LONDON: Nine leading electronics companies, including Philips, Samsung, Siemens and Sony, have come together to form the Open IPTV Forum and create a specification for the delivery of IPTV services.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. The pan-industry initiative known as the Open IPTV Forum is close to completing a specification ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. The Open IPTV Forum (OIPF) has commissioned Digital TV Labs to develop a test suite for the ...
LONDON — The Open IPTV Forum (OIPF) has published the architecture specification for IPTV infrastructure elements and services to be included in Release 2 of the forum's specifications. Meanwhile, ...
A consortium of telecoms vendors and operators announced the founding of the Open IPTV Forum on Monday, an industry body that will work to define an interoperable end to end specification for the ...
AT&T Inc., Ericsson, France Telecom, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung Siemens, Sony, and Telecom Italia today announced the founding of the Open IPTV Forum, an industry consortium that will work to define ...
Delivery of television programming over computer networks using Internet protocols showed signs of a maturing market this week when nine major players supporting the technology announced the formation ...
OTTAWA, June 17, 2014 /CNW/ - The members of the Open IPTV Forum and the HbbTV Association are pleased to announce that they have merged their future activities into a single organization within the ...
The technology behind IPTV is standardized, but those standards are coming from a host of different bodies and cover various parts of the transmission path. The result is alphabet soup: IPTV systems ...
The Open IPTV Forum (OIPF) has published a profile of HTML5, CSS, DOM3 and other related web technologies aimed at connected TV services and devices that implement a browser-based application ...
Video in all its forms has long been touted as a "killer application" for the national broadband network, but according to Ericsson the big opportunity is to exploit tight integration between video ...