Mergers and Acquisitions
January 2007
Ericsson Acquires Redback Networks for US$1.9 Billion
Telco giant Ericsson is acquiring edge router company Redback Networks for about US$1.9 billion. Silicon Valley-based Redback has over 700 carrier customers in 80 countries and has some top-tier customers. Fifteen of the top 20 telephone carriers worldwide use Redback's technology, including broadband routers to manage IP-based data, voice and video services.
ARRIS and TANDBERG Merge
ARRIS and Tandberg announced that they were merging at a deal valued at US$1.2 million. The companies said by combining Arris’ VOIP equipment with Tandberg’s IPTV products they will accelerate the combination of voice, video and data products. According to MRG, Inc. Tandberg enjoys about 30% of the global IPTV video headend (encoder) market, with a strong position in Tier 1 and Tier 2 IPTV service providers.
Motorola Acquires Tut Systems for US$39 Million
Motorola announced it was acquiring Tut Systems for about US$39 million. Tut is a provider of carrier-class digital video encoding, processing and distribution products using MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 AVC video compression. It also provides local ad insertion, forward error correction, and real-time conditioning of video and audio.
For more information, consult our: MRG, Inc. January 2007 IPTV Bulletin
Tiscali to Relaunch Homechoice as Tiscali TV
January 2007
Tiscali announced that it expects to gain about 500,000 U.K. subscribers in 2007 for its Homechoice IPTV offering. Tiscali acquired Homechoice TV when it bought Video Networks International in August 2006 and will rename the offering Tiscali TV when it relaunches later this year.
Broadband provider Tiscali has about 1.4 million U.K. DSL subscriber users and it hopes to convince more than half of them to add TV services. Tiscali said it plans to have over 80 TV channels including E4, MTV, Paramount Comedy and Cartoon Network, as well as 1,000 VOD movies.
In a survey commissioned by Tiscali of 1,400 users, 42% of respondents believe that today's traditional TV schedules will no longer exist in 10 years. Seventeen percent of users surveyed said they already watch on-demand TV, and 63% want to watch on-demand. Being able to watch movies at any time is so important to British consumers that more than half (51%) would prefer to rent a movie by downloading it through their broadband connection rather than go to a video rental store.
For more information, consult our: MRG, Inc., January 2007 IPTV Bulletin
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