SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -- Cingular Wireless, the biggest U.S. wireless service, plans to use RealNetworks' video streaming
technology to deliver video to mobile phones, the companies said late on Tuesday.
The deal is a key win for RealNetworks over its arch-rival Microsoft as both companies try to expand from the desktop into
the wireless services market.
"If Microsoft had won this contract the battle for the mobile media player market would have been close to being over," said
Ovum analyst Roger Entner, who noted that Microsoft is ahead of RealNetworks in the desktop media player market.
"This is version 2.0 of the media player battle. It shows that somebody is fighting back," Entner said.
Cingular's biggest rival, Verizon Wireless, uses Microsoft's media player for a mobile video service that delivers news and
entertainment video clips to customers using its high-speed wireless data network.
Like other operators around the world Cingular and Verizon are developing advanced services such as mobile video and music
in a bid to boost revenue as phone call prices fall and the number of potential new mobile phone users shrinks.
Along with music some analysts expect video services to become one of the hottest advanced mobile phone features.
Cingular, a venture of SBC Communications and BellSouth, plans to introduce a video service using RealNetworks technology
by year-end, the companies said.
Neither company disclosed details about the service which will run over a high-speed network that Cingular plans to build
in up to twenty markets by year end.
As well as putting its media player software in Cingular phones, RealNetworks also plans to host video programing content
for the operator's video service on its own computers.
Cingular also plans to use a mobile version of RealNetworks RealArcade video games, the companies said.