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From May 19, 2004...
Masses tune in to superhero
abilities of HDTV
By Edward C. Baig, USA
TODAY
Jeff Leon was never one to
watch nature documentaries. Until, that is, the Chicago attorney
bought a 50-inch Fujitsu plasma HDTV. "In high definition, it's
just mesmerizing," Leon says.
TV junkies are answering the call of nature with greater frequency
and are gaining appreciation for ballgames, concerts, movies and
other programming that comes alive in high definition.
MORE
FCC WANTS TO KNOW MORE ABOUT
THE POTENTIAL DTV DISENFRANCHISED. When TV turns in its analog
frequencies to move to all digital sometime after 2006, how many
people who don�t subscribe to cable or satellite will be left
without TV service? Are they the elderly? The poor? Do they even
watch TV or care that they will no longer have an over-the-air
signal to watch? FCC Media Bureau Chief Ken Ferree told the New
America Foundation last week that those are questions to which the
FCC needs to find answers. Most lawmakers are cautious about
disenfranchising a large number of voters, leaving them with no TV
service, especially if they are too poor to buy new digital
equipment or if they are disproportionately elderly. Ferree has
suggested people who can't afford DTV equipment on their own be
provided free or subsidized digital-to-analog converters that will
keep their old sets working. There would be no point in
subsidizing all, however, if many in the 15% category are
financially secure or simply don't care about TV.
Micronas Expands Into HDTV
Market With Acquisition of LINX Electronics
Micronas to Provide Best-in-Class ATSC Receiver Technology
ZURICH, Switzerland, May 14 -- Micronas (SWX Swiss
Exchange:
MASN; Frankfurt: MNSN; Prime Standard Segment, TecDAX) today
announced that it
has signed an agreement to acquire LINX Electronics, Inc., a
fabless
semiconductor company that develops innovative digital television
solutions
for improved reception of high-definition television (HDTV)
signals. This
transaction, which is expected to be completed in June 2004, will
enable
Micronas to further expand its comprehensive TV system solutions
portfolio.
The purchase price of approximately USD 26 million will be paid in
cash
and Micronas' shares. Chicago-based LINX Electronics employs a
highly
acclaimed HDTV technology team of about 20 engineers and brings
complementary
technology to Micronas. The purchase includes all development
activities and
patents held by LINX Electronics.MORE
News: by John Merli
Broadcast Lab Wanes
WASHINGTON
Plans for creating and financing a multi-industry
broadcast lab to troubleshoot lingering technical problems with
terrestrial digital TV, first announced at the National
Association of Broadcasters Winter Board meeting in January 2003,
have been greeted with overwhelming apathy from two of the three
involved trade groups. The Consumer Electronics Association (CEA)
and the NAB ultimately ponied up zero support for the apparently
doomed joint venture with Maximum Service Television (MSTV).
The financial arrangement to fund the broadcast lab, which was
presented to the NAB Board by MSTV President David Donovan more
than a year ago, called for NAB to commit $6 million to the test
lab over a three-year period. Another $6 million would have come
from the electronics-manufacturing members of the CEA for the same
36-month period, with MSTV throwing in an estimated $3 million as
initial start-up money.
Yet from its infancy, genuine support for the lab appeared to be
dubious, at best, both from NAB and CEA, as reflected in the TV
Technology headline last year: "DTV Lab Receives 'Quiet' NAB
Commitment."
MORE
RCA and RCA Scenium LCD
HDTV Monitors Deliver Widescreen High-Definition Home
Entertainment Experience
Three Slim Models
Connect To Wide Array of Video Sources to Create Highly Diverse
Entertainment Options
Thomson (Euronext Paris:
18453; NYSE: TMS) is showcasing a new series of RCA and RCA
Scenium slim widescreen LCD high-definition displays that easily
connect to multiple components for an expansive entertainment
experience. The uniquely designed, versatile LCD models produce
vibrant pictures and also serve as high-resolution displays for a
wide variety of components, including standard and progressive
scan DVD players, HDTV over-the-air digital tuner/decoders, HD
cable decoders, HD satellite receivers and gaming systems.
