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Joe-Thanks for all you have done here. Yep, seems it's time to move on.
Thanks Joe and D.inkie.(eom)
Are we tied in with Motorola ColdFire?-Interesting question.
High Speed Thermal Printer
This printer based on the Motorola 5272 ColdFire processor and utilising a USB connection to the host computer is capable of drawing at least 32 traces at chart speeds in excess of 100mm/sec. Sterling, drawing on its experience with the implementation of thermal printing in a number of medical devices, implemented all of the software in this device including the USB interface and the highly efficient thermal drawing algorithms.
Platform: Coldfire 5272 Processor with MicroOS-II
http://216.239.57.100/search?q=cache:-0j9ZySn5N4C:www.sterling1.com/project.htm+motorola+microos&...
Oz-Thanks. That's the confirmation for sure.
Ok-Thanks Tin.
Did e.Digital use the term, "drag and drop", or was it "drag and rip"? Thanks.
Med Rare-Thanks for the post. Look back thru the posts earlier today to see discussion on this. It has VoiceNav, it must be our player. Here's a link to their line of players, found by Sentinel. See the HD 100 in lower right. Things are looking up.
http://www.cprh.ch/produkte/mpio/neue%20Modelle/NEW_MODEL_LINE.htm
Moxa-There it is. Thanks. (eom)
OT-Murgirl-Congratulations to your son and I'm sure he is a special credit to you. God's speed be with you and your son.
DivX News this week:
DivX News (Number 38, 2003-02-07)
=================================
What's Hot in the World of DivX(R) Video This Week:
Black Rock, DivX Help Guides, and More
Now Sent to Over 2 Million DivX Fans Worldwide!
Welcome to the latest edition of the DivX News, your weekly fix of
information about what's hot and what's cool in the world of DivX
video.
(You are being sent this email because you subscribed to this
newsletter at DivX.com. If you'd like to unsubscribe, follow
the instructions at the end of this message.)
In This Week's Issue
--------------------
1. Featured DivX Movie: Black Rock
2. DivX Guides Are Here to Help
3. In Other News...
Featured DivX Movie: Black Rock
-------------------------------
The Movies section of DivX.com offers a showcase of the most
interesting content available in DivX format, including
user-submitted short films and a range of titles from our content
partners. This week's featured DivX movie, Black Rock, was an
official selection at the 1997 Sundance Film Festival. Black Rock
is an acclaimed Australian independent film that tells the story
of a group of teenage friends and the brutal act of violence that
tears them apart. The film, from DivX partner Vanguard Cinema,
features budding Australian superstar Heath Ledger in a supporting
role.
* Watch Black Rock in the Movies section of DivX.com:
<http://www.divx.com/movies>
* Check out more independent titles from Vanguard Cinema:
<http://www.vanguard-cinema.com/divx/index.html>
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VISIT DIVX.COM TO PURCHASE RADEON 9700 PRO TODAY
<http://www.divx.com/hardware/detail.php?id=43>
%------------------ADVERTISEMENT------------------%
DivX Guides Are Here to Help
----------------------------
The recent release of DivX 5.0.3 has spurred increased traffic in
the DivX.com forums, with users anxious to provide feedback on new
features and study at the feet of Grizzled Old Journeymen and DivX
Masters. While the forums offer a great resource for DivX newbies
and veterans alike, they are not the only source of valuable
information on DivX.com. The DivX Help guides in our support
section contain everything you ever wanted to know about DivX
video but were afraid to ask, from watching DivX movies on your TV
to encoding your videos Gej-style. The official DivX Guide is
newly updated for DivX 5.0.3, and it's a great first stop for
anyone seeking to better understand the features and functionality
of the new release.
* Read the Official DivX Guide, updated for DivX 5.0.3:
<http://www.divx.com/support/divx/guide.php>
* Browse all the DivX Help Guides:
<http://www.divx.com/support/guides/index.php>
In Other News...
----------------
In the news this week: CNET News takes a closer look at DivX, The
Matrix blurs the line between movies and video games, and a
glimpse at the future of DVD.
* DivX Software Delivers Movable Media--CNET News.com
<http://news.com.com/2100-1023-982771.html?tag=cd_mh>
CNET takes a look at DivX 5.0.3 and the emergence of DivX
Certified consumer electronics devices.
* 'Matrix' Blurs Lines Between Video Game, Movies--Reuters
<http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=569&ncid=738&e=&u=/nm/20030206/tc_n...
An interesting look at the tie-in between the Matrix sequels and
the upcoming "Enter the Matrix" video game. The article discusses
the ever-increasing convergence of theme and content between
blockbuster movies and games.
* The Hottest Thing Since Sliced Bread-DVD!--DTV Professional
<http://www.dtvprofessional.com/cgi-bin/getframeletter.cgi?/2003/01_jan/features/jpadvd012703.htm>
An article about the emerging DVD market by well-respected analyst
Dr. Jon Peddie includes a section on DivX video and a look at the
future of DVD players.
That's all we have for you this week. Thanks for supporting DivX
video. Please feel free to send us any comments and suggestions
at <info@divx.com>.
Until next time,
The DivX Team
P.S. If you have friends that you think would enjoy receiving
this newsletter, please forward this message on to them.
--
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Hadn't noticed before that a spokesman from 20th Century Fox is speaking just before Steve Ferguson of e.Digital at the IFE conference in April.
http://216.239.57.100/search?q=cache:vduk697ndb0C:www.ipec2003.com/program.htm+boeing+portable+infli...
THE WORLD OF IFE Rich content, poor airlines
IFE meets the challenge of the air transport downturn
DAY ONE: MONDAY APRIL 7, 2003
PLENARY SESSION
09.00 Chairman's opening remarks
Michael Planey, IFE, marketing and transportation consultant, USA
09.05 Welcome address
Stephen Timms MP, Minister of State for e-Commerce and Competitiveness, Department of Trade and Industry, UK*
09.10 Keynote address
IFE in a transformed air transport industry
How do airlines see the role of IFE in an industry transformed by the impact of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, continuing adverse economic conditions, reduced business travel, the need for more intrusive security, and the aggressive expansion of the low-cost operators? What are the prospects for increased investment in systems and content, and is there any way for the IFE community to help its airline partners weather the storm?
Alexander Arafa, VP product management and development, Swiss International Air Lines, Switzerland*
09.30 Opening address
IFE and the customer service proposition: how big a part does it play?
