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See the
2007 OCAP Product
Guide for OCAP device providers
How OCAP Supports a
New Line of Digital TVs and Gadgets
The business of mashing a digital set-top box inside a
television set requires, perhaps not surprisingly, a
tall amount of software. Many of the features in a
traditional cable box are duplicative with those of the
TV, for instance. That creates a need for software that
knows how to pass along requests (“tune this, tune
that”) to the circuitry that can complete the task.
OCAP is a big part of that software mix.
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‘Comcast is committed to OCAP
and to bringing interactive
cable devices to retail.’
Brian Roberts
Chairman and CEO
Comcast Corp.
This “IP” Means “Intellectual
Property”
Intellectual property patents
have been one of the stumbling
blocks to widespread deployment
of interactive TV. If an
applications developer or
distributor wanted to use
patented software, they often
have had to negotiate over
expensive royalties or risk
potential copyright
infringement.
OCAP uses some patented
software, both in OCAP 1.0 and
its association with MHP 1.0. To
make licensing easy and
affordable, a streamlined
process has been developed for
device manufacturers and service
providers.
Under those terms, OCAP fees run
$1.50 per consumer device (a
digital set-top or television,
for example) for manufacturers,
and, for cable operators, 30
cents per subscriber per year,
or a one-time five-year license
for $1.50.
MHP fees are $2 per device, and
25 cents per household per year,
or $1.25 under the five-year
option.
According to CED Magazine,
manufacturers had been concerned
about higher fees, so these
levels should be considered
reasonable.
The fees will go into a pool for
distribution to the patent
holders, which include Comcast,
OpenTV, Panasonic (Matsushita
Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.),
Royal Philips Electronics,
Samsung Electronics, Thomson,
and Time Warner Cable.
Via Licensing Corp., a
subsidiary of Dolby
Laboratories, Inc., is
administering the program (www.vialicensing.com).
See a press release about the
licenses.
Technically, companies that
choose to take the fast-track
“CHILA” path to digital devices
also agree to pay royalties. It
goes like this: CHILA contains
OCAP. OCAP was developed with
the intellectual property of
many companies. Thus anyone
signing CHILA agrees to pay
royalties for the IP within
OCAP.
Additional background
information on intellectual
property information related to
OCAP (CHILA, OCAP Implementer's
License Agreement, and the
OpenCable Contribution
Agreement) is available at
www.opencable.com/documents
- CL, LE
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At
least two categories of equipment will include “OCAP
inside.”
One is the high-end digital cable set-top box,
such as those leased to consumers by cable providers.
Those will contain OCAP more for business reasons than
sex appeal. OCAP forges a common platform, so that the
stuff that consumers see can be written once and run
everywhere.
Tactically, that means re-coding existing features that
digital cable customers regularly see, like the
on-screen program guide and on-demand ordering systems.
Two is consumer electronics devices, like HDTVs
and digital video recorders (DVRs), to start. Game
players, portable video devices, mobile phones, wireless gadgets and
personal computers with OCAP can be part of the mix.
A Unified TV
When available, this new
line of OCAP-enabled digital TVs will provide an
attractive offer for consumers: One TV, one remote, and
full access to all cable-delivered services without the
need for a separate box.
That includes “two-way”
services, which require a link to fetch stuff from
servers nested inside the cable system: electronic
program guides, on-demand shows, and interactive
“triggers” to desired information. (Imagine getting to
the end of a favorite TV show, then seeing a prompt that
asks you if you’d like to see another episode. The
prompt is the “trigger.”)
For a program network or content creator, OCAP provides
assurance that their creations will work across this
unified environment of TVs and devices.
For consumers, this new line of TVs and OCAP devices
will truly be “plug and play”—you connect them to cable
and, voila, everything that you’ve subscribed to comes
in as it’s supposed to do.
The Certification Process
To make sure that everyone’s on the same page – and to
make sure things work properly when they get into
people’s homes – consumer electronics makers must get a
license to build OCAP-based TVs. In the ongoing work
between cable and consumer electronics companies to find
product harmony, a license was born.
Brace yourself. Its name definitely qualifies as an
acronym that perhaps describes itself a bit too
literally: “CHILA,” pronounced “cheye-luh,” rhymes with
“lila.” It stands for “CableCARD Host Interface
Licensing Agreement.”
Companies that sign the CHILA agreement, through
CableLabs, agree to build devices that can be tested and
certified to run approved two-way applications across
the cable plant. Part of the agreement is a stipulation
that OCAP will be included.
As of 2007, CHILA agreement signatories include Digeo,
LG Electronics, Panasonic, Samsung and Thomson.
CHILA is widely viewed as a “fast track” way to get
cable-sanctioned product into the marketplace. Faster
than, say, the ongoing effort to work out ways for
cable, consumer electronics, information
technologies/IT, and copyright owners (studios), as part
of the larger “two way plug and play” negotiations, to
all be able to benefit from cable-connected two-way
devices.
CableCARDs and Host Devices
Cable and consumer electronics negotiators agreed in
late 2002 on guidelines to promote devices, particularly
digital TV sets, that support one-way (“unidirectional”)
delivery of digital content from a cable system. That
accord also is known as the “plug and play” agreement,
because it supports interoperability between cable
systems and digital TVs.
Mostly, it assures that premium cable services are
protected through the use of a CableCARD, which slips
into a slot in the TV. Work also is underway to build
the security features right into the TV, without the
need for the CableCARD. That effort is called “DCAS”
(pronounced “dee-kaz”), and is looking like a 2008-2009
priority. Suffice it to say that DCAS, as a technology,
requires that OCAP is present.
One of the terms that pops up in discussions about “OCAP
devices” is the “host device.” A “host device” is any
piece of hardware that touches and interacts with the
cable plant. A digital TV with a CableCARD slot is a
host device. Ditto for an HDTV. A digital set-top box
also “hosts” cable-delivered services.
At this writing, the industries are still seeking
uniform guidelines on two-way (“bi-directional”)
delivery, so that interactive services work seamlessly
over cable and connected devices (based upon requisite
security, licensing and business arrangements, of
course).
Living In a CHILA World
Sometimes the easiest way to understand something is to
wonder what the scene would be like if it didn’t exist.
If there were no CHILA, it’s entirely possible that
Customer Joe walks into a store this year, buys a
digital TV, or an HDTV, or DVR, tagged as “interactive
digital cable ready.”
But once it was in Joe’s house, and all plugged in,
something wouldn’t work.
That’s why there are technical tests. A big part of
CHILA is tests: They’re hard, and often dull, but they
matter in preventing customer care calls later.
Estimating how many devices will enter the marketplace
with OCAP inside is tricky business. Most cable
providers are already gearing up to outfit their own
boxes with OCAP. The consumer pull to OCAP, through
CHILA-styled products, is likely to crank up in an ’07
timeframe.
- Written by Leslie Ellis
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Additional Information
OpenCable Web site – Get more information about
cable host devices and CableCards through CableLabs’
OpenCable pages, including links to specifications.
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