MORE
Just in case you want to record
7 channels at the same time for a week, Sony has just the
product. Well it's a PC too so I guess it's not a complete ripoff.
Ripoff? Sony hasn't even presented the price yet. I'll take a
guess though, and say...$9000? Just a guess.
Sony held a meeting in Tokyo o�n the 10th to present their new "VAIO"
products. Among them was the "type X," a HD recorder o�n a PC
base.
Adelphia begins HDTV service in
North County
MORE
May 11, 2004
Adelphia Communications said yesterday that it has begun offering
high-definition television service in North San Diego County, a
further boost to the technology.
The new HDTV service, which provides viewers with improved picture
clarity, is available to Adelphia customers in Carlsbad, Del Mar,
Encinitas, Fallbrook, San Marcos, Vista and Solano Beach.
To get HDTV service, customers have to pay $9.95 a month for an
HDTV set box. The company's current digital cable set-top box
costs $3.85. Customers also need a high-definition television to
receive the service, but there is no installation charge.
Adelphia will provide HDTV on four local broadcast channels � KGTV-Channel
10, KFMB-Channel 8, KNSD-Channel 39 and KPBS-Channel 15. In the
next few weeks, Adelphia plans to add HBO and ESPN high-definition
service as well.
Mark Kersey, a local cable industry analyst who runs the Web site
HDTVsandiego.com, said Adelphia needed to offer HDTV to remain
competitive. San Diego County's other large cable companies, Cox
Communications and Time Warner Cable, began offering
high-definition television in 2002.
MORE
How To Choose Right TV
Content provided by HowStuffWorks.com
May 10, 2004
Shopping for TVs is, in a word, overwhelming. You go to the store,
you start looking at sets, features, shapes and sizes. Suddenly
you feel like the only things you're going to leave the store with
are questions and a headache. For example:
What is the difference between HDTV and analog TV?
Do you really need S-video inputs and front RCA jacks?
What on earth is a digital comb filter?
Does any of this really matter when you're sitting down to watch
a movie or a ball game?
If you attack these questions
piece by piece, it's really not that complicated. This guide will
walk you through the basic decisions involved in TV shopping and
explain the available features in plain, easy-to-understand
language.
MORE
Matrixstream Introduces the I-MX
HDTV and DVD Video On Demand System Over the IP Network
Matrixstream, a leader
in the Video On Demand (VOD) over IP industry, today announced the
introduction of the I-MX end-to-end VOD system over the IP network
- a system that will revolutionize the way people watch TV, movies
and videos. Matrixstream was founded by Internet veterans who
tired of driving to video stores looking for movie videos, only to
come away empty-handed because the videos they sought were already
rented out. Today, people can watch on-demand videos only if they
rented them from a video store or if they bought particular DVDs
from a retail store. "The I-MX system will give the power of
choice back to the viewers," according to Robert Liu, VP of
Business Development and Marketing for Matrixstream, "allowing
viewers to have access to an entire video rental store right from
the comfort of their couches and to watch their selections at a
time that's convenient to them in DVD or HDTV quality without fear
of paying that annoying video rental late fee."
MORE
U.S. Growth of 45% in 2003, 51%
Expectation for 2004 Outpaces World
Menlo Park, CA � May 6,
2004. The Worldwide market for front projectors grew from
1,840,000 units in 2002 to 2,490,000 units in 2003, and is
predicted to grow to about 3,620,000 units in 2004, according to
Pacific Media Associates (PMA), the Menlo Park, CA market research
firm that tracks the Worldwide large-screen displays market. These
newly-released figures include all electronic projectors of all
sizes, sold either to organizations or individual consumers, and
are updated quarterly in the Market Outlook reports component of
PMA�s Large-Screen Displays Industry Service.
