Post on 07-Aug-2015
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Plenary speaker in:International Conference on Communications Networks
And Satellite (ComNetSat) 201303-04 Dec 2013
Organized by IEEE- Indonesia Section Hotel Sheraton Mustika
Jalan Adhisucipto, Yogyakarta
By. Satriyo Dharmanto
Trends in Telecommunication and Broadcasting Industries
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
AGENDA
Hand eld
ICT Facts and Figures
Mobile Broadband Trends
Digital TV, Standard & Technology
Digital TV Regulation Update
Broadcasting Trends
Indonesia OTT Experiences
Telecommunications Industries
Indonesia Towards Digital Era
Existing Analog and Pay TV
Strategic Technology Trends
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Shotsberger (2000) reported that though it took radio 38 years to reach
50 million listeners, it only took TV 13 years to reach 50 million viewers
The storm is a’ coming
The Internet took 4 years, iPod took 3 years, Facebook added 100 million users in less than 9 months and iPhone applications hit 1 billion in 9 months
Gartner predicts that through 2014, improved JavaScript performance will begin to push HTML5 and the browser as a mainstream enterprise application development environment. Richer voice and video that can connect people in new and different ways.
Gartner identifies four basic usage models that are emerging:Manage, Monetize, Operate & Extend. These can be applied to people, things, information, and places, and therefore the so called “Internet of Things” will be succeeded by the “Internet of Everything.”
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
AGENDA
ICT Facts and Figures
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Half in the Asia-Pacific region (3.5 billion out of 6.8 billion total subscriptions)
6.8 billion mobile-cellular subscriptions in the world
Source: ITU World Telecommunication /ICT Indicators databaseNote: * Estimate
96%
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
ICT Indicators
In 2013, over 2.7 billion people are using the Internet, which corresponds to 39% of the world’s population.
In the developing world, 31% of the population is online, compared with 77% in the developed world
Internet users by development level, 2003 - 2013*
Source: ITU World Telecommunication /ICT Indicators databaseNote: * Estimate
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
ICT Indicators
Europe is the region with the highest Internet penetration rate in the world (75%), followed by the Americas (61%).
In Africa, 16% of people are using the Internet – only half the penetration rate of Asia and the Pacific.
Internet users by region, 2013*
Source: ITU World Telecommunication /ICT Indicators database
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
ICT Indicators
750 million households – 41% globally – connected to the Internet
Source: ITU World Telecommunication /ICT Indicators database
In 2013, 41% of the world’s households are connected to the Internet. Half of them are in the developing world, where household Internet penetration has reached 28%.
In the developed world, 78% of all households are connected to the Internet.
90% of the 1.1 billion households not connected to the Internet are in the developing world.
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Households with Internet access, by region
Source: ITU World Telecommunication /ICT Indicators databaseNote: * Estimate
The majority of households in the Americas are online (61%), compared with around one third of households in the Arab States and Asia and the Pacific.
Between 2009 and 2013, Internet penetration in households has grown fastest in Africa, with annual growth of 27%, followed by 15% annual growth in Asia and the Pacific, the Arab States and the CIS.
