|      Swedish telecom equipment    maker Ericsson struck a deal on Monday to buy Microsoft Corp's Mediaroom IPTV    business, which makes software used by phone companies to deliver television    over the Internet, making it the world's leader in a growing business. The sale marks the end of    Microsoft's two-decade effort to put itself at the front of a technology    shift toward internet television that did not materialize the way it    expected. The world's biggest software company said it will now focus its TV    ambitions on its popular Xbox game console, which is a vehicle for all types    of entertainment. Ericsson said it expected    to close the deal for the business, which employs more than 400 people    worldwide, during the second half of 2013. It did not disclose a purchase    price, though a company official provided a ballpark figure. "This deal is within    range where we previously bought a company called Optimi for $99 million    (64.9 million pounds) and where we also bought LG Nortel for $234    million," said Ove Anebygd, Vice President and Head of TV at Ericsson.    "So this is somewhere in between the two." Ericsson said the deal    would make the company, already the world's biggest mobile networks maker,    the leading provider of IPTV with a 25 percent market share. Microsoft said    the Mediaroom platform was offered by more than 40 operators and powered 22    million set-top boxes around the world. FOCUS ON SERVICES Internet protocol    television (IPTV) uses the same technology that powers the Internet to    transmit multimedia content over telecom and cable networks. Ericsson wants    to cater to phone companies that are competing with cable, satellite and    web-based media providers. The Mediaroom platform is    the TV technology used by television service providers such as AT&T,    Deutsche Telekom, Telefonica and Swisscom, Ericsson said. "This makes a nice    strategic fit, but it is hard to estimate the impact on key figures since    they are providing no financial information," Alandsbanken analyst Lars    Soderfjall said. With competition from    Chinese network providers stiff over the last few years, Ericsson has focused    increasingly on services, such as managing networks for operators, and on    software, where it has more of a competitive advantage. It is a leading player in    solutions that enable operators to charge for online services and as part of    its shift from hardware-based products has also built up a presence in IPTV,    a position underpinned by acquisitions such as that of video technology firm    Tandberg Television in 2007. "This completes    Ericsson's IPTV offer, with ... Mediaroom nicely rounding up the Tandberg TV    assets," said Alexander Peterc, analyst at Exane BNParibas. Ericsson said the global    IPTV market was estimated to reach 76 million subscribers in 2013 with    revenues of $32 billion, growing to 105 million subscribers and $45 billion    in 2015. Ericsson said the deal    was subject to customary regulatory approvals and that the business would be    integrated into its Support Solutions unit. MICROSOFT PUTS BETS ON    XBOX Microsoft entered the    IPTV business in the mid-1990s. It never became a major source of revenue for    the Seattle-based software maker as most growth in internet TV has come from    widely available 'over the top' services like Netflix Inc and Hulu rather    than internet TV supplied by phone companies. The head of Microsoft's    interactive entertainment business said Monday's deal allowed his company to    "commit 100 percent of its focus on consumer TV strategy with    Xbox." From its beginnings at    the turn of the century as an upstart rival to Sony Corp and Nintendo Co,    Microsoft's Xbox has grown into the United States' best selling game center,    with 76 million now in use around the world. Xbox owners can now buy TV    programs, films and music through Microsoft's own store, or access content    through Netflix and other suppliers. Microsoft even set up its    own studio last year to create original TV content, although it said on    Monday it wants to "partner" with film studios, music labels, TV    networks and content aggregators to expand offerings on the Xbox. (Additional reporting by    Oskar von Bahr and Simon Johnson in Stockholm, Leila Abboud in Paris and Bill    Rigby in Seattle; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford and Andrew Hay)  |    
YOUR COMMENT