�The front projector market has long demonstrated a strong
sensitivity to product prices, and the dramatic decrease that
accompanied the emergence of the sub-$1000 �crossover� models
during 2003 clearly fueled an important portion of this strong
units growth,� said Michael Abramson, who directs PMA�s research
efforts in front projectors. �Because of this large decrease in
the average selling price, though, revenues actually declined 2%,
from US$5.68 billion in 2002 to US$5.55 billion in 2003. However,
we believe that prices will stabilize somewhat in 2004�partly
because the supply of projectors is now lagging demand due to a
shortage of lamps for some of the most popular model designs�so we
expect revenues to grow a healthy 28% in 2004, to about US$7.10
billion.
In the United States, the market grew from 579,000 units in 2002
to 840,000 units in 2003, and is estimated to grow to 1,268,000
units in 2004. In revenue terms, the market eked out a 2% gain,
growing from $1.91 billion in 2002 to $1.94 billion in 2003, with
an expected growth of a healthy 31% in 2004 to $2.54 billion. �The
more rapid growth in the U.S. than in the rest of the world is
primarily due to its faster economic recovery,� according to
Michael Abramson. �In particular, the EMEA (Europe, Middle East,
and Africa) region should equal or exceed the Americas region (of
which the U.S. accounts for about 84%), especially with the
expanded membership of the EU, but the strong Euro and continuing
structural issues are currently restraining economic growth.�
DIRECTV 7S Successfully Delivered
on Sea Launch Vehicle
Space Systems/Loral-built Spot Beam Satellite will Significantly
Expand DIRECTV Local Channel Coverage
El Segundo, CA May 5,
2004 DIRECTV 7S, a spot beam satellite that will deliver hundreds
of local channels to DIRECTV customers in more than 60 markets,
was launched successfully today from the ocean-based Sea Launch
platform. DIRECTV 7S, a Space Systems/Loral-built 1300 model
spacecraft and the second spot beam satellite in the DIRECTV
fleet, lifted off from the Odyssey Launch Platform aboard a Sea
Launch Zenit-3SL rocket at 5:42 a.m. PDT from the equatorial
launch site at 154 degrees west longitude.
The satellite will enable DIRECTV to expand its local channel
programming to an additional 42 markets and transmit local
channels to 19 existing local-into-local markets, freeing up
capacity on other DIRECTV satellites for delivery of more local
channels and other new services. DIRECTV plans to offer local
channels in a minimum of 130 markets - representing 92 percent of
U.S. TV households - by year end.
More
The High-Definition Gaming
Experience
Thursday, 6th May, 2004
The release of the
GV-R800 series is concurrent with the recent launch of ATI
enthusiast-class RADEON X800 XT Platinum Edition / RADEON X800 Pro
VPU. The RADEON X800 series (the world�s most powerful VPU) sets a
new standard in graphics performance and visual realism by
delivering amazing graphics, abundant features and rock-solid
stability for next-generation games and applications.
The GV-R80 series is based on the ATI RADEON X800 platform and is
built on 0.13micron, low-k fabrication process technology for high
levels of integration and superior operating clock speeds. A
revolutionary image enhancement technology �3Dc� defines a new
high�definition gaming experience by providing higher detail in
images at higher resolution. With up to 16 pixel pipelines,
massively parallel 3D architecture, programmable vertex pipelines
and advanced pixel shader engine capabilities, immersive and
complex special effects are possible. In addition, �3Dc� image
enhancement technology brings characters to life and scenery to
greater realism art with increased performance and lower memory
usage. 3Dc is slated to become the industry standard to support
real time complex high-definition visual effects. GV-R80 series
brings you the best-in-class performance for the most demanding
applications.
MORE
Europe Wrestles with HD Strategies
Broadcast market lags, but production facilities are investing
By Jack Lloyd
With only four countries, the United States, Japan,
Canada and Australia, making serious steps toward rolling out
regular HDTV broadcasting, Europe is still lagging far behind in
plans for over-the-air high definition televison. In fact, the
sole current source of HD entertainment is the 1080i/50 satellite
signal that Euro1080 started beaming up this January from the Lint
Media Center in Belgium, but currently only around 10,000 viewers
can receive their service.