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
How the Internet is Growing
Source: Cisco
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Key Driver : Global Internet Traffic
Source : Cisco
Source : Vertical System Group - ENS
Global Ethernet Revenue
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Fixed Telephone SubscriptionsMobil-cellular SubscriptionsActive mobile – broadband subscriptionsFixed (wired) – broadband subscriptionsIndividuals using the internet
Subscribers(in Million)
Cellular Subscribers
Global ICT Developments, 2008 – 2013
Source: ITU - DNote: * Estimate
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
AGENDA
Mobile Broadband Trends
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Mobile Margin Squeeze
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Video; the dominant MBB cost driver
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Global MBB platform trends
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Global population coverage
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Broadband connectivity getting enabled
Source: Akamai
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
AGENDA
Broadcasting Trends
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Changing attention curves
Source: Cisco
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Changing Device behavior
Source: Cisco
Average hours watching video on each device per week
TV Screen 2013
TV Screen 2012
Desktop computer 2013
Desktop computer 2012
Laptop 2013
Laptop 2012
Smartphone 2013
Smartphone 2012
Tablet 2013
Tablet 2012
Other Screen 2013
Other Screen 2012
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Hand eldDigital TV, Standard & Technology
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
TV DIGITAL
Terrestrial Hand Held Satellite Cable IPTV OTT
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
TV DIGITAL STANDARS
Terrestrial
Hand Held
Satellite
Cable
IPTV
OTT
DVB-T; DVB-T2; ATSC; ATSC 2.0; ISDB-T; SBTVD/ISDB-Tb; DTMB & T-DMB
DVB-H; ATSC M/H; ISDB-1seg; CMMB
DVB-S; DVB-S2; DVB-SH; ISDB-S; S-DMB
DVB-C; DVB-C2; ATSC; ATSC 2.0; ISDB-C
Ginga-NCL (H761); LIME (H.762); HTML for IPTV for Middle ware
Ginga-NCL (H761); LIME (H.762); HTML for IPTV for Middle ware
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia25
Digital Broadcasting
Digital Sound Broadcasting
DRM DAB; DAB+IBOC
AM & FMISDB-TSB
DSB (Digital Sound Broadcasting)DTB (Digital TV Broadcasting)
-Band MF & VHF band II- Banwidth 30 kHz & 400Khz- Multiservice up to 2 & 4 - Amerika, Brazil, Meksiko
-Band LF, MF, HF- Bandwidth 4.5,5,9,10,18,20 kHz- Multiservice up to 4- Digunakan di > 27 Negara
-VHF band III & Lband - Bandwidth 1.5 MHz- Multiservice up to 64- Digunakan di > 40 Negara
- Digunakan di Jepang & Brazil
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia26
Digital Broadcasting
Digital TV Broadcasting
ATSC/2.0 DVB-T/T2 ISDB-TT-DMB &
DMB-T
DTB (Digital TV Broadcasting) DSB (Digital Sound Broadcasting)
- UHF Band IV, V & VI- Banwidth 6, 7 & 8Mhz- 2k, 4k & 8k carrier mode- Modulasi BST-OFDM (QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM, DQPSK) - Digunakan di Jepang & Brazil
- UHF Band - Bandwidth 6 MHz- Modulasi 8-VSB- Video Coding: MPEG-2- Audio Coding: AC-3-Digunakan di Amerika & Korea Selatan
-UHF band IV, V & VI- Bandwidth 5, 6, 7 & 8Mhz- 2k, 4k & 8k carrier mode- Modulasi OFDM (QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM)
-Video Coding: MPEG-2, H.264AVC- Audio Coding: MPEG-1, MPEG-2, layer 2 AAC MPEG-2 layer 2, AC-3, MPEG-4 HE AAC- Digunakan di Eropa dan > 40 Negara
- Digunakan di Korea & China
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Market is evolving in the IP-based TV direction
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Geographic consumer internet video market
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
AGENDA
Indonesia Towards Digital Era
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Indonesia WSIS Plan
Plan of Action to be achieved by 2015 (The World Summit on the Information Society/WSIS):
The village with ICT and establish community access points;
Universalities, colleges, secondary schools with ICTs; Scientific and research centers with ICTs; Public libraries, cultural centers, museums, post
offices and archives with ICTs; Health centers and hospitals with ICTs; Local and central government department and
establish websites and email addresses;
To adapt primary and secondary schools curricula to meet the challenges of the Information Society taking into account national circumstances;
To ensure that all world’s population have access to television and radio services; To encourage the development of content and to put in place technical conditions in order
to facilitate the presence and use of all word languages on the internet; To ensure that more than half world’s inhabitants have access to ICTs within their reach.
http://blogs.depkominfo.go.id/asem-indonesia/about-indonesia/ict-in-indonesia/
To connect
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia31
E-Business Regulation Establishment (2009-2010)
Basic Instrument and implementation, Data Exchange, E- Payment, E-Commerce M-Commerce
Basic Instrument of E-Business Establishment : Electronic Signature Certification Authority Supervisory Body for CA Data Exchange Interchange Card Payment (APMK) E-Money :
http://blogs.depkominfo.go.id/asem-indonesia/about-indonesia/ict-in-indonesia/
E-Business Regulation
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia32
Common Platform e-Business (2012-2014)
Synchronize e-Payment and e-Trading Implementation : Unification of e-Commerce and e-Payment for domestic and Cross-border. Availability of Regulation and guaranteed e-Commerce Implementation. Increased trade through E-Commerce Trading house for Trading sector, Industry and SME
Convergence in E-Business Implementation : National Single Window for e-Trading and e-Commerce Harmonization of domestic and cross-border e-Commerce Follow the evolution of mobile technology with M-Commerce National backbone Network plan
http://blogs.depkominfo.go.id/asem-indonesia/about-indonesia/ict-in-indonesia/
E-Business Regulation
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia33
National ICT Council (Dewan Teknologi Informasi dan Komunikasi Nasional / DETIKNAS)
A National ICT Council was established in 2006, formed to ensure the inclusion of ICT in all sectors, to accelerate Information and Communication Technology (ICT) growth through policies that would synchronize the ICT programs of all government departments, ministries, and units.
