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makomemoney

03/28/01 11:52 PM

#300 RE: cksla #295

WoW! Can that be done on our exsiting wireless networks or is that for the future 3G networks? Not sure what a lot of the tech part says but if it could be available in the near future...WoW!! If I am reading this right...does this mean you could be talking to and seeing the person you ar talking to?

It would be nice, well you know the big IF...with SAMSUNG...

Hmmm aaaaaa :-) Well I can dream..lol

Scott

doni

03/29/01 12:08 AM

#307 RE: cksla #295

cksla all on nand flash I bet, If it is WHOA NELLIE!!!!
"According to Rani Plaut, Emblaze's director of wireless terminals, the wireless player and encoder can be implemented in software and hardware in ways that can meet the design requirements of virtually any mobile device, operating system, and Internet browser."
I'd call that pretty much inter operable

right up edigs alley
I must go to bed, nice find, I'll get more into it tomorrow good night
doni


makomemoney

03/29/01 11:02 AM

#384 RE: cksla #295

The Emblaze-Samsung product...

http://www.emblaze.com/serve/main_page.asp

This also about Samsung with Emblaze...Don't know if we can go anywhere with this but...They have been involed with them before we were even mentioned..

SAMSUNG


On November 25, 1999 EMBLAZE Systems announced an agreement with Samsung Electronics to incorporate its patented EmblazeTM technology into mobile phones and other devices to be manufactured.

Under the terms of the agreement, Samsung will pay EMBLAZE a technology licensing fee of several million dollars for the rights to market these products world-wide and additional royalties on sales. EMBLAZE Systems will design for manufacturing the EmblazeTM based ASIC chip for incorporation into Samsung devices enabling advanced video based services to be displayed on remote cellular units.

On June 5, 2000 EMBLAZE announced the signing of another deal with Samsung Electronics for the implementation of EmblazeTM A3 into Samsung cellular handsets. The A3 is an ASIC chip that enables two-way video communication (encoding / decoding). The chip is a hardware manifestation of the EmblazeTM Wireless technology and represents a world breakthrough in embedded video mobile architecture. According to the agreement, Samsung will pay EMBLAZE a $6m license and development fee, and royalties from A3 handset sales worldwide. In addition, EMBLAZE will benefit from sales of the EmblazeTM backend systems that enable A3 level services for Telecom companies, cellular operators and content providers - systems that will be co-marketed and heavily promoted by both companies.