- Digital television in the Netherlands
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The Netherlands now has three major forms of broadcast digital television. Terrestrial (DVB-T/DVB-H), Cable (DVB-C), and Satellite (DVB-S). In addition IPTV services are available. At the end of the third quarter of 2010 almost 63% of the households in the Netherlands had some form of digital television.[1]
Contents
Terrestrial
The Netherlands was the second European country to complete the move to digital terrestrial broadcasting on December 11, 2006. The switch-off was helped greatly by the fact that about 90% of the households have cable that continues to use analog distribution. Due to the very extensive penetration of cable systems, usage of terrestrial television in the Netherlands is largely confined to remote rural areas and for portable televisions in caravans, etc.
Since then all terrestrial television broadcast in the Netherlands are digital. The national public television channels Nederland 1, Nederland 2, Nederland 3 and the regional public television channels are made available free-to-air.
DVB-T transmissions in the Netherlands are provided commercially by KPN daughter company Digitenne. They offer 25 TV channels and 16 radio channels, including the free-to-air channels. The Digitenne system requires the use of a special powered aerial. The Digitenne service uses Conax encryption.
Handheld
KPN launched a DVB-H service MobileTV on Thursday, June 5, 2008 with a bouquet of ten channels. The ten channels are Nederland 1, Nederland 3, RTL 4, RTL 24, SBS 6, Jetix/Veronica, MTV, Discovery Channel, Xite and Nick Toons. RTL24 is a made-for-mobile channel with news and current affair. Xite is a new Dutch music channel.[2] In November 2008, a new dedicated mobile TV channel was added. Nu.tv from Ilse Media and the nu.nl news web site. The service will be closed on June 1st 2011, KPN will use the freed up capacity for improvements to its Digitenne DTT platform.
Cable
Over 90% of the households in the Netherlands receive their television signal by cable, making it one of the highest cable penetrated countries. Most cable viewers still watch analogue because no set-top box is necessary. But with the uptake of LCD and plasma televisions customers are looking for better picture quality in digital cable. In addition digital cable offers hundreds of channels compared to the about thirty channels analogue cable offers.
All the major cable companies in the Netherlands offer a digital television service. They all use the DVB-C standard for their digital signal but use different encryption techniques, most use Irdeto 2 only UPC uses Nagravision. Since September 2009 the largest cable company, Ziggo, started supporting the CI+ standard making it possible for their costumers to use televisions with an integrated digital tuner without the need for an additional set-top-box. All cable companies offer a number of high-definition channels.
The four largest cable companies in the Netherlands are:
- Ziggo
- UPC Netherlands
- CAIWAY
- Delta Kabel
Satellite
Digital satellite television in the Netherlands is available via CanalDigitaal, using the SES Astra's satellites at 19.2° east and 23.5° east. Services from both satellite positions can be received using a single dish with a Duo LNB, specifically designed for this purpose.
It is only possible to register as a customer of CanalDigitaal using a Dutch postal address, due to copyright restrictions. A standard DVB-S receiver is used, which can also receive other free-to-air broadcasts. CanalDigitaal uses MediaGuard and Irdeto 2 encryption.
IPTV
Since May 1, 2006 KPN offers Mine TV, an IPTV service based on their DSL service, with the ability to receive Video on demand and replay a missed TV episodes besides regular TV programming. During 2007, the KPN service was renamed KPN Interactieve TV.
Tele2 also offers an IPTV service called Tele2Vision. Since mid 2008 XMSNET also has started the rollout of IPTV over their FTTH (Fiber To The Home) network in several cities in the Netherlands.
High definition
In the Netherlands customers can receive high-definition television channels by cable or satellite. There is no terrestrial HD service available nor planned.
