Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Multichannel News
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

EBIF Landscape, Revisited

by Leslie Ellis -- Multichannel News, 11/2/2009 2:00:00 AM

In the blur of last week’s mashup of cable events, the lingo landscape bulged with EBIF, pronounced “ee-biff.”

EBIF refresher: Five or so years ago, U.S. cable got wiggy about a U.K. interactive-TV staple that allowed viewers to participate with programs by “pressing red” whenever a “red button” appeared on the screen.

Work commenced at CableLabs to fast-track a way of doing “program synchronous” interactivity here, so that viewers could, say, click to vote a player off a reality show, or click to dive into the on-demand warehouse to pull up additional titles of an episodic show, or see longer-form versions of an ad.

A driving goal was ubiquity. Nobody wanted another interactive plan that worked only on a small subset of deployed set-top boxes. That body of work began to be called “ETV,” for “Enhanced TV.” The technology behind it was the Enhanced Binary Interchange Format.

Somewhere in there, Canoe was born and took the lead on the ad-centric applicability. That work will become reality yet this year, Canoe people said last week.

Comcast executives are similarly headlong into EBIF, which is good news — because if consumers are exposed only to EBIF triggers that lead exclusively to ads, they could easily “learn,” incorrectly, that clickable things on the TV screen are ads, so why bother.

The word from Comcast: 11 million set-tops will be EBIF-enabled by year-end; loads more next year. Applications will be launched in three categories: Content-based (a better way of saying “program synchronous”), widget-oriented (meaning not tied to a particular show) and guide extensions.

That last one was news to me. It makes sense, especially for expediency: Stop spending a year or more on enhancements, including testing a big, monolithic code footprint to work right on a huge and mixed base of deployed boxes. Instead, launch smaller features individually, and quickly, using EBIF.

Example: A “remind/record” app, which lets consumers ask to be reminded to watch favored programs. The “remind” part is aimed at people who don’t use a digital video recorder — you’re watching TV on one channel, and are reminded that you wanted to watch a different channel at that time.

This is one of those intuitive things, like Time Warner Cable’s “Start Over,” that just makes sense for TV. Case in point: Comcast placed the “remind/record” app on an ad for Lifetime’s Project Runway in its San Francisco market for four days; 2,600 people hit it.

I don’t know any Runway fans who wouldn’t dive at a chance to get a reminder (of anything) from Tim Gunn. The whole thing makes it tempting to call 2010 “the year of EBIF.” Someone should probably just say it.

Stumped by gibberish? Visit Leslie Ellis atwww.multichannel.com/blogorwww.translation-please.com.

RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email
Talkback
Related Content
More >>>

Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Related Resources

Advertisement

Related Microsite Content

Related Links

More Content
  • Voices
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

VIEW ALL VOICES RSS
HALL OF FAME WELCOME

2009 CABLE HALL OF FAME

Some snapshots from the 2009 Cable Hall of Fame induction, part of Cable Connection-Fall in Denver on Oct. 27.
HIGH ACHIEVER

2009 ACC FORUM

The Association of Cable Communicators headed west from Washington, D.C., to Denver as its 2009 Forum and Beacon Awards ceremony became part of Cable Connections-Fall festivities.
Curtain Rises

CTAM SUMMIT: DAY ONE

Snapshots from day one of CTAM Summit '09 in Denver. Photos by John Staley.

marketing module graphic
Advertisement
Multichannel Subscription
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2010 NewBay Media, LLC. 810 Seventh Avenue, 27th Floor, New York, NY 10019 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy