Bennett Johannsen

Today Nokia announced a new commercial DVB-H pilot in Stockholm with Teracom in Sweden. Nokia is providing Nokia N92 cellular TV products and the Nokia Mobile Broadcast System 3.0 to the pilot which will last from October to December 2006 and contains 400 customers. The task can be a co-operation between ATG, Boxer, Nokia, Sveriges Radio, Sveriges Television/UR, Telenor and Teracom.

The pilot individuals will be able to view fourteen TELEVISION channels and tune in to four radio channels in the Stockholm area area, the place where a system is created for top quality indoor and outdoor insurance. The objective would be to examine what Swedish customers think about professional broadcast mobile TV.

ATG, Boxer, Sveriges Radio and Sveriges Television provides material for the pilot. The test will be provided using Nokia Mobile Broadcast Solution 3.0, and the pilot members will use mobile units from Nokia, the Nokia N92. Teracom will undoubtedly be accountable for the system, the broadcast and running of the platform.

"We strongly rely on the capability of the DVB-H technology as-well as in the mobile TV company, and we are looking towards delivering the entire potential and curiosity of broadcast mobile TV in Sweden," says Sigurd Leth, Multimedia Director for Nokia Nordic.

DVB-H technology suits present operator systems, optimizing quality and capacity. It offers the chance to people to enjoy good quality terrestrial electronic shows along side voice telephony and internet access all in a single system. Broadcast mobile TV will offer new work at home opportunities for mobile service providers, information and broadcast infrastructure, businesses and device manufacturers in addition to technology providers. Get further on this related use with - Click here: nokia lumia.

This is the next cellular TV pilot in Sweden where Nokia is one of the main suppliers of DVB-H technology. Last week, Nokia announced a new agreement with TeliaSonera Sweden to get a full DVB-H pilot system, including Nokia Mobile Broadcast System 3.0 and Nokia N92 mobile TV units, underpinned by Nokia's hosting and systems integration know-how.

The feedback from different mobile TV pilots is promising. Benefits from pilots on broadcast (DVB-H) mobile TV services amongst people in Finland, the UK, Spain and France have revealed significant indi