Past hopes that IFE would swiftly become a key differentiator in attracting passengers seem to have been dashed as airlines face the realities of operating in a radically different marketplace. Business travellers are now more interested in security and efficiency of operation than in entertainment and productivity. Or are they? Can the inflight email and Internet access providers deliver on their promises and help move IFE towards the customer-service centre-stage? And will the new generation of rich-media digital content prove to be an effective weapon in the marketing war for the leisure dollar?
Kevin George, senior manager product change, British Airways, UK
09.45 THE 64,000-DOLLAR DEBATE
Revenue generation and return on IFE investment - what's the bottom line?
Airlines have invested heavily in cutting-edge IFE systems, only to see the goalposts move as advancing technology has raised passenger expectations again and again. Can yet another round of spending be justified and funded? And can IFE offerings become a worthwhile source of revenue for the airlines and their service providers?
Moderated by Walé Adepoju, CEO, Inflight Management Development Centre, UK
John Caulcutt, CEO, Watermark Group, UK
John Rohr, managing director video services, Pace Communications, USA
Don McLaren, head of IFE and onboard IT, SWISS, Switzerland
10.15-10.45 COFFEE BREAK AND EXHIBITION
10.45 Customer attitudes to IFE - what do passengers want?
An exclusive, in-depth look at customer attitudes to IFE. What are their real preferences? How do they rate current offerings and what do they want in the future? How important is IFE when they book their flights? Are they impressed by promises of inflight connectivity?
Walé Adepoju, CEO, Inflight Management Development Centre, UK
11.10 SPECIAL SHOWCASE PRESENTATION
The wireless cabin - who wants it?
The wireless cabin is one of the hottest topics in IFE today. Are its potential cost, weight and passenger service benefits just around the corner, or will safety worries delay its introduction? And if it proves practicable, will airlines and passengers want it? Dr Andrew Rogoyski of UK consultancy ESYS sets the scene for the Big Issue session by describing the results from his market research campaign for Europe's WirelessCabin project.
Dr Andrew Rogoyski, consultant, ESYS, UK
11.35 OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION moderated by Michael Planey
12.00-14.00 LUNCH (SPONSORED BY IEC IN-FLIGHT SYSTEMS) AND EXHIBITION
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
14.00 IFE TECHNOLOGY SESSION 1
Moderated by technology chairman Michael Childers, CEO, LightStream Communications, USA
DELIVERING EMAIL AND THE INTERNET
While inflight phone continues its uphill struggle, the signs are that email and Internet access will find a ready response from passengers. The variety of offerings making their way towards the air transport marketplace reflect two schools of thought - the evolutionaries, building on existing technologies and adding bandwidth on demand, and the revolutionaries, with their radical new solutions.
The evolutionaries: Tenzing Communications
Creator of patented techniques to optimise the efficiency and minimise the cost of air-ground data communications, Tenzing aims to duplicate in the aircraft the level of access to business data already afforded by personal mobile devices on the ground.
John Wade, EVP operations and general manager, Tenzing Communications, USA
14.00 CORPORATE CABIN MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
MINI-CONFERENCE
Moderated by Chris Nicholls, VP sales and marketing, IEC In-flight Systems, UK
Opening address
Cabin management systems: too good to be true?
The CMS suppliers appear confident of their ability to meet the growing demand for more functionality and connectivity. But are they falling into the same trap as some of the first-generation air transport IFE suppliers and promising ambitious systems that they may not be able to deliver?
Todd Zarfos, director airplane systems, Boeing Commercial Aviation Services, USA*
14.20 The evolutionaries: Inmarsat
Aeronautical satcoms pioneer Inmarsat has seen its data capability evolve from the 9.6kbitsec of its initial system to today's Swift64 64kbit/sec service and is laying plans for the 432kbit/sec potential of its fourth-generation satellites.
Tony Busby, general manager aeronautical business, Inmarsat Ltd, UK 14.30 CCMS SESSION 1
THE OWNER/OPERATOR'S VIEW
What the flight department wants from a CMS
Owners are usually the prime movers behind what goes into the cabin. But the people responsible for operating the aircraft also need to have a say. A flight department's view of CMS technology, functionality, reliability, ergonomics, support and future requirements
Todd Chisholm, chief pilot, GE Corporate, USA*
14.40 The revolutionaries: AirTV
AirTV believes that only a purpose-built broadband solution is good enough and is venturing into the virgin territory of S-band to provide it.Robert M. Sorbello, senior vice-president engineering and technology, AirTV, USA
14.50 Sponsor presentation
15.00 The revolutionaries: Connexion by Boeing
Connexion by Boeing shares the broadband vision but is avoiding some of the cost of entry by building its new system on the foundation of existing commercial satellite capacity.
Ed Laase, director of system development, Connexion by Boeing, USA
15.00 What the big operators want from a CMS
The influences at work on a big lessor or fractional-ownership operator are significantly different from those affecting a compact corporate flight department. With many more aircraft and varying numbers of different airframes to equip, what are the big operators looking for in a CMS?
David Kinson, EVP marketing and development, PrivatAir, Switzerland*
15.20-15.45 COFFEE BREAK AND EXHIBITION
15.20-16.00 COFFEE BREAK AND EXHIBITION
15.45 IFE TECHNOLOGY SESSION 2
Moderated by Michael Childers
SATELLITE CONNECTIVITY: THE AIRLINE VIEW
The first quarter of 2003 could go down in history as marking the debut of commercially significant satellite data communications for the air transport industry. Two airlines talk about their trials work with AirTV and Connexion by Boeing. Inmarsat users and service providers describe their operational experience and look forward to the arrival of Swift64 in the airline arena
Alitalia and AirTV
As AirTV moves towards the introduction of an ambitious four-satellite system in the middle of the decade, the US company is working with Italy's national carrier to prove its initial service concepts
Richard Stone, EVP content and programming, AirTV, USAInvited Alitalia representative. 16.00 Sponsor presentation
Doug Leis, director sales and marketing, IEC In-flight Systems, UK
16.05 Lufthansa and Connexion by Boeing
The head of the Lufthansa airborne Internet project comes to IPEC with the first results from the German carrier's trial of Connexion by Boeing.
Dr-Ing Burkard Wigger, general manager, Project Lufthansa FlyNet, Lufthansa, Germany
Stanley Deal, Director of commercial services, Connexion by Boeing, USA 16.15 CCMS SESSION 2
Moderated by Chris Nicholls
THE COMPLETION CENTRE VIEW
CMS integration - jumping through the regulatory hoops
The plug-and-play CMS is still a long way off. An installations specialist describes some of the technical challenges - RTCA DO 160 specifications, power interrupt and smoke emission standards, FAA supplemental type certification, COTS equipment - encountered when integrating CMS during aircraft completions.
