Satellite Satellite television is a service that delivers television programming to viewers by relaying it from a
communications satellite orbiting the Earth directly to the viewer's location. The signals are received via an outdoor
parabolic antenna commonly referred to as a
satellite dish and a
low-noise block downconverter. In Australia, paid satellite television is or has been provided through the following satellites: •
Foxtel uses the
Optus C1 and
Optus D3 satellites. • The various
Globecast platform services use
PAS 8. • MySAT uses
PAS 8. • The various PanGlobal TV platform services use
PAS 8. • TFCDirect! uses
PAS 8. • Canal+ Australie uses Intelsat 701. • Pacific Media uses
AsiaSat 4.
HFC cable Hybrid fibre-coaxial (HFC) is a broadband network that combines optical fibre and coaxial cable. It has been commonly employed globally by cable television operators since the early 1990s. In Australia it is used or has been used by: •
Foxtel use
Telstra's cable in Sydney,
Melbourne,
Brisbane,
Adelaide and
Perth. •
Optus use their own cable network in Sydney,
Melbourne and
Brisbane to provide subscription television. However, the service has reportedly become unavailable in areas where the
National Broadband Network is rolled out. •
Neighbourhood Cable (merged with TransACT) provides a TV service over their own cable to
Geelong,
Ballarat and
Mildura. The majority of these cable networks has since been removed from service, with many parts of the Telstra HFC network (used by Foxtel) integrated into the
National Broadband Network – the Optus network was planned to be similarly integrated, but it was later determined to not be financially viable due to the network being in a state of disrepair. As Optus' subscription TV platform eventually focused selling Foxtel's service over their own cable network, they (essentially) discontinued their service in preparation for handing over their cable. Customers were encouraged to contact and subscribe to Foxtel to continue receiving those services – Foxtel, in turn, migrated all cable customers (both their own and new customers previously with Optus) to their satellite service. Optus remains in the subscription television market through the relaunched
Optus Sport platform and retailing
Fetch TV, both of which are internet-based services (although Optus Sport is available as part of
Tabcorp's SKY satellite-based offering to pubs and clubs or, at an extra monthly cost, via satellite to consumers, with both requiring special decoders). Excluding internet-based services, Foxtel is the sole remaining "traditional" mainstream pay TV operator in Australia; Foxtel's satellite service is also the last remaining offering in the field, having acquired Austar in 2012 and Optus having withdrawn their cable offering due to the transfer of the network infrastructure. Foxtel have continuously been trying to integrate broadband internet into their service, both by selling broadband plans (via the NBN) and by using the internet to expand their television service. Several popular streaming apps, such as catch-up TV and
Netflix are supported on their iQ4 decoder, which also supports "Start Over" functionality (via a simultaneous internet stream of most channels). Foxtel's upcoming iQ5 (and possibly the existing iQ4) set-top-boxes are also intending to support an "internet-only" mode which doesn't require a satellite signal to operate. As they have begun offering similar streaming boxes, separate to their traditional decoders, it is likely that Foxtel may consider discontinuing the satellite service if the internet is able to support a similar level of service to the satellite one. Given the issues in regional Australia when it comes to broadband access, this may take several years to become feasible.
IPTV / Internet television Internet television in Australia is the digital distribution of movies and television content via the Internet. In Australia, paid internet television is provided by a number of generalist streaming service providers, in addition to several niche providers that focus on specific genres. Major providers of streaming services in Australia include: •
Netflix •
Amazon Prime Video •
Paramount+ •
Stan •
Disney+ •
HBO Max •
Foxtel Now •
Binge •
Kayo Sports •
Apple TV+ •
Brollie Internet television in Australia is also provided by IPTV: •
FetchTV provides IPTV through the
Telstra,
dodo,
iiNet,
Internode,
Aussie Broadband,
iPrimus and
Westnet Internet networks, or any other internet provider when their set top box is purchased from one of their retail partners. •
TransACT's TransTV service (merged with Neighbourhood Cable) uses
VDSL over a
fibre-to-the-kerb network in some suburbs of the
A.C.T. • Foxtel uses the Internet to provide some extra content to its iQ2 platform. It also offers Foxtel on
Xbox, a subset of Foxtel channels via any internet provider
Defunct services A number of subscription television services in Australia have become defunct or are no longer supported in Australia: •
Austar previously delivered an analogue
MMDS service into selected regional areas, however the system was dumped in the late 1990s/early 2000s. Austar also briefly tested a digital MMDS service on the Gold Coast. •
TARBS leased some of Austar's metropolitan licenses for their service. •
ECTV and
Galaxy also used MMDS. •
SelecTV used
Intelsat 8 until administrators shut the service down in January 2011. •
UBI World TV used
Optus D2 and
Intelsat 8 until United Broadcasting International Pty Ltd ceased to trade on 8 June 2012
. •
Austar has ceased transmission 24 May 2012, prior to this,
Foxtel had acquired Austar. ==See also==