Oman Daily Observer

Phone makers focus on flicks on the fly

- DANIEL SILVA

The mobile phone industry is racing to improve its ability to deliver content as the popularity of watching TV series and films on small screens surges, forcing a shift in focus for the sector. Mobile video traffic is forecast to grow by around 50 per cent annually to account for over two-thirds of all mobile data traffic by 2021, according to a forecast by Sweden-based telecommun­ications operator Ericsson. The growing popularity of video is pushing phone makers to come up with devices with better screens and sound quality.

For telephone operators it is pushing them to work closely with media giants like Vivendi and Turner, who are ramping up production of video content made specifical­ly for mobile devices.

“Video is not an option, it is a must for telecom operators today,” Eric Xu, the CEO of China’s Huawei, the world’s third-largest phone maker after Apple and Samsung, said at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

French media group Vivendi, which owns YouTube competitor Dailymotio­n and France’s No 1 pay TV service Canal+, set up Studio+ last year to make high quality mini series made to be watched on smartphone­s.

The company has so far produced 25 original series in five languages.

Each series consists of ten episodes lasting ten minutes which are distribute­d to paying subscriber­s via an app by people on the go.

Vivendi has reached an agreement with telecom providers in Brazil, Argentina, France and Italy to provide the service and it will debut in Russia in June.

“Our aim is to be the preferred partner of major carriers,” said Vivendi Chief Executive Arnaud de Puyfontain­e.

The service allows telecom firms to “differenti­ate themselves” and encourages customers to sign up to plans with bigger data bundles so they can watch more video, he said.

US media giant Turner Communicat­ions, a division of Time Warner whose HBO channel is the home to popular shows such as ‘ Game of Thrones’, has also started production groups that make short form content “that is really, really specific for mobiles,” said Turner Chief Executive John Martin.

Several phone makers meanwhile unveiled new devices at the trade fair geared for watching video.

South Korea’s LG presented a new flagship phone, the G6, which comes with a massive screen to target Netflix-loving, stream-savvy commuters who want to watch films and series on the go.

Italian cinematogr­apher Vittorio Storaro, who has won Oscars for ‘Apocalypse Now’ and ‘The Last Emperor’, was on hand to praise the advantages of the phone’s 18:9 screen aspect ratio, a step up from the convention­al 16:9 found on most phones, for watching film.

The LG device is the first smartphone that can support Netflix’s higher quality HDR video streaming which makes colours more vivid.

Netflix announced at the fair that it is set to introduce new technology that will deliver decent video quality to mobile devices while using less data.

“We are doubling down on mobile,” said the company’s vice president of product innovation, Todd Yellin.

Streaming Netflix shows on mobile phones is rising around the world and in three major markets — India, Japan and South Korea — people stream more Netflix video on their phones than on TV, he said.

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings claims he is among the converts to watching series on mobile phones. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? A visitor looks at the Oppo F1 Plus FC Barcelona special edition mobile phone at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Phone makers are wooing new buyers with artificial intelligen­ce functions and other innovation­s at the world’s biggest mobile fair.
— AFP A visitor looks at the Oppo F1 Plus FC Barcelona special edition mobile phone at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Phone makers are wooing new buyers with artificial intelligen­ce functions and other innovation­s at the world’s biggest mobile fair.

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