Task Force has been formed to over viewing, coordinating and monitoring progress of the activities, programs, projects undertaken by different ministries and departments.
Initial Result: 7 Flagship Programs
1. Palapa Ring Project (National Main Backbone Network )2. E-Procurement3. National Single Window4. National Identity Number5. E-Budgeting6. E-Learning7. Legal Software
ICT Council
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia34
To develop and deliver national policy directive in ICT development to be followed by government institution;
To supervise and review closely ICT development progress in order to make sure that it is always within the right track of the ICT roadmap;
To approve multi institution /across-department large ICT projects including planning, budgeting, standardization, and evaluation aspects;
To review basic pre-requisites of ICT development such as infrastructure, human resources to ensure their availability and sufficiency;
To facilitate and develop incentive scheme to induce rapid ICT development
National ICT Task Force
http://blogs.depkominfo.go.id/asem-indonesia/about-indonesia/ict-in-indonesia/
ICT Task Force
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Indonesia ICT Indicators
• Internet User : 35 million • Mobile Phone : 140 million (approx)• Mobile Density : 13.4 (source CIA Fatchbook)• TV Household : 32 million, out of 60 million total
household• Radio & TV Public Broadcasters : 2• National TV Broadcasters : 10• Radio Private Broadcasters : 819• Pay TV : 20• New Applicants (radio & TV) : 2.319 & 331• ISP : 220• NAP : 49• Siskomdat / Data Center : 12
The country has more rural than urban areas with urban teledensity of 1-25%, rural density 0.2%, around 38.471 villages out of 69.065 villages without phones.
http://blogs.depkominfo.go.id/asem-indonesia/about-indonesia/ict-in-indonesia/
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
SulawesiKalimantan
о
о
о
оо
Banda Aceh
Sabang
Medan
Palembang
Jakarta
оCirebon
оSemarang
оSurabaya
ооо
Ketapangо о о
Sumbawa
о о
о
о
о
Singkawang
оoSampitBanjarmasin
о
о
о
о
Balikpapan
Samarinda
Tarakan
о
оо
о
о
о
оBatam
о
Toli-toli
оо
o
Sibolga
оо
Meulaboh
Tapaktuan
оNatal
Padang
Bengkulu
Kalianda
оBelitung
o
Kalabahi
o
o
o
o
o
Saumlaki
oo
o
Tobelo
oPalopo
Sumatera
Jawa Nusa Tenggara Maluku - Papua
Pontianak
Atambua
to Thailand
to Perth, Australia
to Asia Pacificto India
о
o
o
o
oo
o
Raba
Waingapu
Ende
Kupang
Makassar
Bulukumba
Kolaka
Kendari
Ambon
ParigiPalu
Gorontalo
Manado
Ternate
Sorong
Fakfak
Manokwari Bia
k Sarmi
Jayapura
Timika
Merauke
Maumere
Mataram
= New Network= Existing Network= Landing Point
1. Sumatra 7402.5 km
2. Jawa 3542 km
3. Kalimantan5345.5 km
4. Sulawesi 5813 km
5. Maluku 2988 km
6. Nusatenggara 3480 km
7. Papua 4958 km
8. Connecting Line 2063 km
Palapa Ring Project
36
Source : Sardjoeni Moedjiono, 2009
56,988 KM Total Palapa Ring Project 35,280 KM Fiber optic submarine; 21,708 KM Fiber optic underground 33 Provinces; 440 Kabupaten / Kotamadya
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Universal Service Obligation (USO) Program
37
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia38
International Network
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia39
Network Access Point / NAP: currentl 49 operators Internet Service Providers / ISP: 220 operators Internet Telephony for Public Communications / ITKP: 27 operators Data Communications System / Siskomdat: 11 operators Multimedia Services Licenses IPP : Broadcasting License (licenses Prinsip Penyiaran) : 30 operators
Source : Kominfo September 2012Current Network Operators: Jartaplokal: 5 licenses Jartaplokal packet switched: 29 licenses Jartup: 72 licenses SLJJ: 2 licenses SLI: 3 licenses Trunking: 3 licenses Seluler: 8 licenses Satelit: 1 licenses.