Steve Walton, director systems integration, DeCrane Aircraft, USA
16.25 The Inmarsat service providers and their
customers
Most of the world's long-haul airliners are equipped for voice and data communications via Inmarsat. A selection of carriers and service providers talk about their current capabilities, consider applications for the new Swift64 64kbit/sec service, and look forward to the broadband potential of the Inmarsat fourth-generation satellites.
David Coiley, director business development passenger services, ARINC, USA
Stuart Jewell, IFE analyst, Virgin Atlantic Airways, UK
Sasha John, marketing manager aeronautical, Stratos, UK
David Knerr, manager of flight dispatch, United Airlines, USA
Joel Ehrman, aeronautical accounts manager, Telenor Satellite Services, USA
George Cooper, VP aircraft communications, SITA, International
16.35 CMS requirements - staying one step ahead of the customer
The completion centre's sales team has a unique perspective on what customers say they want from CMS and what they are ready to pay for. A top completions salesman takes a cool look at current and future customer requirements.
Dan Preble, manager of executive aircraft programmes, L-3 Communications Integrated Systems, USA*
16.45 OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION moderated by Michael Childers
16.55 OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION moderated by Chris Nicholls
17.15 COCKTAIL RECEPTION IN EXHIBITION AREA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE WORLD OF IFE
Rich content, poor airlines
IFE meets the challenge of the air transport downturn
DAY TWO: TUESDAY APRIL 8, 2003
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
09.00 IFE TECHNOLOGY SESSION 3
Moderated by Michael Childers
SYSTEM SUPPLIERS' FORUM
In recent years the leading IFE suppliers have striven to shake off their analogue legacy to produce light, robust digital systems capable of meeting growing passenger expectations. At the same time, all-digital newcomers have entered the market. Now yet another set of challenges is emerging. As the low-cost carriers continue their advance, what will appeal to this most cost-conscious of sectors? And how seriously should the manufacturers take the idea of distributed IFE, with devices such as the proposed portable hard-drives and wireless-enabled laptops taking over from embedded systems on the aircraft?
Rockwell Collins
With its PAVES solution for single-aisle aircraft, Total Entertainment System (TES) for widebodies and now the connectivity-enabled eTES, Rockwell Collins has its sights on the whole of the air transport market.Dave Frankenbach, director advanced product planning, Rockwell Collins, USA*
09.00 CCMS MINI-CONFERENCE SESSION 3
Moderated by Chris Nicholls
COMMUNICATIONS, CERTIFICATION AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Communications - meeting the broadband challenge
How much data bandwidth is enough? One leading aviation communications provider is betting that if it builds a megabit-rated data pipe the corporate operators will find ways to use it.
Tom Mullan, senior director ARINC broadband services, USA
09.20 Thales Avionics
The i-Series range spearheads Thales Avionics' offer to the airlines, integrating communications, laptop power and entertainment in a single flexible platform.
Joe Patti, director product marketing, Thales Avionics In-Flight Systems, USA 09.20 Communications - data delivery for today's office in the sky
A leading supplier of communications solutions to corporate aviation describes how the Inmarsat Swift64 64kbit/sec service is turning the office in the sky into a practical reality.
David Greenhill, business development director, Satcom Direct Inc, USA
09.40 Delta Beta In-Flight
Delta Beta's Self-Contained In-Seat Entertainment (SCISE) system does away with servers and seat boxes by packing capability into the passenger display units.
Henry DeBey, president and CEO, Delta Beta In-Flight, USA
09.40 CMS certification - living with tighter requirements
The completion centres are having to learn to live with new and tighter requirements governing the certification of CMS installations.
Russ Wenman, managing director, BBJ Design Services, UK
10.00 Global Aviation
Aiming for low costs and high maintainability, Global Aviation has based its SMC-3000 SkyMediaCenter on commercial off-the-shelf systems and years of experience in the installations business.
Manuel Beltran, chief technology officer, Global Aviation International, USA 10.00 Installation or irritation?
The road to customer satisfaction does not always run smooth. A customer representative with years of experience of overseeing aircraft completions describes some of the possible pitfalls of a CMS installation campaign, including unsatisfactory communications between the completion centre and the CMS supplier, and lack of project planning
Flo Ciobotaru, executive VP, AIMS, Canada
10.20-10.50 COFFEE BREAK
10.50 IFE TECHNOLOGY SESSION 4
Moderated by Michael Childers
SHOWCASE PRESENTATION
The low-cost opportunity
Some say the low-cost airlines, with their tight controls on spending, can never be a significant opportunity for IFE suppliers. Others point to JetBlue, which offers its passengers in-flight TV, and to lower-risk business models for the airlines. The single-aisle solutions look right for the low-cost fleets - can the operators be persuaded? A leading supplier weighs up the odds
Alan Pellegrini, senior vice-president marketing and operations, Matsushita Avionics Systems, USA
Christos Fournias, inflight services manager, Cyprus Airways, Cyprus
10.50 CCMS SESSION 4
Moderated by Chris Nicholls
ONBOARD NETWORKS
The heart of the matter - the case for an airborne server
Not so long ago, a simple telecommunications router was all that even the most advanced corporate cabin needed in the way of network management. Now, as users demand a range of new capabilities, the smart operator is specifying an airborne network server
Bob Rodgers, president, Pentar Avionics, USA
11.15 A new approach to airline IFE installations
IFE retrofits can be inelegant, inefficient and more costly than they need to be. One installation provider believes there's a better way.
George Smallhorn, president and general manager, Inflight Canada, Canada*
11.05 Sponsor presentation
11.35 PANEL
IFE reliability and maintainability
Over the years IFE systems have attracted an unwelcome reputation for complexity and unreliability. Are the criticisms still justified? If they are, what can be done to toughen up installations, improve availability and reduce maintenance cost and downtime?
Andrew Armstrong, project manager customer avionics, Air Canada Technical Services, Canada
Ricky Frick, president and CEO, AirWorks, USA George Smallhorn, president and general manager, Inflight Canada, Canada*Peter Chilsen, manager business development, ECS, USA*
Henry DeBey, president and CEO, Delta Beta In-Flight, USA
11.20 Solutions for the big jets
Bigger and even more costly than the top-of-the-range purpose-designed bizjets, the Airbus Corporate Jet, Boeing Business Jet and the widebody head-of-state conversions present the CMS community with some particular challenges.