Yet surprisingly, European production facilities, especially post
houses, are investing heavily in HD equipment and services. So
with the popular market for HD programming still on the distant
horizon, why such a demand for high definition post?
MORE
Auction
HD Grants a High-Def VIP PASS to Rock Legend Eric Clapton's Guitar
Sale
Wednesday May 5
VOOM HD Originals Channel to Telecast June 24th Auction
Live from Christie's at Rockefeller Center
JERICHO, N.Y., May 5 This Summer, Auction HD, one of the
VOOM HD Originals, further establishes itself in the exciting
world of high-profile buying and selling when it airs Christie's
Crossroads Guitar Auction: Eric Clapton and Friends for the
Crossroads Centre, another episode in their ongoing live series
Auction HD L!VE. Auction HD will give fans across the country a
"VIP pass" to the "cream" of Clapton's collection. The live
high-definition coverage begins at 6pm on Thursday, June 24, 2004.
Telecast in crystal-clear high-definition, Auction HD puts
collectors at home in the center of the bidding wars, from the
first paddle wave until the final hammer falls. MORE
Tech gadgetry key to future
BY HARRY BERKOWITZ
STAFF CORRESPONDENT
May 4, 2004
NEW ORLEANS - So you already have hundreds of channels, on-demand
films, high-definition pictures, a digital recorder, high-speed
Internet and even telephone service from your local cable TV
company, and you're wondering what's next.
How about a $30,000 Jacuzzi with a built-in 43-inch HDTV screen,
six surround-sound speakers and floating remote control? Or a
Philips bathroom mirror with a built-in television screen?
Or a videophone that looks like a remote control attached to a
Palm Pilot and works without jerky pictures?
MORE
Motorola Extends Industry's
Leading High-Definition Set-Top Platform by Integrating Dual-Tuner
Digital Video Recording
Motorola Further Supports Broadband Operators' Plans to Drive Digital
Penetration by Introducing an Advanced Set-Top Platform That
Integrates the Powerful Combination of HD and Dual-Tuner DVR
NEW ORLEANS, May 3 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Motorola, Inc. (NYSE:
MOT - News) today expanded the company's successful platform for
high-definition television (HDTV) by introducing the Motorola
DCT6400 series -- a digital set- top family that integrates HDTV
with dual-tuner digital video recording (DVR) capabilities.
Part of Motorola's "connected home" strategy, the DCT6400 will
enhance the value of a digital cable subscriber's package by
providing simple, unified access to the latest digital
entertainment services, including HDTV decode and watch-and-record
DVR.
MORE
Matrixstream Introduces the I-MX
HDTV and DVD Video On Demand System Over the IP Network
Tuesday May 4, 2:37 pm ET
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, May 4-- Matrixstream, a leader in the
Video On Demand (VOD) over IP industry, today announced the
introduction of the I-MX end-to-end VOD system over the IP network
- a system that will revolutionize the way people watch TV, movies
and videos. Matrixstream was founded by Internet veterans who
tired of driving to video stores looking for movie videos, only to
come away empty-handed because the videos they sought were already
rented out. Today, people can watch on-demand videos only if they
rented them from a video store or if they bought particular DVDs
from a retail store. "The I-MX system will give the power of
choice back to the viewers," according to Robert Liu, VP of
Business Development and Marketing for Matrixstream, "allowing
viewers to have access to an entire video rental store right from
the comfort of their couches and to watch their selections at a
time that's convenient to them in DVD or HDTV quality without fear
of paying that annoying video rental late fee."
MORE
This is an op
ed piece written by Dale
Cripps for the Washington Post.
I am responding to Thomas Heath�s
article entitled "Low Returns for Sports on High-Definition
television."
