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Sources: Moto's Shopping for IPTV Middleware

November 9, 2006 | Mark Sullivan | Comments (15)
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Motorola Inc. (NYSE: MOT) is shopping around for an IPTV middleware vendor to buy, according to several industry sources.

The sources, who requested anonymity, say Motorola has "kicked the tires" of several potential acquisition targets during the past few months.

The main motivation for Motorola's move, it seems, is to get itself on a par with its vendor rivals and give itself another foot in the door of potential carrier customers.

Many of Motorola's peers -- companies that provide integration and/or equipment for telco TV networks -- either have their own IPTV middleware system in-house or have formed tight partnerships with specialist players.

The most high profile of these is Alcatel (NYSE: ALA; Paris: CGEP:PA), which has a productive partnership with Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq: MSFT) that has resulted in multiple carrier engagements. (See Wind, Telefónica Pick Alcatel, Alcatel, Microsoft Confirm IPTV Deal, and Alcatel Lands TDC IPTV Deal.)

But Alcatel is not alone. Nortel Networks Ltd. has forged a relationship with Minerva Networks Inc. , while Lucent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: LU) partnered with Orca Interactive Ltd. before more recently taking over development of Telefónica SA (NYSE: TEF)'s homegrown Imagenio middleware platform. (See Nortel, Minerva Find IPTV Partners, Lucent, Telefonica Team on IPTV, and Orca's Not Blubbering.)

In addition, Siemens AG (NYSE: SI; Frankfurt: SIE) acquired established IPTV middleware company Myrio Corp. , and Thomson (NYSE: TMS; Euronext Paris: 18453) bought Thales Broadcast & Multimedia, including the Smartvision middleware used by France Telecom SA (NYSE: FTE). (See Thomson Fuses VOIP & IPTV and Siemens Snaps Up Myrio.)

Meanwhile, Motorola and rival Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CSCO), have, to date, remained relatively agnostic on IPTV middleware. (See Will Cisco Make an IPTV Middleware Move?.)

It makes sense that Motorola would be scouting for opportunities, says Heavy Reading analyst Rick Thompson. "There are still several major players out there that don’t have an IPTV middleware platform -- all those players are potential buyers and it would certainly include Motorola," says the analyst. "It's a long shot to assume it would try to retool its cable middleware product for telcos."

Thompson says a short list of possible acquisition targets can be derived just from identifying the current unattached players. "From a logical perspective you'd have to think of Minerva, Espial Group Inc. , Orca and a few other smaller players that are a little less visible, but that might pop up on the radar screen." (See Espial Joins IPTV Middleware Madness.)

Motorola erected the PR barricades when asked about any acquisition plans. "I can't give you a definite answer to that question either way," says Motorola spokesman Paul Alfieri. "I can't comment on any speculation."

"What I can say is that our current strategy is to partner with Microsoft where appropriate," Alfieri adds. Under that partnership, Motorola sells various set-top boxes to the customers of Microsoft's IPTV carrier accounts -- AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T), for example. (See AT&T Set to Expand Its U-verse.)

Asked if any service providers have asked Motorola to provide an end-to-end video distribution system including middleware, Alfieri says: "I can't commnent on customer conversations, but what I can say is that our play is the [set-top] box play."

It's easy to see how Motorola might benefit from owning its own IPTV middleware. Such a system could create "pull-through" sales of the vendor's video processing and infrastructure gear, insiders tell Light Reading.

Heavy Reading's Thompson shares that view. "Middleware alone isn’t a cash cow, but has a lot to do with owning the service and selling other equipment as part of the larger IPTV investment," he noted in a recent column. Operators may want to buy the middleware and the hardware from the same vendor because the two elements interoperate so closely, he stated. (See IPTV MiddleWARs: Far From Over.)

And service providers might think Motorola is an appealing supplier given its real-world video distribution experience. "Regardless of whether it’s a telco or a cable network, we do have that experience of how to get video from the head-end to the home," Alfieri points out.

