Digital TV Group

The DTG (Digital TV Group) is the association for British digital television broadcasters. The DTG publish and maintain the technical specifications for digital terrestrial television (DTT) in the United Kingdom which is known as the D-Book[1] and used by Freeview, Freeview HD and YouView. It consists of over 120 UK and international members[2] who can participate in DTG activities to varying degrees, depending on their category of membership.

Full members, who are active in the UK market, contribute to the evolution of the D-Book through the DTG's Working Groups[3] which reflects the full diversity of interests within the UK digital television industry - regarded as leading the world in television technology.[4]

Collectively, these Working Group's provide for the industry-approved introduction of new solutions and services to the D-Book, currently on its seventh iteration, D-Book 7.[5] D-Book 8 is due to be published in late 2014/early 2015,containing support for the forthcoming Freeview Connected platform, a profile for tablet computer DTT receivers and preparations to smooth the potential 700 MHz clearance.[6]

DTG
Industry Digital TV, technology, television, standards
Founded 1995
Headquarters London, United Kingdom, Vauxhall, London, England
Area served
UK, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Ghana and Europe
Key people
  • David Docherty (Chairman)
  • Richard Lindsay-Davies (CEO)
  • Simon Gauntlett (CTO)
Website www.dtg.org.uk

About

The DTG publish and maintain the D-Book, the technical foundation of the United Kingdom's Freeview, Freeview HD, Freesat and YouView television platforms – covering 95% of UK homes with a digital TV.[7] It also actively encourages and supports the development of Sky, Virgin Media, BT TV, TalkTalk, Connect-TV and VuTV.

History

The DTG was formed in 1995 by the BBC, BSkyB, BT Group, Channel 4, ITV (TV network) NTL Incorporated, Pace and Sony to set technical standards for the implementation of digital terrestrial television in the UK.

From these initial eight members, the DTG has grown to include over 120 UK and international members and played a decisive role in the success of the UK television industry.[4]

Current work

The DTG, working with its members, has identified six priority television technologies to pursue and bring to fruition with the maximum benefit, these are:

Membership

The DTG is a members association with four categories of membership:[14]

  1. Full Member for organisations who are active in the UK market.
  2. New Entrant for new organisations in their first two years of operation.
  3. World Member for organisations who are interested in, but not active, in the UK market.
  4. Affiliate Member for charities, governments and regulators with an interest in the UK market and/or technical aspects of the television industry.

DTG Testing

The DTG owns and operates DTG Testing, an ISO 17025 accredited test laboratory in Central London. DTG Testing ensures digital television products in the United Kingdom conform to the D-Book specification[15] – a requirement of obtaining the Freeview trade mark licence.[16]

DTG Testing also provide access to:

The D-Book

The DTG publishes and maintains the D-Book. It is currently on its seventh edition (released March 2011[5]) providing the detailed interoperability specification for digital terrestrial television in the United Kingdom with extended Connected TV functionality. D-Book 7 provides the baseline specification that YouView, Sky, Virgin Media and others can build on for trademark requirements to support their services.

See also

References

  1. "What is the D-Book?". Digital TV Group, Technical, DTT. 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  2. "Current DTG Members". Digital TV Group membership website. 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  3. "DTG Groups". Digital TV Group Working Groups. 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  4. 1 2 Vaizey, Ed (2014-05-20). "Ed Vaizey Speech to Digital TV Group Summit 2014". Ed Vaizey MP announcements. Department for Culture, Media & Sport and Ed Vaizey MP. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  5. 1 2 "D-Book 7 published". Digital TV Group news. DTG staff. 01-04-2011. Retrieved 2014-08-12. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. "The DTG starts work on the next-generation free-to-air technical specification to support Freeview Connected and prepare for a possible 700 MHz clearance". Digital TV Group News. DTG Staff. 07-08-2014. Retrieved 2014-08-12. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. "Facts & Figures". Facts & Figures. Ofcom. 01-08-2014. Retrieved 2014-08-12. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. http://dtg.org.uk/work/ultrahd.html
  9. http://dtg.org.uk/work/dtt.html
  10. http://dtg.org.uk/work/mobile.html
  11. http://dtg.org.uk/work/spectrum.html
  12. http://dtg.org.uk/work/ctv.html
  13. http://dtg.org.uk/work/accessibility.html
  14. http://dtg.org.uk/dtg/membershipcategories.html
  15. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/conformance-product-testing
  16. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/obtain-freeview-logos
  17. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/over-air-downloads
  18. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/dtg-testing-receiver-collection-welcome-zoo
  19. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/wireless-test-and-innovation-centre
  20. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/gtem-cell-hire
  21. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/consulting-services
  22. http://www.dtgtesting.com/content/dtg-testing-training

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.