Information and Broadcasting Minister Anurag Thakur yesterday said efforts are afoot to have a built-in satellite tuner in television sets to offer access to over 200 channels, a move that could make set-top boxes redundant.
He said there has been a humongous expansion of general entertainment channels on Doordashan FreeDish, which has helped attract crores of viewers, according to a PTI report from Mumbai.
Indianbroadcastingworld.com was the first to report on January 10 that the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) has published the norms for digital television receivers with built-in satellite tuners, amongst three significant Indian standards in the area of electronics, facilitating easy viewing of free TV, especially those channels belonging to pubcaster Prasar Bharati. (https://www.indianbroadcastingworld.com/bis-publishes-standards-for-digital-tv-receivers-built-in-satellite-tuners/)
“I have made a new beginning in my department. If your television has a built-in satellite tuner, then there will be no need to have a separate set-top box. One can have access to more than 200 channels at the click of the remote,” Thakur told reporters, the PTI report further stated.
The minister, however, made it clear that the decision in this matter is yet to be taken.
In December last year, Thakur had written to Electronics and Information Technology Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw to issue directions to television manufacturers to adopt the standards issued by the Bureau of Industrial Standards for built-in satellite tuners.
Television sets with built-in satellite tuners would enable reception of free-to-air television (of public broadcaster Doordarshan) and radio channels by mounting a small antenna at a suitable place such as at the rooftop or side wall of a building.
At present, television viewers need to purchase a set-top box for viewing various paid and free channels.
The viewer is required to use a set-top box even for the reception of free-to-air channels (non-encrypted) transmitted by Doordarshan, which is in the process of phasing out analog transmission and free-to-air channels will continue to be broadcast using digital satellite transmission.
The number of households having Doordarshan FreeDish have more than doubled since 2015.
A KPMG report had pegged Doordarshan Free Dish users at 20 million in 2015. The number had increased to 43 million in 2021.
Thakur said as per the direction of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, SWAYAM Prabha channels were started for classes 1 to 12 in record time during the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure that the poor and those staying in rural areas had access to education.
“Today there are about 55 such channels and state governments are starting their own channels separately. Apart from news channels, there has been tremendous expansion of general entertainment channels on Free Dish,” he added.
Meanwhile, as reported by Indianbroadcastingworld.com, the Indian standard IS 18112:2022 specification is for television with built in satellite tuners. TVs manufactured as per this Indian standard would enable reception of free-to-air TV and radio channels just by connecting a dish antenna with LNB (low noise box) mounted at a suitable place like the rooftop or side wall of a building.
This would facilitate transmission of knowledge about government initiatives, schemes, educational content of Doordarshan and repository of Indian culture programmes to reach and benefit a wide segment of population in the country, the government had said in a statement mid January.