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News
ABI Research's Home Networking and Connected Home
Market Analysis: Value of Networked Consumer Electronics and Home
Networking Hardware to Reach $85 Billion by 2011 (10/4/2006)
According to a new study from ABI Research,
the market for home networking and connected entertainment devices
will grow at an astonishing rate over the next few years, as the
total value of home networking hardware, gateways, networked storage
devices and networked entertainment devices rises from $14 billion
in end-user revenue in 2005 to more than $85 billion by 2011. The
major driver in overall revenue growth for this market is the transformation
of most conventional consumer electronics devices such as game consoles,
DVD players, TVs and portable media players from stand-alone devices
to network-connected ones, using both wireless and wired IP communications
technologies.
"This market has reached a major turning
point," says Principal Analyst Michael Wolf. "Home networking has
moved beyond a basic broadband sharing model to one of networked
entertainment and convergence across the PC, consumer electronics
and communications devices. The emergence of enabling technologies
such as 802.11n for wireless video distribution, HomePlug AV and
MoCA as alternative multimedia network backbones, and DLNA media
server and device interoperability software, are all solidifying
the foundation for an explosion of new devices and applications
based on a fully connected home."
New digital media applications are creating
end-user demand for connected entertainment and communications devices.
The rise in popularity of multi-room PVR, place-shifting, and networked
gaming are fast creating an increased need for a pervasive connectivity
throughout the home, to the Internet and between different devices.
Service providers are also a catalyst in
this market, as IPTV providers such as Verizon, France Telecom,
PCCW and AT&T utilize home network technologies for video distribution,
while others look to home networking as a way to extend data services
without having to rewire the home. Residential gateways and networked
set top boxes are becoming standard requests as service providers
look for new revenue streams based on IP and converged networked
services.
"The total number of network connections
shipped into the connected home will grow from 247 million in 2005
to over 861 million by 2011," says Wolf. "Wi-Fi will become the
most common of the connection technologies, as consumers look to
connect home servers, gateways, networked consumer electronics and
portable devices over the media network."
The ABI Research study, "Home Networking
and Connected Home Market Analysis" examines all segments of the
home networking and networked entertainment market, and investigates
media networking and network storage for the home. It forms part
of the Home Networking Research Service.
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