Andrew Muirhead, manager innovation engineering, Lufthansa Technik, Germany
11.55 OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION moderated by Michael Childers
11.35
11.50
Sponsor presentation
OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION moderated by Chris Nicholls
12.15-14.00 LUNCH (SPONSORED BY ROCKWELL COLLINS) AND EXHIBITION
14.00 IPEC 2003 EXHIBITION
IPEC 2003 promises to be richer in content than ever before. But delegates also need time to stand,stare, think and derive maximum benefit from having the industry on one spot. So this session has been set aside to give delegates time to compare and contrast the latest offerings and discuss their needs with suppliers.
16.30 COCKTAIL RECEPTION IN EXHIBITION AREA
With the day's timetable complete, a relaxed opportunity to meet old friends and new contacts and let the information and ideas flow.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE WORLD OF IFE
Rich content, poor airlines
IFE meets the challenge of the air transport downturn
DAY THREE: WEDNESDAY APRIL 9, 2003
BREAKOUT SESSIONS
09.00 IFE TECHNOLOGY SESSION 5
Moderated by:
Brendan Gallagher, editor, Inflight magazine
Peter Lemme, chief technical officer, Tenzing Communications, USA
THE BIG ISSUE: WIRELESS IN THE CABIN AND THE TERMINAL
The growing demand for wireless-based services in the cabin and the terminal is both an opportunity for the suppliers and a burden for the airlines and regulators. What are the technology options, how real are the air safety fears voiced in some quarters, and what are the prospects for a timely regulatory and technical resolution?
THE BASIC TECHNOLOGIES
Weighing up wireless: the pluses and minuses
Several wireless technologies - cellular, ultra-wideband, Bluetooth, IEEE 802.11b, DIR, Gatelink, Terminal Cellular Bridge - are jostling for a place in air transport. How do they work, and what are their strengths and weaknesses?
Joe Winston, director business development, Formation Inc, USA
Rod Farley, president, IMS Consultants, USA
09.00 CONTENT SEMINAR
Moderated by Michael Childers
CONTENT MANAGEMENT IN AN EVOLUTIONARY WORLD
For the first time IPEC devotes a special session to content, both traditional and the emerging alternatives. The familiar staples of movies, news and sitcoms are being supplemented by interactive offerings such as games. What is the likely future balance between "lean back" traditional content and "lean forward" interactive? And how will digital delivery and other new technologies affect the nature and management of inflight content?
CONTENT SESSION 1
EMERGING IFE CONTENT AND HOW TO MANAGE IT
Content management, media integration, media metrics, network delivery and interactivity are products of the rise of digital technology in IFE. This session gets its hands on the tools of the new digital disciplines
Network delivery: A content provider's perspective
Content providers are moving towards a world of digital delivery and asset management. Digital television is emerging rapidly and digital cinema is in the offing. A new IFE content delivery supply chain is being forged, and its links are MPEG-4, digital rights management and XML.
Julian Levin, executive VP of digital exhibition and nontheatrical, 20th Century Fox, USA*
09.20 Wireless in the cabin: a better way to LAN?
How wireless LANs could score over cable-based networks in the airliner cabin.
Ralf Wolckenhauer, chief engineer, Airbus In-Flight Information Services, Germany
09.20 Turbocharged software for digital delivery
IFE may be forsaking MPEG-1 for MPEG-2, but content providers are moving on to MPEG-4 and have MPEG-7 and MPEG-21 in their sights. The newest versions of MPEG-4 promise MPEG-2 quality at 1-1.5Mbit/sec - see it demonstrated on a big screen and hear about the developments that will shift digital delivery up another gear.
Marty Levine, VP business development, Consumer Platforms, iVAST Inc, USA
09.40 Wireless in the terminal: a quick win?
The regulatory road to the wireless cabin may stretch into the distance, but carriers and airport operators could quickly meet some of the demand from passengers by offering wireless connectivity in the terminal during waiting-to-board and dwell time. A view of wireless "hot spot" services from the company that pioneered the technology in Europe
Chris Brown, VP business development and UK country manager, Megabeam Networks Ltd, UK.
09.40 mContent: Will distributed mobile platforms challenge embedded IFE?
Steve Ferguson, VP sales and marketing, e.Digital Corporation, USA
Passengers often spend hours in the terminal - so why should the IFE experience be confined to the aircraft? Airport wireless networks, portable hard-drives and laptops could extend the reach of IFE to the other side of the gate - and even one day make embedded in-seat systems obsolete. Judge for yourself as the portable hard-drive makes its IPEC debut
10.00-10.30 COFFEE BREAK AND EXHIBITION 10.00 Metrics: Opening the door to real-time content management
The introduction of metrics is taking the guesswork out of IFE content management. Reporting quickly and comprehensively on content usage, could metrics software combine with digital delivery to replace the time-honoured 30-day programme cycle with something more responsive and flexible? User airlines will be at IPEC to show off the method in their metrics
Airlines and their suppliers will describe their operational use of metrics
10.30 IFE TECHNOLOGY SESSION 6
Moderated by Michael Childers and Peter Lemme
THE BIG ISSUE: WIRELESS IN THE CABIN AND THE TERMINAL (CONTINUED)
INTERFERENCE AND SPECTRUM MANAGEMENT/ALLOCATION
Ultra-wideband and Bluetooth: deadly duo or heavenly twins?
One was pioneered by Second World War film star Hedy Lamarr to protect radio-guided torpedoes from enemy jamming, the other takes its name from a Viking monarch with a taste for blueberries. Together they could revolutionise the use of laptops and other personal electronic devices. But there are fears that ultra-wideband, particularly in combination with Bluetooth, can interfere with safety-critical systems on the aircraft. Is there a sound basis for these concerns? And if so, does spectrum allocation offer a solution?
James Miller, Programme manager, United Airlines, USA
10.20-10.45 COFFEE BREAK AND EXHIBITION
10.50 Cellular: tomorrow's inflight phone?
After years of profitless operations, inflight telephony recently looked like a discredited business. But now it could find salvation in cellular technology. A new US operator makes the commercial and technical case for cellular-based inflight phone and comments on the present objections to the use of passengers' own cellphones in the cabin.
Jack Blumenstein, chairman and CEO, AirCell Inc, USA 10.45 CONTENT SESSION 2
Moderated by Brendan Gallagher
THE IMPACT OF TECHNOLOGY ON TRADITIONAL IFE CONTENT
The changing world of IFE news
The world's largest provider of inflight news, CNN has migrated from tape to server-based distribution and is now entering the world of media asset management. Specialist subsidiary Turner Inflight Services not only provides news aboard the aircraft but is also among the first to extend its offering into the terminal itself.