Current Licenses Holders
Current Services Operators Jasa teleponi dasar: 2 licenses Jasnita premium call: 18 licenses Jasnita call center: 10 licenses Jasnita calling card: 9 licenses Jasa multimedia ISP: 230 licenses Jasa multimedia NAP: 48 licenses Jasa multimedia ITKP: 26 licenses Jasa multimedia sistem komunikasi
data: 11 licenses.
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Existing Analog and Pay TV
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
TV Industries
Government Owned
Private, Advertising
Private, Subscription based
Community TV
TV Operational Income
About 300+
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia42
No. of Transmission sites
Current Analog Terrestrial TV Network
TV
RI
RC
TI
MN
CTV
GLO
BA
LTV
TR
AN
STV
IND
OS
IAR
376
AN
TV
TV
ON
E
SC
TV
METR
OTV
49
28
30
47 4
0 31 2
6
30
27
52
TR
AN
S7
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia43
• Adi TV • Agropolitan TV • Amuntai TV • Bali TV • Bandung TV • Batam TV • Batu Televisi • BiTV • BMS TV • Bogor TV • Borneo TV • Bunaken TV • Cahaya TV •
Cakra TV • CB Channel • CT Channel • Da Ai TV • Deli TV • Dhamma TV • Elshinta TV • Fajar TV • Fativi • Ganesha TV • Gorontalo TV • GOTV • Gemilang TV •
Gajayana TV • GNTV • JakTV • Jogja TV • JTV • Karesidenan TV • Kendari TV • L TV • Logis TV • Lombok TV • Mahameru TV • Malang TV • Minang TV • Makassar TV • Megaswara TV • MQTV • O Channel • PKTV • Pacific TV • Padjadjaran TV • Palembang TV • Pro TV • Rantau TV • Ratih TV • RBTV • Riau TV • Riauchannel •
SAM TV • SJTV • Spacetoon (TV Anak) • SSTV • STV • TA TV • Tarakan TV • Televisi Tegal • Televisi Manado • Tugu TV • TV Borobudur • TVKU
Locals TV
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Typical Diagram of Analog TV
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Existing Pay TV Industries
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia46
Based on Pyramid Research, Indonesia's pay-TV market is characterized by a very low household penetration, which reached only 3 percent in 2010.
This figure possible to be expanding to 7 percent by 2015, driven by an improving economic situation and the greater market competition since PT Telkom-owned Telkomvision entered the market in 2007.
Currently Indovision, Telkomvision and First Media dominate the market, with about 95 percent of total pay-TV subscribers in 2010.
Some other Pay TV providers via DTH : Direct Vision, Aora TV, OK Vision, B-Vsion, Topas TV are coloring the market,
Cable TV operators : First Media (Kabelvision), Telkomvision, Indosat Mega Media (IM2) and Cepat Net (Moratelindo).
Despite benefiting from Telkom's ability to offer triple-play bundles, IPTV will account for only 6 percent of total pay-TV accounts by year-end 2015.
The country's geography structure is archipelagic, so DTH technology based will remain the dominant technology, accounting for about 88 percent of total pay-TV subscriptions through 2015.
Pay -TV Industries
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Digital TV Terrestrial Regulation Update
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia52
the Minister Decree No. 07/P/M.KOMINFO/3/2007 dated 21st of March 2007 KOMINFO was endorsed the DVB-T as a national standard for the Digital Terrestrial Television
for Fixed reception in Indonesia.
