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Today Nokia announced a new commercial DVB-H pilot in Stockholm with Teracom in Sweden. Nokia is delivering the Nokia Mobile Broadcast System 3.0 and Nokia N92 portable TV units to the pilot that will last from October to December 2006 and contains 400 customers. The task is just a co-operation between ATG, Boxer, Nokia, Sveriges Radio, Sveriges Television/UR, Telenor and Teracom.

The pilot members will be able to view fourteen TV channels and listen to four radio channels in the Stockholm area location, where a network has been built for high quality indoor and outdoor coverage. The aim is always to assess what Swedish people think about commercial broadcast mobile TV.

ATG, Boxer, Sveriges Radio and Sveriges Television will give you content for the pilot. The test will be sent utilizing Nokia Mobile Broadcast Solution 3.0, and the pilot participants will use mobile phones from Nokia, the Nokia N92. Teracom is likely to be responsible for the network, the broadcast and operating of the system.

"We firmly have confidence in the mobile TV service as well as in the capacity of the DVB-H technology, and we are looking forward to showing the full potential and curiosity of broadcast mobile TV in Sweden," says Sigurd Leth, Multimedia Director for Nokia Nordic.

DVB-H technology suits current agent sites, perfecting quality and capacity. It includes customers the opportunity to enjoy high quality terrestrial electronic contacts alongside voice telephony and access to the internet all in one single unit. Broadcast mobile TV can provide new work at home opportunities for mobile service providers, information and broadcast organizations, structure and phone manufacturers along with technology providers.

This is the next mobile TV pilot in Sweden where Nokia is one of the main suppliers of DVB-H technology. A week ago, Nokia announced a fresh contract with TeliaSonera Sweden for a complete DVB-H pilot program, including Nokia Mobile Broadcast System 3.0 and Nokia N92 mobile TV products, underpinned by Nokia's hosting and systems integration know-how.

The feedback from different cellular TELEVISION pilots has been promising. Results from pilots on broadcast (DVB-H) mobile TV services amongst consumers in Finland, the France, Spain and UK have unveiled clear customer demand for such services as well as significant signals over future business models for commercial mobile TV services. atlanta seo