Cable Industry Courts Network DVR

It took years for Cablevision to plow the necessary legal ground for its network-based DVR service. Even once the paperwork was filed, actual deployments didn’t start until January of 2011. However, since that time, the buzz around cloud DVR has ramped up in the cable industry. I’ve been hearing since at least last fall that cable operators are testing out new network DVR solutions and planning to move video recording into the cloud. Now, there’s confirmation of sorts from cable vendor Envivio. Envivio says multiple MSOs in Europe and North America are running lab tests with its Halo network  media processor, which would enable network DVR services.

While I’m hesitant to read too much into news about lab tests (the press release also talks about updates to the Halo platform), the announcement does jive with other activity in the cable industry. Comcast, for example, has invested hugely in building out its network in order to host more content in the cloud for VOD services and TV Everywhere delivery. And there is a concerted effort underway across multiple operators to shift electronic program guides (EPGs) into the cloud for easier and faster interface management. While a better cable UI is in everyone’s best interest, the real motivation for cable operators with these EPGs is the future promise of cloud-based content and service management. When cable can introduce new services – including network DVR – without a truck roll, operators will be in revenue heaven.

Meanwhile, as Steve Donahue at Fierce Cable also points out, Charter’s CEO said last month that it would consider introducing a network-based DVR (which could include TiVo), and Comcast has filed its own patents for network DVR technology.

The big question for the next generation of digital video recording is whether it will be true nDVR, or the hobbled remote storage DVR (RS-DVR) that Cablevision has had to deploy for legal reasons. From an operational and an environmental standpoint, let’s hope it’s the former.

 

2 thoughts on “Cable Industry Courts Network DVR”

  1. I hope this is true.

    It seems dumb that we all have hard drives under our TVs to, essentially, record the same thing when we could just have it recorded centrally and then use a menu and technology like SDV to distribute it.

  2. “It seems dumb that we all have hard drives under our TVs to, essentially, record the same thing when we could just have it recorded centrally”

    Of course, in that case, you’d get:

    – Loss of manual comskip

    – Additional ads, and limitations on fast forward / rewind

    – Loss of ability to avoid whatever kind of draconian windowing schemes such a ‘network DVR’ would implement

    – An across the board shift of control from consumer to MSO that would negatively impact consumers in myriad ways

    I hope the relevant laws and FCC regs make this as difficult/impossible to implement as can possibly be imagined. The Golden Age of CableCARD beats the hell out of the Brave New World of Total MSO Control…

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