Bob Garner, director, Turner Inflight Services, USA
11.10 OPEN FORUM DISCUSSION moderated by: Brendan Gallagher and Peter Lemme
11.05 Low-risk route to live television?
AIRIA plans to use the existing Inmarsat aeronautical system to deliver onboard live television worldwide from the fourth quarter of 2003. Can this new application of established technology give the company a head start in the airline TV market? And what effect could it have on consumption of ground-loaded content?
Vardhan Rajkumar, VP marketing, AIRIA, UK
11.30 SHOWCASE PRESENTATION
Cellular/satellite convergence
Inflight telephony has been a consistent disappointment to service providers. Impatient of the complications and nervous about cost, passengers have never phoned home in the expected numbers. But now an emerging technology promises to bring cellphone convenience to the airliner cabin. How technically mature is cellular/satellite interworking, and what are the prospects for early regulatory approval?
Nick Green, principal consultant, Logica, UK
George Cooper, VP aircraft communications, SITA, International
Don McLaren, head of IFE and onboard IT, SWISS, Switzerland 11.25 Inflight games: the bridge between static and interactive?
Already enormously popular, inflight games are getting a fresh boost in the form of multi-user capability. Will growing play power tip the IFE balance in favour of interactivity?
Louis Belanger-Martin, executive vice-president, DTI Software, Canada
11.50 OPEN FORUM moderated by Michael Childers 11.45 Interactive IFE: lean-back versus lean-forward
Are airline passengers flying couch potatoes who prefer to lean back and watch fixed-time, channel-differentiated programming? Or do they want to lean forward and take charge, treating IFE just like their home entertainment systems?
Dave Tharp, CEO, Inflight Digital, UK
12.05 OPEN FORUM moderated by Brendan Gallagher
12.15-14.00 LUNCH (SPONSORED BY VERIZON) AND EXHIBITION
PLENARY SESSIONS
14.00 THE LEADERS' DEBATE
Moderated by Michael Childers and Michael Planey
IFE - caught in the airline survival squeeze?
Battered from one side by the most damaging downturn in air transport history and from the other by the onward march of the low-costs, many of the full-service long-haul carriers have little interest in putting precious survival dollars into IFE.
But passengers are used to ever richer mobile communications and electronic entertainment on the ground and are demanding something similar in the air.
How will the airlines square the circle? What will their decisions mean for the IFE industry?
In this concluding Leaders' Debate, experts from airlines, system suppliers and independent consultancies will discuss the industry's likely trajectory over the next few years
14.45-15.15 COFFEE BREAK AND EXHIBITION
15.15 DELEGATES' DEBATE
Delegates debate the issues with the chairmen, consultants and industry leaders.
15.55 Conference chairman's summary
16.00 COCKTAIL RECEPTION
Sinkman-Very good thought process, imo. Too good to be true? a real longshot? We shall see. I believe that if e.Digital survives as a company, these presently so-called longshots, and these too good to be true scenarios, will be realized in more ways than one. Their technology was ahead of it's time, and the world economy didn't help it get kick started earlier. That time may now be near. Imo, their technology is important to the industry going forward, just as it was a few years ago. We shall see. Thanks for the post.
Sent-Thanks for the update and I agree with Berge, they should be tight lipped always. If this thing turns into what I think it will, then all of this daily minutia will be a non-factor. Take care.
An interesting video on the YP-900GT by Samsung.
I played it on real player at 56K and it is good listening.
http://news.com.com/2014-1089-0.html?tag=vid#
Hit on the icon on the left side next to:
January 27, 2003 Samsung's audio player takes on iPod
Mark Farish, product manager, Samsung
Just ran by this again-Seems we are all around the big boys. One of these days, it will begin.
September 12, 2002
Microsoft Wins a Spot on the Set-top
By Thor Olavsrud
Continuing its drive to gain a foothold outside of the (PC) box, Microsoft (Quote, Company Info) Thursday used IBC2002 in Amsterdam as a platform to announce support by major set-top box and digital media appliance chip makers, as well as European broadcast technology firms, for its Windows Media 9 Series.
Windows Media 9 Series, formerly code-named Corona, was unleashed last week in Los Angeles.
In the past few years, Microsoft has been striving to push its influence beyond the slumping PC market in an effort to diversify its revenue streams. The software giant has played aggressively for the handheld and game console spaces, and has dipped its toes in the embedded operating system market, interactive television, and other digital media appliances.
From the beginning, Microsoft has made it clear that it will be focus its strategy on securing hardware partners for the Corona technology, while also seeking to reel in the entertainment industry with a new distribution outlet for its products.
The customer wins announced Thursday, which include chip makers Equator Technologies, National Semiconductor, Sigma Designers, STMicroelectronics and Texas Instruments, will help Microsoft work its way deeper into the set-top box market. Microsoft has also won over broadcast systems hardware firms TANDBERG Television and Optibase, box makers Pace Micro Technologies and Moviesystem, and VoD provider Yes Television.
"Windows Media 9 Series is a significant step forward in the evolution of digital television, especially for telcos and broadband network operators that deliver more content and services than ever," said Tim Fern, chief technology officer at Pace Micro Technology, which will manufacture set-top boxes using chips that support Microsoft's Windows Media 9 Series. "Advanced silicon supporting Windows Media 9 Series has been important to our development of the world's first Windows Media 9 Series set-top box, which will be on show at IBC2002. Not only has it helped us make product costs viable, it has reduced our time to market -- crucial factors for our telco and operator customers."
The partnership with set-top box chip makers will especially help to drive Microsoft deep into the market. Equator, whose BSP series System-on-a-chip processors support Windows Media 9 Audio and Video supplies its chips to many set-top box manufacturers, including Pace. National Semiconductor, which has provided support for playback and decoding of Windows Media Audio and Video in its Geode processors and Geode CS1201 media coprocessor, supplies chips to Pioneer, and other Japanese manufacturers. Sigma Design's new EM8500 DVD decoder chip supports playback of Windows Media Audio -- and future chips will support video -- and supplies chips to Fujitsu Siemens Computers, Samsung Electronics and Kreatel Communications AB.
