CES: Comcast CEO Details Ambitious Plans

By Bob Wallace Comments
Posted in News
Print

Comcast Chairman and CEO Brian Roberts made a strong effort to portray the nation’s top cableco as far more than a cable TV provider during a broad-sweeping keynote presentation Tuesday morning at the Consumer Electronics Show.

He did so by updating attendees on a number of key initiatives, detailed new efforts in the areas of communications services and focused on the first fruits of ongoing efforts with the industry’s top players.

Specific items included the launch of Fancast, a planned Internet entertainment and communications destination extending well beyond TV shows and movies, a deal with Panasonic to build set-top-box capability into HDTV sets, and an update on DOCSIS 3.0 technology deployment which will support greater network capacity – and hence performance – for these items and much more.

“It’s a whole new year for Comcast and a whole new attitude,” said Roberts. “We’re energized, excited and ready to get to work.” He is the first top executive from a cableco to deliver a keynote speech in the 40-plus year history of the Consumer Electronic Show.

“Some claim content is king and some claim distribution is king,” said Roberts. “But we believe the customer experience is king.” To that end, the CEO admitted the customer service it provides has been less than stellar and promised Comcast will work to raise the level going forward.

But perhaps the real key to better customer service is better service performance, whether new products and services or current ones, and a faster network to make all offerings quicker and more engaging and compelling. That’s where DOCSIS 3.0 comes into increasing focus as new modems that support its theoretical throughput of 160mbps downstream and 120mbps upstream.

That’s because Comcast currently provides a maximum bandwidth of 16mbps down and 2mbps up for Internet connectivity – and that’s using the operator’s PowerBoost technology which calls into service unused network bandwidth, where and when available, to push the speedometer.

Roberts and execs said Comcast hopes to have up to 20 percent of the homes it passes DOCSIS 3.0-ready by yearend, an effort that requires customers to swap in new cable modems to cash in on the as yet unpriced faster speeds.

“DOCSIS 3.0 is huge,” admitted Roberts in post-keynote comments. “But it’s really bigger than that. We have to have the best network to deliver everything.”

And in the latest installment of we-have more-HD-channels-than-you race, Roberts proclaimed Comcast will offer 1,000 HD TV shows and movies by yearend.

The bulk of the CEO’s presentation, however, was focused more on new content products and services as opposed to network technologies. Chief among them was the introduction of Fancast, which Roberts called “the first ever one-stop destination for entertainment content.”

« Previous12Next »
Comments