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News from China -- A New Respect? | |
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By Dale Cripps Founder & Co-Publisher Posted on April 19, 2005 Category: Global & Worldview |
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Register Now to receive notification of new HDTV Magazine Articles via email as soon as they are published. While China has earned no high marks for protecting the rights of content owners the following news item appears to be altering that history. The HDMI in questions is the digital interface over which any encryption satisying to Hollywood can be carried. -Editor
SHENZHEN, China, April 19
HDMI Licensing LLC, the agent responsible for licensing the High-Definition Multimedia Interface(TM) (HDMI(TM)) Specification, today announced at the Shanghai Information Household Appliances Trade Association's (SIAA's) 2005 HDMI and Copy Protection Technology Seminar that more than 200 companies worldwide have become HDMI Adopters, in addition to the seven HDMI Founders. HDMI has quickly emerged as the standard for connecting high-definition television (HDTV). By delivering crystal-clear, all-digital audio and video quality via a single cable, HDMI dramatically simplifies cabling and helps provide consumers with the highest-quality home theater experience.
Signifying the rapid adoption of HDMI on a global scale, HDMI Adopters include cable/connector, semiconductor, system and test equipment vendors in the United States, Asia-Pacific, China, Japan and Europe. Hollywood studios, cable operators and satellite operators also support HDMI.
"Manufacturers across the globe are rapidly embracing HDMI, which is now featured on more than 400 consumer electronics devices from more than 40 manufacturers," stated Les Chard, president of HDMI Licensing, LLC. "HDMI's performance and ease-of-use advantages make it appealing to consumers, and it has quickly become a check-list item for DTVs and high-definition source devices. HDMI's simple application process, reasonable terms and the availability of the HDMI test specification make it easy for manufacturers to efficiently meet their customers' needs."
Various standards bodies have incorporated HDMI in their standards, further driving adoption. The FCC has mandated that after July 1, 2005, all "Digital Cable-Ready" TVs sold in the United States with screen sizes 36 inches and above, and 50 percent of those with screen sizes 25 to 35 inches, must feature an HDMI-HDCP or a DVI-HDCP input, and that all HD set-top boxes offered by cable providers must feature an HDMI or DVI output. In addition, the DVD Copy Control Association has established HDMI as an approved digital output for DVD players playing CSS-protected content at resolutions higher than 480p/576p. U.S. cable industry association CableLabs also requires that all OpenCable HD STBs must have HDMI-HDCP or DVI-HDCP outputs, and satellite operators DIRECTV and EchoStar require HDMI-HDCP or DVI-HDCP on all HD STBs. In addition, the European HDTV Forum recommends an HDCP-compliant HD digital interface, such as HDMI-HDCP or DVI-HDCP, be provided on both HD integrated receiver decoders and HD displays.
HDMI Licensing, LLC is a sponsor of the SIAA 2005 HDMI and Copy Protection Technology Seminar and will be promoting HDMI at tomorrow's seminar in Shenzhen.
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About HDMI Licensing, LLC HDMI Licensing, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Silicon Image, Inc., is the agent responsible for licensing the HDMI Specification, promoting the HDMI standard and providing education on the benefits of HDMI to retailers and consumers. The HDMI Specification was developed by Sony, Hitachi, Thomson (RCA), Philips, Matsushita (Panasonic), Toshiba and Silicon Image as the digital interface standard for the consumer electronics market. The HDMI specification combines uncompressed high-definition video and multi-channel audio in a single digital interface to provide crystal-clear digital quality over a single cable. For more information about HDMI, please visit www.hdmi.org. Forward-looking Statements
Sphere: Related ContentPosted by Dale Cripps, April 19, 2005 6:21 PM
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About Dale CrippsDale Cripps is a professional journalist who has focused two thirds of his career on the subject of high-definition television. Upon completing his education in business and service in the military he formed Cripps and Associates, South Pasadena, California, in 1964, which operated as a market-development company for aerospace services. In 1983 he turned to television and began what has become a 20 year campaign to pioneer HDTV. For fifteen of those years he published the well-regarded HDTV Newsletter (an international monthly written for television professionals). During much of this same time he also served as the HDTV-Technical Editor for "Widescreen Review Magazine." On November 16, 1998 he launched the Internet distributed HDTV Magazine, which remains the only consumer publication devoted exclusively to high-definition television. In April of 2002 he co-founded with Tedson Meyers of Coudert Bros, the High-definition Television Association of America, which is presently based in Washington DC. Cripps is the president of this organization. Mr. Cripps is a charter member of the Academy of Digital Television Pioneers and honored by that organization with the DTV Press Leadership Award of 2002. He makes his home in Oregon. |
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