Google has announced plans to launch a dedicated YouTube app through the Freesat digital satellite service.
Unlike a traditional TV channel, Google’s product will be built around HTML5 and offer rich Web-enabled features and “fully interactive viewing experience”. It will be available for free on any compatible device from the end of next month. YouTube has not yet elaborated on how exactly the “interactivity” will work.
Update: Earlier, it was erroneously reported that YouTube and Freesat will be launching a TV channel. This has been denied by a YouTube spokesperson.
From the end of March, YouTube will be available on any set-top box that supports the Freesat ‘free time’ standard. The organisation estimates that the new service will reach around 1.7 million UK households. Just like any other web-enabled service, it will require a broadband connection.
The company didn’t elaborate on whether the TV app will give access to all of YouTube’s 1,730,000,000 videos, or limit the viewing to certain types of content.
Freesat, a joint venture between BBC and ITV, has recently announced that it signed up 55,000 new households to its free service in the third quarter of 2012, more than Sky and BT Vision combined.
Freesat offers subscription-free access to over 180 TV, radio and interactive channels, including HD services. In autumn 2012, the company launched its ‘free time’ standard that introduced elements of Open IPTV Forum (OIPF) technology, HbbTV standard and HTML 5 language to its TV platform, enabling the creation of interactive applications.
“They [YouTube] join Freesat at a time of rapid growth for our business,” said Emma Scott, managing director at Freesat, promising content “previously unseen on free to air TV in the UK”.
Meanwhile, late last week Google announced that its executive chairman Eric Schmidt will release 3.2 million shares, or 42 percent of his stake in the company, back on the market over the course of 2013. This sale, worth around £1.6 billion, could become one of the biggest personal share disposals in history.
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