X
Innovation

Net rock concert to discriminate in favour of broadband

MediaWave wants to show people the advantages of a high-speed connection
Written by Wendy McAuliffe, Contributor

Rock legend Elton John is set to host the largest ever pay-per-view Internet broadcast in mid July, but the event will only be available to privileged broadband users.

Internet portal MSN.co.uk will streaming live coverage of Elton's exclusive concert in Turkey on 17 July, but Internet users without high-speed connections will be excluded from watching the event. Elton fans will need a minimum modem speed of 100kbit/s in order to view the broadcast.

"We could have made it available to people with dial-up connections, but we want people to see that broadband is a viable business opportunity and an important technology," said Chris Frampton, managing director of IP broadcasting company MediaWave which is broadcasting the event.

In order to subscribe to the event, Internet users with a 100kbit/s connection speed will be charged £7, and those with a faster 300kbit/s modem will pay the higher price of £10. "Until now, there has never been a network in place that could handle the quality and reliability of a global event on the Web, that people would be prepared to pay for," said Frampton.

But with only around one million broadband home users in the UK, the majority of British Internet users will be denied the privileged of tuning into the event. MediaWave believes that initiatives of this kind will drive demand for broadband, as well as proving that the infrastructure to host quality live events is already in place. "Once things start to become available for higher performance technology, the cost of the equipment falls dramatically," said Frampton.

At the end of last year, more than nine million people logged onto the Internet to watch Madonna's first British concert in seven years.

Is broadband coming to your neighbourhood? Find out the latest in ZDNet UK's Broadband News Section.

Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the Telecoms forum.

Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read other letters.

Editorial standards