Estimates place the total number of regular mobile TV watchers (i.e., subscribers to services) at just 450,000. That's 1%. Ouch. One percent is not enough to help the operators recoup the massive investment made in building the networks used to deliver mobile TV. While the numbers coming from England paint a bleak picture, U.S. operators are mum on the uptake of mobile TV services.
For instance, Verizon Wireless recently reported its second quarter results. Even though its V CAST TV service (which utilizes Qualcomm's MediaFLO network) was in operation during the full quarter, no subscriber numbers were broken out in the quarterly results. Verizon was happy to point out the increases in its data revenues (70%), but didn't go so far as to show us which services earned what. Right now, V CAST TV is still only available in a few dozen markets, and is only viewable on two handsets. Verizon will add more markets and handsets over time.
Sprint also offers mobile TV via its 3G PowerVision services. I have demoed these. While surfing channels and finding interesting content to watch is relatively painless, the viewing experience can be iffy. Stops and starts, out-of-sync audio, and grainy images abound. Same goes for watching YouTube videos on handsets...even when streamed via Wi-Fi and not the WWAN.
What do you think? How many of you have watched or subscribed to mobile TV programming?