BURBANK, CA - ESPN Zone, the nation's top sports dining and entertainment concept, has kicked off a multi-million dollar conversion of all eight restaurants to bring in the High Definition (HD) viewing experience. ESPN Zone restrauants can be found in New York, Las Vegas, Washington, D.C., and Baltimore. The good news is that they will be converted to HD in time for Super Bowl XL, which ABC-TV carries on Sunday, Feb. 5 at 6 pm ET. The remaining ESPN Zone locations in Chicago, Anaheim, Atlanta and Denver will be converted to HD by the end of 2006. With the number of sporting events now broadcast in HD from ESPNHD and ESPN2HD and critical breakthroughs in hardware, the circumstances called for this move forward. Each facility will be replacing standard def television monitors with Philips flat screen plasmas and LCD's. In addition, each of the large projection screens at ESPN Zone have been converted to be able to project up to 16 foot images in High Definition.
In addition to the hundreds of new Philips monitors, each converted ESPN Zone also features up to eight new HD satellite receivers, up to eight new HD cable receivers, HD-compatible routing and switching equipment, as well as 10,000 feet of CAT 6E skew-free network cable. "Given the significant amount and complexity of the audio / visual infrastructure in place at ESPN Zone, the conversion to High Definition has been much more elaborate than a typical sports bar," said Guy Savage, Manager of Audio / Visual Systems for ESPN Zone.
ESPN HD and ESPN2 HD will combine in 2006 to deliver over 600 major events plus over 2,000 programs totaling more than 6,500 hours in high definition featuring live programming, individual programs, movies and series from ESPN Original Entertainment plus news and information programming. Event telecasts will include a variety of match-ups from college football, the men's College World Series, the Little League World Series, Major League Baseball, men's and women's college basketball, the National Basketball Association, Monday Night Football from the National Football League, the Women'sFinal Four, the National Hot Rod Association, the NCAA Frozen Four (hockey championships) and the FIFA World Cup from Germany. ESPN Bristol-based high-definition news and information programs include - SportsCenter, NFL Countdown, NFL PrimeTime, NFL Live, Monday Night Countdown and Baseball Tonight. Reader CommentaryMore in Category: Sports
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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