TV Digital in Indonesia
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia53
Access to the Television (TV) : 78.22% Access to the Radio : 59.17% Access to the Printing Media : 22.83%
Current Licenses for TV 11 TV has National broadcasting licenses (incl. TVRI) 97 TV has Regional broadcasting licenses 30 TV has Pay TV licenses (60% cable, 20% satellite, 20% Terrestrial)
New Licenses Applicant 12 applicants for TV Public Broadcaster 179 applicants for TV Private Broadcaster 13 applicant for TV Community broadcaster 54 applicants for Pay TV
109 applicants for Radio Public Broadcaster 179 applicants for Radio Private Broadcaster 13 applicant for Radio Community broadcaster
Why Digitalization of TV and Radio are Important for Indonesia
Source : BPS
Why Digitalization are Important
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia54
Digital Terrestrial Television for Fixed reception in Indonesia is implemented, with the aims:
Increasing quality of the receiving of television broadcasting program in Indonesia
To provide more alternative of television broadcasting program to the public of Indonesia
To speed up the health of television media in Indonesia To provide Growths of content industries, software and hardware related
to Digital Terrestrial Television for Fixed reception in Indonesia To increase the efficiency of the radio spectrum usage for broadcasting
TV usage Release valuable frequency spectrum for other uses after full migration
from analogue to digital broadcasting
Digital Terrestrial TV for Fixed Reception
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia55
Broadcasting Content
Radio Frequency LicenseTower & InfrastructureLicense
TV Content Providers
Multiplex Provider
TV Analog
TV Digital
Business Model TV Digital
Public Broadcasting TVRI or Local Private Broadcasting Community Broadcasting
Content Providers
Public Broadcasting TVRI Private Broadcasting
Multiplex Providers
o Public Broadcasting shares their facilities to Community Broadcasting
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia56
Digital television in Indonesia will start to be fully implemented in 2018. Therefore, there are several steps that must be made
towards the implementation of digital broadcasting.
First Phase 2009-2012 period, in the form of broadcast simulcast which is broadcast together between analogue and digital (simulcast period).
Permit termination for the operation of analog TVs after a new license of the digital TV infrastructure providers.
Starting with a new license for digital TV providers infrastructure Encourage the domestic electronics industry in the provision of TV
receiving equipment
Second Phase In 2013-2017, a number of analogue broadcasts in some areas will be turned off and intensification of a new license for digital TV providers infrastructure
Final Phase, starting 2018, all analogue broadcasts will be turned off. Digital TV will be fully operated in UHF Band IV and V. The rest UHF channel will be used for advance wireless
telecommunication (International Mobile Telecommunication & Public Protection Disaster Relief).
Three Phases Migration to TV Digital
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia57
Migration Roadmap, the detail time frame for migration (the transition period and the analog cut-off).
Coordination - Nationally and within each Television Broadcasting. Frequency Planning for Digital TV Broadcasting Policy of SFN and co-located systems Single tower policy; Determination of the format SDTV, HDTV or both are multiplexed in one channel. Selection of MPEG2 or MPEG4 compression system Proposal from some existing broadcasters to the alternative of DVB T2 leap frog Standardization of the set top box (STB):
Basic STB (with basic TV Digital features), local content are minimum 20% and to be increased gradually become 50% in the 5 years period.
Must have the menu features in Bahasa Indonesia and features an early warning of natural disasters and can be equipped with means of measurement data services and television show ratings.
Advanced STB (With the addition of several features such as an MHP, Early warning system (EWS) for disaster, PVR, CA, etc).
Preparation of existing broadcasters internally Change management Management for TV Digital Operation
Strategic Issues
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia58
Strategic Issues
No. Company Legal Name Call Sign
a. PT Banten Sinat Dunia
Televisi
BSTV
b. PT Lativi Media Karya TVOne
c. PT Media Televisi Indonesia Metro TV
d. PT Surya Citra Televisi SCTV
e. PT Televisi Transformasi
Indonesia
Trans TV
No. Company Legal Name Call Sign
a. PT Cakrawala Andalas Televisi Bandung dan Bengkulu
ANTV Bandung
b. PT Indosiar Bandung Televisi Indosiar Bandung
c. PT Media Televisi Bandung Metro TV Jabar
d. PT RCTI Satu RCTI Network
e. PT Trans TV Yogyakarta Bandung Trans TV Bandung
There are 5 service zones given licenses, that are service Zone-4 (DKI Jakarta and Banten), service zone-5 (West Java), service zone-6 (Centra Java and Yogyakarta), service one-7 (east java) and service zone-15 (Riau Island). Hereunder is list of operator for service zone-4 and service zone-5.
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia59
Strategic Issues
There are 5 other operators got licenses for zona layanan-14 (Kalimantan Timur and Kalimantan Selatan) consist of :
PT. Trans7 Pontianak Samarinda (Trans7 Samarinda). PT. GTV Tujuh (Global TV), PT. Lativi Mediakarya Manado and Samarinda (TV One Samarinda), PT. Media Televisi Banjarmasin (Metro TV Kalsel) andPT. Surya Citra Multikreasi (SCTV Banjarmasin).
