Move over, cable —

DirecTV will broadcast live 4K content by “early next year”

It wants to help solve the 4K content issue rather than focusing on hardware.

DirecTV will broadcast live 4K content by “early next year”

Even if 4K TVs were popular Black Friday and Cyber Monday steals, there continues to be a lack of 4K content to watch on them. DirecTV wants to provide a solution: the company's SVP of Video and Space Communications Phil Goswitz confirmed at New York's TranSPORT conference that DirecTV will launch a live 4K broadcasting service sometime in "early 2016."

At the conference, Goswitz explained that the company currently has the ability to transmit up to 50 new UHD channels, and live sports transmissions are already being tested as part of next year's rollout. DirecTV already has the hardware in place, and according to Goswitz, the company wants to get ahead of cable companies and provide viewers with 4K content they can't get from their cable companies. "I think the belief that there are technology challenges is a bit of a misinformed myth," he said. "I think technology throughout the entire ecosystem is ready. But I think content is king; the plane is ready to take off and there is no king on board."

Goswitz went on to say that DirecTV is "moving into working with partners" to create more 4K content. Currently Netflix and YouTube have some 4K video ready to stream, but most companies continue to focus on hardware. Roku and TiVo recently came out with updated set-top boxes ready for 4K streaming, but they still have to work with the finite amount of 4K content available.

This isn't DirecTV's first experiment with 4K—last year, the company launched its own 4K streaming service that featured content from Paramount Pictures and others. However, the service required the company's Genie HD DVR and one of a few select Samsung 4K/UHD TVs. Goswitz was not forthcoming with specifics about DirecTV's 4K broadcasting service, and there's no word on when in 2016 it will launch.

Channel Ars Technica