Meanwhile, Microsoft is making strides among European broadcast hardware and distribution firms. NTL Broadcast, partnered with TANDBERG, used IBC2002 as an opportunity to demonstrate their new technology, which uses Windows Media Video 9 format to encode high-quality video and then deliver it in real time over a DVB-T mobile network to moving vehicles in Amsterdam. IBC shuttle vehicles, traveling through Amsterdam will receive ITN news stories and British Eurosport video via the standard DVB-T infrastructure.
Of course, Microsoft is not the only digital video and audio technology firm that is aiming to nest itself inside digital media appliances. Competitor DivXNetworks, in April, cozied up to Texas Instruments, which is embedding DivX's codec on its chips. And earlier that month, it partnered with e.Digital, which is using DivX's technology in its consumer electronics devices, including MP3 players.
"We are pursuing relationships with a number of different chip companies to port DivX to their chips for a number of devices," said DivXNetworks spokesman Tom Huntington. He noted that more partnerships will be announced soon.
"We're very much a consumer facing company," Huntington said. "Our company is still driven by consumers, but consumers are demanding convergence devices that allow them to play back their DivX videos."
Huntington said the firm is developing relationships with both large and small content providers, and has had some "encouraging conversations" with a number of Hollywood studios.
But while DivXNetworks is looking to forge partnerships with more mainstream content distributors, Huntington also noted that the company is being careful to keep its eye on what it's users want and need.
"Our strategy is driven by what consumers want," he said. "They want to be able to create and distribute their own videos. There's a whole universe of other content outside mainstream Hollywood that is particularly attractive to our users."
http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/1461881
OT- BW)(CO-MPEG-LA) MPEG LA Releases MPEG-4 Systems Patent Portfolio License
Business Editors/High-Tech Writers
DENVER--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 4, 2003--MPEG LA today announced the availability of the MPEG-4 Systems Patent Portfolio License.
Copies of the License may be obtained at www.mpegla.com, "MPEG-4 Systems," "The License Agreement," by telephone 301/986-6660, ext. 209, or email eharvey@mpegla.com. For more information, see "MPEG-4 Systems" at www.mpegla.com.
The MPEG-4 Systems Patent Portfolio License provides fair, reasonable, nondiscriminatory access under a single license to essential MPEG-4 Systems intellectual property owned by many patent holders. The License includes essential patents owned by Apple Computer, Inc.; Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI); France Telecom, S.A.; Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.; Mitsubishi Electric Corporation; Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.; and Sun Microsystems, Inc.
MPEG LA Chief Executive Officer Baryn S. Futa said: "MPEG-4 Systems is an indispensable technology. MPEG LA is pleased to be able to offer this License for the benefit of the marketplace."
MPEG LA's objective is to include as much essential intellectual property as possible for the convenience of the marketplace. Therefore, any party that believes it has patents that are essential to the MPEG-4 Systems Standard (ISO/IEC 14496-1:2001 (Part 1:Systems), 14496-1:2001/Amd.1:2001 (Extended BIFS)) and wishes to join upon successful evaluation, is invited to submit such patents to the independent Patent Evaluator together with a statement confirming its agreement with the objectives and intention to abide by terms and procedures governing the patent submission process, which may be obtained from Jane Tannenbaum, Director, Contract Administration (jtannenbaum@mpegla.com) or Jll McLain, Contract Administrator (jmclain@mpegla.com), MPEG LA, LLC.
MPEG LA, LLC
MPEG LA successfully pioneered one-stop technology standards licensing beginning with a portfolio of essential patents for the international digital video compression standard known as MPEG-2, which it began licensing in 1997. One-stop technology standards licensing enables widespread technological implementation, interoperability and use of fundamental technologies covered by many patents owned by many patent holders. MPEG LA provides users with fair, reasonable, nondiscriminatory access to these essential patents on a worldwide basis under a single license. For more information, please refer to http://www.mpegla.com, http://www.1394la.com and http://www.dvbla.com.
--30--amm/dx*
CONTACT: MPEG LA, LLC
Lawrence Horn, 301/986-6660
301/986-8575 (fax)
lhorn@mpegla.com
KEYWORD: TRACK COLORADO INTERNATIONAL EUROPE ASIA PACIFIC
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: CABLE HARDWARE SOFTWARE TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELEVISION/RADIO
SOURCE: MPEG LA, LLC
Dan'l-Did you ever get a reply?
Ark-Looks like a pretty nice toy. Thanks.
DivX news this week:
DivX News (Number 37, 2003-01-31)
=================================
What's Hot in the World of DivX(R) Video This Week:
DivX 5.0.3, CyberLink/DivX Deal, and More
Now Sent to Over 2 Million DivX Fans Worldwide!
Welcome to the first edition of the DivX News in 2003! The DivX
News is your weekly fix of information about what's hot and what's
cool in the world of DivX video.
(You are being sent this email because you subscribed to this
newsletter at DivX.com. If you'd like to unsubscribe, follow
the instructions at the end of this message.)
In This Week's Issue
--------------------
1. DivX 5.0.3 Released
2. CyberLink Multimedia Software to Include DivX
3. In Other News...
DivX 5.0.3 Released
-------------------
By far the biggest story of the past week is the long-awaited
release of DivX(R) 5.0.3. The first new DivX release in over eight
months, DivX 5.0.3 includes a number of new features and
optimizations. The first of many exciting new DivX products to
come your way in 2003, the new release was specifically built to
integrate with the crop of DivX Certified hardware devices hitting
the market.
A few new features in 5.0.3:
* Nth Pass(tm) encoding to improve visual quality
(more encoding passes = better quality)
* Direct support for interlaced video like that from television shows
and digital video cameras
* Support for DivX Certified Hardware profiles (ensure playback on the
DivX Certified hardware devices due for release in 2003)
* And of course, much more...
* Read about all the new features in DivX 5.0.3 and DivX Pro 5.0.3:
<http://www.divx.com/divx/divx_win_versions.php>
<http://www.divx.com/divx/divxpro_win_versions.php>
* Download DivX 5.0.3 or DivX Pro 5.0.3:
<http://www.divx.com/divx>
%------------------ADVERTISEMENT------------------%
RADEON 9700 PRO FROM ATI TECHNOLOGIES
RADEON 9700 PRO is the world's fastest and most advanced graphics
board, featuring ATI's RADEON(tm) 9700 PRO Visual Processing Unit
(VPU). Through a combination of incredible 3D rendering
performance, sophisticated real-time visual effects, unsurpassed
image quality and cutting-edge video features, it takes the PC
entertainment experience to a totally new level.
