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Friday, August 22, 2003 |
Hauppauge [HAUP; Nasdaq] and others are making these devices that the NYT's Mcmanus describe as "bridging the gap" between the PC and the TV enabling consumers to display "media content" that resides on PCs. Curiously, there is no word on the Hauppague website about the MediaMVP product that Mcmanus references in his article [From PC to TV Screen, a Stream of Multimedia. Your PC is brimming with great photos, MP3's and videos. But your family and friends are glued to the television. By Neil Mcmanus. New York Times: Technology] and no indication of its price or feature set.
Among other things, Hauppaauge makes a 350 Meg PC/DVR card that sells for $200.
11:50:43 AM
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Tuesday, June 10, 2003 |
Autonomy (Nasdaq: AUTN) announced the purchase of a small company called Virage (Nasdaq-SCM: VRGE) which they apparently intend to integrate with their existing Dremedia division. Dremedia software uses Autonomy's Intelligent Data Operating LayerTM (IDOL) technology and enhances it by providing a technology platform that automatically analyzes, understands, and manipulates video and audio content.
Acquiring Virage adds a software product suite that covers the creative side of video production, Internet publishing and webcasting. Virage is headquartered in San Mateo, California, and was established in 1995. It's products include:
- VS ProductionTM for professional video production
- VS PublishingTM for developing content into compelling Internet programming
- VS WebcastingTM for planning and producing interactive, live and on-demand webcasts
The company has ~400 customers including: Cisco Systems, Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield, Harvard University, NASCAR, Oracle Corporation, Pfizer, the United States Senate, Xerox and others. www.virage.com.
Here's an article in The Register about the acquisition. Autonomy swoops on Virage. Video Play [The Register]
8:24:45 AM
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Sony plugs TV into Vaio notebooks. The Japanese company looks to boost its PC fortunes with a notebook that lets people pause and record live TV for future playback and another that packs Centrino wireless technology. [CNET News.com]
4:03:06 PM
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Yesterday at NCTA, Microsoft introduce Microsoft® TV Foundation Edition what they descirbe as "a new digital TV software platform designed to help cable operators get more value from on-demand and other digital TV services"
They simultaneously announced support (http://www.microsoft.com/tv/mstvIndustrySupportPR.mspx) for the platform from cable industry vendors Motorola, Inc., SeaChange, Concurrent Computer Corp., MetaTV Inc., Two Way TV Ltd. and Advanced Digital Broadcast Ltd.
They also announced a customer win (http://www.microsoft.com/tv/cablevisionselectsmspr.mspx) for the software platform with Televisa's Cablevision (CVC) subsidiary, one of Mexico City's largest cable MSO with ~450k subscribers announcing that they will adopt it.
3:10:46 PM
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Thursday, March 06, 2003 |
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Monday, February 17, 2003 |
According to Pixim there is an annual market for ~15 million of these security cameras and they are addressing the problem that most of them have, which is picture quality. Interesting approach:
"The D2000 Video Imaging System consists of two chips - one focusing on image capture, one on image processing and camera interfaces - and the optimized software and settings to enable manufacturers to build high-quality video cameras. By placing an analog-to-digital converter inside of each pixel in an array, each pixel can act as its own camera, optimizing for the proper amount of light. This solution provides high quality pictures under any lighting conditions that no other competing or legacy architecture can deliver."
1:36:01 PM
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© Copyright 2003 Douglas L Ross.
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