History
The first trials with high-definition television in the Netherlands began in the summer of 2006 with the broadcast of the 2006 World Cup in HD. The games where broadcast by the Netherlands Public Broadcasting (NPO) broadcaster NOS on a temporary 720p HD version of the Nederland 2 channel. Only the live games where broadcast in HD, images from the studio and interviews were still SD. The Nederland 2 HD channel went off-air after the World Cup. The larger cable companies continued a HD service with a small number of general interest channels like Discovery HD and National Geographic Channel HD. But because no Dutch network had made the move to HD, already broadcast in widescreen and the quality of the standard-definition PAL signal was good enough for most people, demand was low.
Since the 2006 trials none of the main Dutch networks made the move to HD until the summer of 2008 when from June 1 until August 24, 2008 the NPO made their primary channel, Nederland 1 temporary available in HD. This made it possible to broadcast Euro 2008, the 2008 Tour de France, and the 2008 Summer Olympics in HD and additionally allowed them to test their systems before the scheduled launch of their permanent HD service. Technicolor Netherlands, the company responsible for the technical realisation of the broadcasts for all the NPOs television and radio channels, began the summer 2008 test broadcast of Nederland 1 HD in 720p and by doing so following the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) recommendations for HD broadcasting. During the test period an additional 1080i version of the channel was made available to the cable companies because of quality complaints from viewers.
On July 4, 2009 the NPO started their permanent HD service when all three channels, Nederland 1, Nederland 2, and Nederland 3, began simulcasting in 1080i high-definition.[3] Most programming in the early stages is upscaled as in time more programs will become available in native HD.
On October 15, 2009 RTL Nederland started simulcasting their RTL 7 and RTL 8 channels in 1080i high-definition. RTL Nederland also announced plans for HD versions of their two other channels, RTL 4 and RTL 5, in 2010.
Current
The Netherlands has ten main television channels, three public and seven commercial. At this time all three public channels and two commercial channels are simulcast in high-definition. Furthermore other general interest high-definition channels are available with Dutch audio or subtitles.
Main Dutch channels that broadcast in HD, or plan to do so:
- Nederland 1 (started, 4 July 2009)
- Nederland 2 (started, 4 July 2009)
- Nederland 3 (started, 4 July 2009)
- SBS 6 (started 2010)
- Veronica (started 2010)
- NET 5 (started 2010)
- RTL 4 (started, 2010)
- RTL 5 (started, 2010)
- RTL 7 (started, 15 October 2009)
- RTL 8 (started, 15 October 2009)
Other HD channels available in the Nederlands:
- BravaHDTV
- Discovery HD Showcase
- Eurosport HD
- Film1 HD
- History HD
- National Geographic Channel HD
- myZen.tv HD
- Sport1 HD
- Fasiontv HD
- Mtv Live HD
- BBCHD
Satellite viewers can receive a number of additional HD channels from the surrounding countries when broadcasting free-to-air including BBC HD from the United Kingdom, één HD from Belgium, Arte HD, the Franco-German cultural channel and the German Anixe HD. But most of these channels are not part of HD services offered in the Netherlands nor broadcast programming aimed at the Dutch market.
See also
- Digital television transition
- Television in the Netherlands
- List of cable companies in the Netherlands
- SES Astra
- Digital television
- High-definition television
References
- ^ Kriek, Jarco (2010-09-04). "Nederland maakt weer stap in digitalisering televisie" (in Dutch). TotaalTV. http://www.totaaltv.nl/index.php?action=nieuws&id=3582. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
- ^ Robert Briel (2008-05-29). "Ten channels for Dutch mobile TV service". Broadband TV News. http://www.broadbandtvnews.com/?p=5063. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
- ^ JK (2009-06-16). "Nederlandse Publieke Omroep dicht bij start HDTV" (in Dutch). TotaalTV. SBS Broadcasting. http://www.totaaltv.nl/index.php?action=nieuws&id=2094. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
External links
Digital television deployments by country Australia · Canada · France · Malaysia · Netherlands · Philippines · Russia · Turkey · United Kingdom · United StatesCategories:- Television in the Netherlands
- Digital television by country
- Science and technology in the Netherlands
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