or rewind live TV and record programmes at the touch of a button. The box is also HD ready. BT Vision also features a “Replay TV” service, allowing customers to catch up with some of the broadcast TV programmes they may have missed during the previous week.

BT is giving away the V-box – worth £199 - for free to existing and new customers who sign up to a new contract with BT Total Broadband. The box will be installed by a BT engineer. There will be an installation fee of £60 and a connection charge of £30. BT will introduce a self-install version of BT Vision next year.

BT Vision’s unique library of “on-demand” content is delivered over broadband and includes entertainment to suit every taste. There will be current and library movies, music videos, concerts, kids’ programmes, recent and classic television including drama, comedy, documentaries and other genres.

In the summer of 2007 BT Vision will launch its new sports service. Following a deal with Setanta announced today, (see release DC06-650) BT Vision Sport customers will have access to the Setanta Sport channel and its 46 live FA Premiership games, 60 live games from the Scottish Premier League and a great deal of other sport. They will also have access to the 242 “near live” on-demand FA Premiership games secured by BT earlier this year. That means three quarters of all FA Premiership games will be available in full to BT Vision Sport customers.

BT Vision requires no subscription or minimum monthly payment differentiating it from other services on the market. Customers can subscribe to genres of content should they wish or pay as they go. Movies will be available on a pay per view basis with current titles offered at lower prices than satellite, cable and high street video chains (see notes to editors). Subscriptions for other types of content can be for as little as one month at a time providing customers with great flexibility.

Ian Livingston, BT Retail chief executive said: “BT Vision is all about giving control to the viewer – control over what they watch, when they watch it and how they pay for it. We believe that broadband can transform television and take it into a new era. BT Vision is ideal for people who want more choice than Freeview delivers but who want that extra choice without being tied to a pricey, long-term subscription.”

BT Vision is set to become even more flexible, personal and interactive. From 2007, the service will use broadband to deliver more special interest programming and there will be new interactive services based around audience participation, voting, gaming, gambling and communications enabling customers to chat with each other or use video telephony to talk face to face whilst watching programmes. BT Vision will also provide a platform for user-generated content so customers can share their videos, photographs and music with a wider audience.

Existing BT Total Broadband customers will be the first to experience BT Vision, beginning with those who pre-registered their interest earlier this year. BT will start to fulfil orders from that customer base from mid December, initially connecting thousands of customers then hundreds of thousands by the end of 2007. BT aims to have two to three million BT Vision customers in the medium term.

Additionally, BT and its partner Vodafone UK are excited to be working together to enhance the recently announced Vodafone at Home service by offering these customers a version of BT Vision. Under these discussions, Vodafone UK will be the exclusive mobile network partner offering BT Vision as part of this converged TV, fixed, broadband and mobile experience.


Set Up Costs

Launch

Set Top Box (V-box)

£Free*

Connection Fee

£30

Engineer Installation

£60

BT Home Hub

£Free**

Total

£90

* Free when customers contract or recontract to BT Total Broadband option 1 for 18 months or BT Total Broadband option 2 and 3 for 12 months
**For BT Total Broadband customers purchasing option 2 and 3.

Entertainment on Demand – Monthly Subscriptions

TV

£6

TV Replay

£3

Kids

£6

Music Videos

£6

Value Pack (all of above)

£14


Entertainment on Demand – VOD

From

To

Film

£1.99

£2.99

TV Replay

£0.99

£1.49

TV

£0.79

£0.99

Kids

£0.49

Music

Premium Concerts

£2.99

Library Concerts

£1.99

Premium Documentaries

£1.49

Library Documentaries

£0.99

Individual Music Videos

£0.29

Video playlists (10 videos)

£1.79





HEXUS Forums :: 6 Comments

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Lol, thats a joke, option 2 has a 6GB cap… which would last how long? a couple of days maybe?
Edit: i'd say even the 40GB one might be pushing it, especially in a home, with people on the internet at the same time, watching a couple of films a day plus a couple of other of other things…, then theres the monthly cost… is it even competitive with the others?
And you don't get the snazzy hub if you're already a customer upgrading…

(Unless you pay for it)
DragonStar
Lol, thats a joke, option 2 has a 6GB cap… which would last how long? a couple of days maybe?
Edit: i'd say even the 40GB one might be pushing it, especially in a home, with people on the internet at the same time, watching a couple of films a day plus a couple of other of other things…, then theres the monthly cost… is it even competitive with the others?
Unless BT say outherwise, there is a good chance that the bandwith cap does not apply to video on demand.

ISPs pay for their connection to the internet at large, especialy for connections to the states and other countries. Bandwith between the costomer and the ISP's own servers is almost free, which is why all ISPs run web proxies.

Likewise, anything that the costomer downloads via the video on demand service will be connecting to BT's servers, and that bandwith will cost BT an fraction of what they pay for international connections.
DavidM
And you don't get the snazzy hub if you're already a customer upgrading…

(Unless you pay for it)

Yea ya do :P Jus have to moan at them :)

I moaned rather a lot at them and got sent a home hub - my router was on the blink at the time so I thought why not - still sitting in the packet though, the Belkin one started working again :undecided
It's an interesting read, complicated but interesting.

Given that there are no real content to prices information it's hard to form an opinion on it's merits. Maybe BT should state more clearly the inbuilt cost required by the broadband and telephone line rental etc but these as of themselves are not detriments to the value of the product seeing as we all need to pay for these from somewhere. BT prices are at the upper end of the market scale but this will change when certain regulated levels of LLU are meet, which is estimated I believe in summer next year around the time most of the pertinent information about the true cost/value of the product in promised.

So in short what we have here ladies and gentlemen IMO is the current annoying tech industry trend ( Hi-Def DVD, PS3 computer graphics cards, chipsets etc) for paper launch…..