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Sky Picnic

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Sky Picnic is a proposed pay television service to launch from Sky. It would sit alongside Freeview and Top Up TV on the digital terrestrial television (DTT) platform in the United Kingdom. The service is currently the subject of a public consultation by communications regulator Ofcom. The consultation was published on October 4, 2007 with the outcome to be announced in early 2008.[1]

Contents

Existing Channels

Sky currently broadcasts three free-to-air services as part of Freeview on the digital terrestrial platform. These channels are Sky News, Sky Sports News and Sky Three on Multiplex C (to be known as NGW A post digital switch over). The proposed service would use the capacity of these three channels.[1]

Proposed Channels

The submission states that Sky plans to use their space for a pay TV service which will offer a mix of basic and premium content. The channels proposed are Sky Sports 1, Sky Movies Screen 1 (formerly Sky Movies SD1), Sky One, a children's channel and a factual channel. Sky News content will also be aired for up to seven hours a week as part of the service.[1] The third party children's channel is to be the Disney Channel while the factual service will be the Discovery Channel.[2][3] The first stream would be Sky Sports 1 to be broadcast 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.[1] The second stream is proposed to be Sky Movies Screen 1 from 6pm to early in the morning, 7 days a week. The Disney Channel would air from 6am to 6pm, 7 days week, beginning as early as 3am on days where Sky Movies Screen 1 finishes early.[1] The third stream would be the Discovery Channel broadcasting from 6am to 6pm, 7 days a week. Sky One would air from 6pm to 6am, 7 days a week with the 6pm - 7pm slot being used for used Sky News content up to 7 days of the week.[1]

Encryption

Sky plans to use a conditional access system supplied by NDS Group for the Picnic service. This a different conditional access technology to that used by Top Up TV which is already on the platform.[1]

MPEG-2 and MPEG-4

Sky have proposed to the use MPEG-2 compression format which is currently used by all other video services on the DTT platform. They have indicated to Ofcom in the consultation document that they would like to move over to the more efficient MPEG-4 format in the future, allowing for further broadcast capacity. It has been proposed that set-top boxes compatible with the Sky Picnic service must support MPEG-4 (which is not currently used on the platform) in addition to MPEG-2. This would allow Sky to implement MPEG-4 without customers needing to upgrade their set-top box. Ofcom is yet to decide on whether MPEG-4 can be used on the DTT platform, and as part of this and other consultation processes, it is determining whether this is a viable option in the future.[1]

References

External links

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Sky Picnic from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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