VISIT DIVX.COM TO PURCHASE RADEON 9700 PRO TODAY
<http://www.divx.com/hardware/detail.php?id=43>
%------------------ADVERTISEMENT------------------%
CyberLink Multimedia Software to Include DivX
---------------------------------------------
We've already told you about the DivX Certified consumer
electronics devices that will soon be hitting retail shelves
worldwide--but DivX video has also been making serious headway in
the software market lately. A number of leading multimedia
software products have included support for DivX video in their
latest releases, including InterVideo's WinDVD Platinum, ACD
VideoMagic from ACD Systems, ShowShifter PVR software from Home
Media Networks, QCast Tuner from BroadQ, and more.
The latest company to sign up for DivX video is CyberLink, the
company behind the popular video software PowerDVD and
PowerDirector, among others. CyberLink recently announced that
they will integrate DivX and DivX Pro into their entire line of
video products, providing users worldwide with even more great
DivX-enabled products.
* Read the CyberLink/DivXNetworks press release:
<http://www.divxnetworks.com/press/pr_detail.php?pr_id=47>
* Check out DivX Licensed software products on DivX.com:
<http://www.divx.com/software/>
In Other News...
----------------
In the news this week: A review of the KiSS DP-450 from Tom's
Hardware, another shot fired in the file trading wars, and a look
at the future of the connected home.
* DP-450: First Player for DivX Video in Hi-Fi Format--Tom's Hardware
<http://www6.tomshardware.com/consumer/20030124/index.html>
A comprehensive review of the KiSS DP-450, the first DVD player to
enable playback of DivX videos. A bit of wisdom from the review:
"And in 2003, the emerging trend may be that DVD players need to
allow for playback of DivX videos and JPEG images (picture CDs) if
they want to stay on the market...Anyone who has bought a DVD
player without a DivX feature will probably be kicking himself."
* Kazaa strikes back at Hollywood, labels--News.com
<http://news.com.com/2100-1023-982344.html?tag=cd_mh>
Popular file trading service Kazaa is counter-suing the big
Hollywood studios, claiming they are "obscenely" abusing copyright
powers by attempting to drive potential online competitors out of
business in order to corner the market on digital distribution.
* Audio and Video to Pioneer Multimedia Home Network Market--In-Stat/MDR
<http://www.instat.com/press.asp?ID=523&sku=IN020018MI>
A recent report from research firm In-Stat/MDR predicts that audio
and video technologies will drive a spike in home networking in
the coming years. From the report: "In the near term, because of
bandwidth and Quality-of-Service (QoS) constraints, it is expected
that only compressed video, such as MPEG 2 and MPEG 4, will be
networked."
That's all we have for you this week. Thanks for supporting DivX
video. Please feel free to send us any comments and suggestions
at <info@divx.com>.
Until next time,
The DivX Team
Illegal downloading News:
Jan 30 2003, 05:32 AM
WASHINGTON — Internet providers must agree to requests by the music industry to track down computer users who illegally download music, a federal judge ruled Tuesday in a case that could dramatically increase online pirates' risk of being caught.
The decision by U.S. District Judge John D. Bates upheld the recording industry's power under a 1998 law to compel Internet providers to identify customers that illegally trade music or movies online.
Bates acknowledged that the case was an important test of subpoena powers Congress granted to copyright holders under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
The judge said that controversial law, which was enacted to uphold copyrights online, permits music companies to force Internet providers to turn over the name of a suspected pirate upon subpoena from any U.S. District Court clerk's office, without a judge's order.
Cary Sherman, president of the Recording Industry Association of America, said, "The illegal distribution of music on the Internet is a serious issue for musicians, songwriters and other copyright owners, and the record companies have made great strides in addressing this problem by educating consumers and providing them with legitimate alternatives."
During a contentious hearing in October, the judge lamented ambiguities in the copyright act, saying that Congress "could have made this statute clearer." At the time, the music industry indicated that a ruling in its favor could result in reams of warnings to scare Internet pirates into taking their collections offline.
The case arose from efforts by the recording association to track down a customer of Verizon Communications Inc. who was freely sharing copies of more than 600 songs by well-known artists.
Sherman said that his organization, once it knows the identity of the Verizon customer, would "let them know that what they are doing is illegal."
Verizon had resisted the music industry's subpoena to identify its customer, saying it could turn Internet providers into a turnstile for piracy suits and put innocent customers at risk.
Through programs like Kazaa, Morpheus and Gnutella, a person can find virtually any song or movie -- sometimes even before it's released in stores -- and download it for free. On a typical afternoon, about 3 million people were connected on the Kazaa network and sharing more than 500 million files.
http://www.mbforums.org/forums/index.php?act=site
DivX-5.0.3-Update ready:
A new DivX is finally here! As a subscriber to our DivX newsletter, we wanted to let you know before anyone else. Be the first kid in your neighborhood to have a copy.
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US$9.99
DivX® 5.0.3 and DivX Pro™ 5.0.3 are the latest updates to the world's most popular video technology. Yes, we know it's been a while, but believe us, we're hard at work and 2003 will see lots of exciting developments. This is just the first of many. Download DivX or buy DivX Pro using the direct links below.
Here is what's new in 5.0.3:
Nth Pass™ encoding to improve visual quality
(more encoding passes =etter quality)
Direct support for interlaced video like that from television shows and digital video cameras
Support for DivX Certified Hardware profiles (ensure playback on the DivX Certified hardware devices due for release in 2003)
And of course, the ever popular "much more"
Download DivX or Purchase DivX Pro
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DivX Pro DivX Pro
(Adware) DivX
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(deinterlacing, resizing, 3:2 pulldown)
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A couple of Treo exchanges on the Phataudio site:
Samsung's YEPP YP-900, the better iPod killer (Score: 0)
by Anonymous on Friday, January 17 @ 10:43:28 CST
Not to change the subject but I think I will hold off on the Odyssey 1000 for two reasons: it's made by eDigital, who also make the Treo, the precursor to the Odyssey, which is basically a cheap piece of junk; and there's no line-in (unlike the Archos player/recorders or even the Mambo-x) so you can't record directly from any audio source.
The mp3 player I'm waiting for is the YEPP YP-900 from Samsung which was picked by Tech TV as best mp3 device at last week's CES 2003. It's supposed to be about the same size and capacity as the iPod and the Odyssey but with an important enhancement, a line-in for direct audio recording (plus some other bells and whistles like voice recording and fm transmission that I'm not as excited about). Unfortunately, I can't get any info on the thing and it's not on Samsung's website, which is weird because it's supposed to be coming out next month.
