Interactive program guides are nearly ubiquitous in most broadcast media today. EPGs can be made available through television (on
set-top boxes and all current digital TV receivers),
mobile phones (particularly through
smartphone apps), and on the Internet. Online TV Guides are becoming more ubiquitous, with over seven million searches for "TV Guide" being logged each month on
Google. For television, IPG support is built into almost all modern receivers for digital cable,
digital satellite, and over-the-air
digital broadcasting. They are also commonly featured in digital video recorders such as
TiVo and
MythTV. Higher-end receivers for
digital broadcast radio and digital
satellite radio commonly feature built-in IPGs as well. Demand for non-interactive electronic television program guides – television channels displaying listings for currently airing and upcoming programming – has been nearly eliminated by the widespread availability of interactive program guides for television; TV Guide Network, the largest of these services, eventually abandoned its original purpose as a non-interactive EPG service and became a traditional general entertainment cable channel, eventually rebranding as
Pop in January 2015. Television-based IPGs provide the same information as EPGs, but faster and often in much more detail. When television IPGs are supported by
PVRs, they enable viewers to plan viewing and recording by selecting broadcasts directly from the EPG, rather than programming timers. The aspect of an IPG most noticed by users is its
graphical user interface (GUI), typically a grid or table listing
channel names and program titles and times: web and television-based IPG interfaces allow the user to highlight any given listing and call up additional information about it supplied by the EPG provider. Programs on offer from
subchannels may also be listed. Typical IPGs also allow users the option of
searching by genre, as well as immediate one-touch access to, or recording of, a selected program. Reminders and
parental control functions are also often included. The IPGs within some
DirecTV IRDs can control a VCR using an attached
infrared emitter that
emulates its remote control. The latest development in IPGs is personalization through a
recommendation engine or
semantics. Semantics are used to permit interest-based suggestions to one or several viewers on what to watch or record based on past patterns. One such IPG,
iFanzy, allows users to customize its appearance. Standards for delivery of scheduling information to television-based IPGs vary from application to application, and by country. Older television IPGs like
Guide Plus+ relied on analog technology (such as the
vertical blanking interval of analog television video signals) to distribute listings data to IPG-enabled consumer receiving equipment. In Europe, the
European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) published standard ETS 300 707 to standardize the delivery of IPG data over
digital television broadcast signals. Listings data for IPGs integrated into digital terrestrial television and radio receivers of the present day is typically sent within each station's
MPEG transport stream, or alongside it in a special
data stream. The
ATSC standard for digital terrestrial television, for instance, uses tables sent in each station's
PSIP. These tables are meant to contain program start times and titles along with additional program descriptive metadata.
Current time signals are also included for
on-screen display purposes, and they are also used to set timers on recording devices. Devices embedded within modern digital cable and satellite television receivers, on the other hand, customarily rely upon third-party listings metadata aggregators to provide them with their on-screen listings data. Such companies include
Tribune TV Data (now
Gracenote, part of
Nielsen Holdings), Gemstar-TV Guide (now
TiVo Corporation), FYI Television, Inc. in the United States and Europe; TV Media in the United States and Canada; Broadcasting Dataservices in Europe and Dayscript in
Latin America; and What's On India Media Pvt. Ltd in
India,
Sri Lanka,
Indonesia, the
Middle East and
Asia. Some IPG systems built into older set-top boxes designed to receive terrestrial digital signals and television sets with built-in digital tuners may have a lesser degree of interactive features compared to those included in cable, satellite and IPTV converters; technical limitations in these models may prevent users from accessing program listings beyond (at maximum) 16 hours in advance and complete program synopses, and the inability for the IPG to parse synopses for certain programs from the MPEG stream or displaying next-day listings until at or after 12:00 a.m. local time. IPGs built into newer television (including
Smart TV), digital terrestrial set-top box and antenna-ready DVR models feature on-screen displays and interactive guide features more comparable to their pay television set-top counterparts, including the ability to display grids and, in the case of DVRs intended for terrestrial use, the ability – with an Internet connection – to access listings and content from
over-the-top services. A growing trend is for manufacturers such as
Elgato and
Topfield and software developers such as
Microsoft in their
Windows Media Center to use an Internet connection to acquire data for their built-in IPGs. This enables greater interactivity with the IPG such as media downloads,
series recording and programming of the recordings for the IPG remotely; for example,
IceTV in Australia enables TiVo-like services to competing DVR/PVR manufacturers and software companies. In developing IPG software, manufacturers must include functions to address the growing volumes of increasingly complex data associated with programming. This data includes program descriptions, schedules and
parental television ratings, along with flags for technical and access features such as display formats,
closed captioning and
Descriptive Video Service. They must also include user configuration information such as favorite channel lists, and multimedia content. To meet this need, some set-top box software designs incorporate a "database layer" that utilizes either proprietary functions or a
commercial off-the-shelf embedded database system for sorting, storing and retrieving programming data. ==See also==