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Telecommunication Industries
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Celluler Operators
Celluler Operators in Indonesia :
Subscribers (million)
TELK
OM
SEL
104
IND
OS
AT
XL A
XIA
TA
TH
RE
E
AX
IS FLEX
I
ES
IA
CER
IA
FR
EN
HEP
I
Sm
art
52
46
1816
13,8 8
30,5
0.51,9
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Mobile Broadband in INDONESIA
• 3G services consist of: Video Call, Video Streaming, Interactive Game, High Speed Internet
• 3G service has been distributed over 12 cities with more than 2 millions subscribers and it is estimated to be kept on growing
Subscribers(in Million)
Source: PT Telkom Tbk
Cellular Subscribers
3G Subscribers
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia63
Source: Erik Meijer Presentation
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia65
Source: Erik Meijer Presentation
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia66
Source: Erik Meijer Presentation
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia67
Source: Erik Meijer Presentation
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia68
GSM-BASED OPERATORS :ALLOCATIONS AND SUBSCRIBERS
CDMA-BASED OPERATORS :ALLOCATIONS
Source: Denny Setiawan, Directorate of Spectrum Policy and Planning, The Ministry of Information and Communication Technology
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Indonesia OTT Experiences
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
70
An increase of number ISP currently reaching over 200 companies. The consistent growth of internet connect and online game companies. Very high local internet traffic, currently reaching over 28 giga peak traffic Development of Cloud computing 2011 up to IDR 1,6 triliun, 0,7 % to 2%
from National ICT budget, about IDR 40 triliun - IDR 80 triliun (source Sharing Vision)
Development of Social Media users (Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Youtube, etc)
Indonesia Key Driver of OTT
Facebook User : 35,174,940 (5,6%)
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia71
Pay -TV Industries - OTT
Information, Lifestyle and entertainment portal that providing digital streaming of Video, Film, video clip, music, karaoke, live TV, TV On demand, Radio Live streaming and Radio On demand
They also has premium services named ToVi They just launched on October 2013. Currently they have 15 TV channels, 52 Radio channels, and about 200
films Their digital content can be accessed trough Laptop, smartphones, IoS
and Android device Their target subscribers are middle -up class ,modern family for all region
in Indonesia The subscriber can make subscription through social media account
(Facebook and twitter), Telkom speedy account, Telkomsel account and Telkom Flexi account
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia72
Pay -TV Industries - OTT
Online Video Service that providing digital live streaming channels of TRANS TV and TRANS7 TV and some Video On Demand
Currently they have 15 TV channels, 52 Radio channels, and about 200 films
Their digital content can be accessed trough Laptop, smartphones, iPad, iPhone. iPod and Android device
Their target subscribers are modern family for all region in Indonesia The subscriber can make free subscription through www.mytrans.com
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia73
Pay -TV Industries OTT
PT Mega Media Indonesia is one of new DTH operator in Indonesia, They just launched 27 October 2011. They are using Palapa-D satellite. Their target subscribers are low-medium class ,modern family for all
region in Indonesia The subscriber can make subscription payment through buy a voucher
like cellular voucher. Preparing OTT services very soon
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia74
PT Media Vision Nusantara, Part of KKG group They will launch 27 January 2014 They are using Measat satellite. Their target subscribers will be low-medium-end class ,modern family for
all region in Indonesia Preparing OTT services for their second stage
Strictly Confidential!
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Strategic Technology Trends
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia76
Gartner: Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends For 2014
Mobile Device Diversity and Management Mobile Apps and Applications The Internet of Everything Hybrid Cloud and IT as Service Broker Cloud/Client Architecture The Era of Personal Cloud Software Defined Anything Web-Scale IT Smart Machines 3-D Printing
© Satriyo Dharmanto 2013 ComNetSat 2013 – Yogyakarta Indonesia
Presented in:International Conference on Communications Networks
And Satellite (ComNetSat) 201303-04 Dec 2013
Organized by IEEE- Indonesia Section Hotel Sheraton Mustika
Jalan Adhisucipto, Yogyakarta
By. Satriyo Dharmanto
Trends in Telecommunication and Broadcasting Industries