Re: Samsung's YEPP YP-900, the better iPod killer (Score: 0)
by Anonymous on Tuesday, January 28 @ 18:40:55 CST
Treo a piece of junk? You are mistaken. For the price and what it can do, it is one of the best buys on the market today. Sounds like to me like you may have another reason for your statements, having nothing to do with the player. By the way, the YP-900 will be a 10 gig player, not a 15 or 20 gig. The Odyssey also will have FM and a recorder. The Odyssey 1000 will blow away all of the others out there, including the IPod.
Tin-Cash or no deal at all.
LL-My msn was off all day till about 6 pm.
Couldn't get onto the internet at all. Was a withdrawal kind of day.
D.inkie-You must be a wizard. Thanks for the laughs. Why don't you call e.Digital and see if they can use your tech expertise. Jeeze, this is pretty wild. Keep rocking D.inkie.
This is strange.. Everytime I click on D.inkies Post # 27640, after a few seconds, it starts playing a song about the universe. What the heck is this? Anyone know? Strangest thing I ever saw.
Berge-Maybe, just maybe, all of e.Digital's business opportunities will come to fruition this year and we can apply to the National Nasdaq. Then we won't even have to talk about the OTC new or old exchanges. Could happen, imo. Just thinking outloud.
Now, this could be interesting. SRS Labs store temporarily closed to make changes and updates to the to the products they offer.
http://www.srs-store.com/store/mall/closing.asp
Thanks D.inkie.
OT-Intel-Not sure if this has been posted:
Intel withdraws from ASIC services market
Crista Souza
EBN
(01/16/2003 7:53 PM EST)
A little over a year after throwing its hat into the ASIC services ring, Intel Corp. is withdrawing.
According to a spokeswoman for Intel Microelectronics Services, the Hillsboro, Ore. division stopped accepting new business earlier this month.
The microelectronics unit operated as a fabless ASIC supplier, designing chips for startups and small companies and helping them get access to major semiconductor foundries. The venture was intended to enable new applications that would also use Intel's microprocessors, flash memory, and communications chips.
"Intel has decided to focus on our core silicon business," the spokeswoman said. "The Microelectronics Services business in it's current form is not strategic to our standard products strategy."
Instead, Intel will take what it's learned from its ASIC customers and reapply the knowledge elsewhere within the company, she said.
But its abrupt retreat has severely damaged its prospects for winning future design business, according to Jordan Selburn, an analyst at market research firm iSuppli Corp., San Jose.
"Intel had a very strong technical offering, but they weren't alone at the top," said Jordan Selburn, an analyst at iSuppli Corp., San Jose. "Who's going to go to an Intel now as opposed to an IBM, LSI Logic, or Fujitsu that can offer the same silicon with less ulcer potential?"
Facing such formidable competition for a declining number of high-volume chip designs may have been one of the factors in Intel's sudden move.
"Even if they hit a grand slam, in six years they might have built it into a $1 billion business. That's good, but Intel is a $20 billion company," Selburn said. "It's a big risk with no huge upside for a company that size."
Intel said it will complete all its existing ASIC projects, and reassign Microelectronics Services personnel to other areas of the company. No layoffs were expected in relation to the closure.
50+ and Sentinel-
RP to Newelong:
"Thank you for your e-mail, Phil. I can only comment on what has been previously released; that we are working with Samsung on DataPlay-related products. Thank you for your understanding." [11-6-02]
He can only comment on what has been released. Obviously, and this email even makes me feel better about it. Good luck to you both.
From the Nov 6th, 2002 shareholders recap of the annual meeting:
Stated by FF:
The Company is working with APS, Eclipse by Fujitsu Ten, Bang
& Olufsen, Samsung, Digitalway, and others on projects based
on its cutting-edge technology, employing research and
development that in many cases it has already completed.
From the webcast last week re wireless platform:
"We have a major oem development"
"We will talk about the particulars after the announcement regarding the signed agreement is made"
We know about APS, we know about Eclipse from Fujitsu Ten, and we know about B & O. We also know about Digitalway and it seems to me we may soon know about the other company listed here. e.Digital has been working with them for a long time; and from the e.Digital/Digitalway PR on May 2nd, 2002:
Digitalway started MP3 player development in July 1998 and grew to become the No.1 digital audio player manufacturer in the world. As the OEM to Samsung Electronics (Yepp) and RFC (Jazpiper), Digitalway grew into one of the world's largest manufacturers and has earned a reputation for the highest quality. In Asia including Japan and Korea, Digitalway's products are recorded as No.1 selling digital audio products.
Things are getting very interesting for e.Digital, imo.
OT(Maybe)-Samsung/Set Top Box-Interesting.
Samsung Elec in talks with Disney on set-top boxes
Reuters, 01.10.03, 8:22 PM ET
http://www.forbes.com/home_asia/newswire/2003/01/10/rtr844319.html
SEOUL, Jan 11 (Reuters) - South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co <05930.KS> is in talks with Walt Disney Co (nyse: DIS - news - people) on supplying the U.S. entertainment group with set-top boxes for its North American pay-TV project, a Samsung spokesman said.
South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper said on Saturday a deal between the two companies had already been reached but the Samsung spokesman said talks were going on and nothing has been determined.
"It's hard to say at this stage. We're still in the middle of talks," the spokesman for Samsung Electronics said.
The Chosun Ilbo newspaper said Samsung, which produces memory chips, handsets and electronic goods, will start supplying 20,000 set-top boxes from July and gradually increase the number of boxes.
"(Samsung) has decided to participate in Disney's movie pay-TV project by providing high definition set-top boxes. A contract has recently been signed," the paper said,
Samsung was selected from among contenders from Japan, Europe and the United States, the newspaper said.
Copyright 2003, Reuters News Service
Judo-Great post.
Night LL and thanks.
Major OEM developement-e.Digital has a signed agreement on a wireless application per FF. Wonder who the OEM is and what the application is? Sounds like it is for home entertainment that plugs into the wall. Could it be a set top box? Any thoughts?
Maybe it has something to do with another patent application. I believe they said they were thinking about a possible new appl this past Fall. Don't know how much something like that cost though. Could be part of it.
From the Jan 8th edig pr:
Eclipse by Fujitsu Ten has been awarded a CES Innovations Award in
the Mobile
Electronics category for their HD1213 Hi-fidelity 20-Gigabyte MP-3/WMA
Player/recorder. This product, developed with e.Digital, is scheduled
to go into
production this quarter.
Tenderloin-the hd1213 was in an edig pr, wasn't it?
sdr-What exactly did Fred say? Thanks in advance.