Not to Belabor the CableCARD Issue, but…

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As part of a conversation today someone emphasized to me that Verizon’s CableCARD waiver from the FCC is only a one-year grace period for advanced (HD and DVR) set-tops. Seven-Oh-Seven is past. But Seven-Oh-Eight isn’t that far away.

I bring this up not to hype another deadline, but to point out that a year isn’t a long time to develop and ramp up production on an entirely new set-top. As I’ve pointed out before, Verizon’s network is hybrid QAM/IP, which means the CableCARD set-tops being deployed by cable operators won’t work for the telecom company. Verizon also can’t count on another deadline extension from the FCC just because its facing a unique technical challenge, not after it’s already been given one, much-contested reprieve.

If Verizon doesn’t have a CableCARD set-top by Seven-Oh-Eight, it will literally have to stop shipping advanced set-tops. Verizon doesn’t want that and neither do eager FiOS customers.
Update: Verizon is now asking for a two-year extension on its waiver from the FCC.

 

2 Responses to “Not to Belabor the CableCARD Issue, but…”

  1. Aren’t some people using TiVo cable card units with FiOS?

  2. Yes, but as Evan Groat clarified for me, using CableCARD with a TiVo means you’re decrypting a single stream of programming for display. On the other hand, an operator-provided set-top needs to access an EPG, VOD and any two-way services. The Motorola/FiOS set-tops use an IP return path and IP for VOD sessions. This is where they’re different from cable operator set-tops. (Thanks, Evan)

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