The TV Mobile Phone

The TV mobile phone has pushed cell phone innovation into a new realm. Just about any electronic function that can be help for those who use business mobile phones and need to be on the go is not only conceivable, but it is also advancing in the format that seems to be the one most commonly used.

In general, TV mobile phones use a subscriber-based service to send signals to the cell phone units of mobile users. They can also be offered as free-to-air programs through participating television stations, as streaming video through the corresponding wireless network or as podcasts downloaded and stored in the memory of the phone.

The TV mobile phone service is exclusive to 3G mobile phones in the U.S. but received its birth into the current market in 2005 with technology originated by South Korea and later Japan. In the U.S., AT&T and Verizon are the only two wireless networks currently offering the service. Vodafone mobile phones are the most popular network carrying TV mobile phone service in the UK.

Power consumption and memory have posed great design issues for manufacturers who create the mobile devices that can carry TV mobile phone service. So far, the market has not been able to generate a battery life for any phone that is powerful enough to handle TV transmission without dying out quickly. Current battery life maximums for most phones just cannot keep up with TV mobile service requirements. Excess charging destroys the ability of the phone to keep a charge for any extended amount of time.

Similarly, memory limitations in current devices are not enough to handle all the additional content that is continue to flood the mobile pipeline. More programming, podcasts and downloads leave consumers salivating for access to the new capabilities of video. Without the proper technological advances to keep up with these impressive data developments, however, consumers will continue to be at a lost for gadgets that can do the job adequately.

Cellular gadgets that have already made it to the market also suffer from an inability to offer any buttons on the user interface that allow operation or adjustment of TV mobile phone service. Many users have had to resort to primitive bulky handsets that tend to distort the images on the screen.

The TV mobile phone format itself provides some challenges to content providers. One of the thrills of mobile phone service options is bytes of information or clips of videos rather than the full, expanded versions of these offerings. Mobile phone users want information fast and for short durations. Some of the content that will be offered will have to be given in shorter doses. A 30-minute program has to be competently whittled down to about five minutes of airtime called a “mobisode” and retain a gist of the program that still makes sense and does not leave anything important out.

These challenges to TV mobile phone as an extended service do not make it an impossible task. As has been the case with technology advancements in the past, market devices always catch up. By the time they do, however, content providers and software designers may be on to the next big thing.

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