Motorola already sells equipment at both ends of the IPTV distribution system -- encoders and VOD servers at the video head end, and set-top boxes and residential gateways at the customer premises. And the company has already added to its portfolio through acquisitions this year -- set-top box maker Kreatel Communications AB in January, and VOD server vendor Broadbus Technologies Inc. in July. (See Motorola Acquires Kreatel.) and Moto Buys VOD Vendor Broadbus.)

— Mark Sullivan, Reporter, Light Reading

Newest Comments First       Display in Chronological Order
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sunra
User Ranking
Tuesday November 14, 2006 10:51:53 AM
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Netopia? How does this fit in Motorola's acquisition jigsaw puzzle?
LightWarrior
User Ranking
Monday November 13, 2006 12:06:33 AM
no ratings
Guys, it is not so easy to port your cable stuff to IPTV middleware. Motorola and SA tried (and are still trying it) and things have not gone well and that's why they are looking around. Other smaller/medium players like NDS and BigBand have had or are having similar experiences. Remember that middleware is the glue that holds everything together (the whole IPTV ecosystem) from the head-end to the STB, and in IPTV there is increased interactivity and service platform variability, so the stakes are higher. That is why the next-gen middleware systems like Espial and the smaller guys (Industria, etc.) are getting looked at now.
lr_fanny
User Ranking
Sunday November 12, 2006 9:31:58 PM
no ratings
Both Moto and SA have many many millions more deployed set top box middleware clients and headend servers than MSFT. Do your homework!
alchemy
User Ranking
Sunday November 12, 2006 11:14:54 AM
no ratings
litedope writes:
True, MOT may be a weak now on IP elements of IP TV software/middleware, however history of IP TV is not that long, MOT has chance. Further more, as far as client middleware goes, how much difference between so called IP version and non-IP version?

Doesn't MOT have a small army of people working on cable OCAP? There's no reason why you can't use that technology as the basis for your IPTV offering.
litedope
User Ranking
Saturday November 11, 2006 9:51:41 PM
no ratings
In the context of this article, IPTV middleware consists of “server” side and “client” side. MOT has long history in developing DTV software in both server side and client side. The software may or may not be abstracted to be “middleware”, but saying that MOT does not know what they do in DTV domain is really not true.

True, MOT may be a weak now on IP elements of IP TV software/middleware, however history of IP TV is not that long, MOT has chance. Further more, as far as client middleware goes, how much difference between so called IP version and non-IP version?

To the opposite, overall, MOT still knows more about real world DTV software than Microsoft - my 2 cents.
Honestly
User Ranking
Saturday November 11, 2006 4:37:41 PM
no ratings
Mark, you are a smart guy so remember that Software is best left in the hands of software infrastructure companies. Just do not think you will see MOT, or CSCO get into this business. I think they both understand what they do well and know what they do not know. Microsoft is just running the table, like it, or not. I think Verizon is already feeling the pain of trying to replicate some IPTV software and they failed before with IOBI. It will cost them billions and they will still us Microsoft

I say, do what you know.
RTL Rules
User Ranking
Friday November 10, 2006 4:43:20 PM
no ratings
Where's MOTO getting their access equipment? The article mentions only headend and CPE equipment.

Where has MOTO gained real-world video distribution experience?

RTL
Mark Sullivan
User Ranking
Friday November 10, 2006 4:04:08 PM
no ratings
Looks like OpenTV is just client-side middleware. From their Web site:

OpenTV middleware products include:
OpenTV Core: Flagship middleware client software driving today’s most advanced digital TV services including PVR and interactive TV for cable, satellite, telecommunications, and digital terrestrial network operators
litedope
User Ranking
Friday November 10, 2006 1:25:02 PM
no ratings
Does OpenTV offer IPTV middleware on both server and client sides? If so, can this thing come to them?
Mark Sullivan
User Ranking
Friday November 10, 2006 12:00:07 PM
no ratings
We too have heard that Orca has been struggling. But is that really a reason for Moto not be interested in it? Seems it would devalue the company somewhat and make it ripe for acquiring. Also, the Orca product itself is said to be pretty good relative to its peers.
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