AT&T lets mobile phones control the television

Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

Anisha Iyer

OMD India

AT&T lets mobile phones control the television

MUMBAI: US telecom major AT&T Inc. is offering subscribers a new kind of TV remote control: their cell phones.

The company will begin offering its Homezone customers the ability to control their digital video recorders through Web-enabled phones. The interface allows cell phone users to remotely schedule or delete recordings from their set-top boxes connected to satellite television service.

 

The downloadable programming was also being expanded to include 12,000 programs from Akimbo, ranging from movies to concerts to how-to videos. AT&T previously had content agreements with Yahoo Inc. and Movelink.

Homezone is a service that uses a set-top box to help deliver content over the Internet to televisions, including on-demand movies, caller ID and photos stored on the home computer. The company will not disclose how many subscribers Homezone has, but the service has far broader reach than U-verse, the premium service AT&T hopes will help it eventually win back cable customers.

 

AT&T is still slowly expanding U-verse, but the rollout has been delayed because of software difficulties with the service delivered over a high-speed Internet connection. AT&T said it would begin offering U-verse in Dallas-Fort Forth on Tuesday, its 14th market for the service.

Patrick Comack, an analyst with Zachary Investment Research, said the Homezone box, made by 2Wire is convergence technology strong enough to allow AT&T to compete with cable providers, but in the long term, the success might breed other challenges.

"There’s going to be a lot of Homezone boxes, and it’s going to create a problem when AT&T wants to migrate them to U-verse down the road," he said.