_Dale Cripps
I sympathize with any reporter
who has the task today of assessing the state of the HDTV
movement. It is a huge story with many parts and has become less
defined as it spreads. In my 21 years of covering HDTV, first as
publisher of the HDTV Newsletter and now the consumer publication,
HDTV Magazine (www.ilovehdtv.com), and as president of the
High-Definition Television Association of America I have never
seen a time when we were with such a "blind spot". How do you get
useful feedback when the public being polled is still deeply
confused about the product? Taking a survey of the confused is
like reading radar signals when metal foil has been thrown at
them. The terms HDTV and DTV are not interchangeable but have
appeared that way for years. These two terms alone leave the
nation befuddled. Ask ten people you meet today what DTV is and
another ten what HDTV is and this point is proven. While Mr. Heath
has chosen excellent sources to build his story how do those
sources come to any conclusions about whether HDTV will mean
anything to sports or not?
The sports industry lives from the enthusiasm of the middle
classes. This segment of the nation has yet to adopt HDTV in large
numbers. That is illustrated by the fact that 84% of all
televisions sold last year were of the old standard. Another
problem for those trying to �read� the HDTV audience is that most
of the consumers who do own HDTV don�t watch HDTV signals. Worse
yet, these consumers don�t know they are not watching HDTV
signals. I hear from my audience how horrified they are to find
their friends watching standard definition television on an
expensive HDTV monitor simply because they don�t know better. They
presume, or were erroneously told, that digital cable or digital
satellite is all they need for HDTV reception. Mr. Heath was very
accurate in his assessment of who is viewing HDTV broadcasting. We
can go a bit further and say that from the ten million HDTV-ready
sets installed about 14% percent of those are hooked up to some
HDTV receiver and signal source (cable or satellite). How do you
sample this group of owners who are not seeing the same thing, but
think they are? I have the largest data base containing real HDTV
owners with HD receivers since the heart of my Internet service is
a program guide for HDTV formatted programs. No one has come
asking me to survey this audience for years. How can one forecast
the future of HDTV formatted sports viewing when there is no way
of knowing what the audience is watching and responding to? It is
all anecdotal at present and that is not substantial enough for
headlines that can lead or mislead the thinking of millions of
people.
DTV Sets New Sales Records During
First Quarter 2004
March 2004 DTV Sales Up 79 Percent
Arlington, Va., May 4, 2004
-Manufacturer-to-dealer sales of digital television (DTV) products
reached new heights during the first quarter of 2004 with unit
sales totaling 1.39 million and dollar revenues of more than $2.1
billion, according to figures released today by the Consumer
Electronics Association (CEA).
The 2004 first quarter sales surpassed the 2003 first quarter
total by 104 percent in units and 89 percent in dollars. CEA
defines DTV products as integrated sets and monitors displaying
active vertical scanning lines of at least 480p and, in the case
of integrated sets, receiving and decoding ATSC terrestrial
digital broadcasts.
CEA also released single-month sales data for March 2004,
announcing that March product sales totaled 533,797 units on
dollar sales of $813.5 million. These figures represent a 79
percent and 69 percent increase for unit and dollar sales,
respectively, compared to the same period in 2003.
"The future of television is here today," said CEA President and
CEO Gary Shapiro. "As manufacturers offer an ever-increasing array
of DTV products, more and more consumers are embracing this
technology. TV today is truly about digital and high-definition
television."
HDNET TO LAUNCH "UP CLOSE WITH
ROY FIRESTONE"
In-Depth Interview Show Takes
Viewers Inside the World of the Biggest Celebrities
New
Orleans - The National Show - May 4, 2004 - HDNet announced today
a new original program featuring legendary broadcast journalist
Roy Firestone. "Up Close with Roy Firestone" premieres this
summer, exclusively on HDNet.
Firestone's deeply personal, probing interview approach has made
him a favorite among sports fans and celebrities alike. Now he
brings his signature style to HDNet, where he will profile
athletes, artists and entertainers in personal settings - in their
homes, where they work, and where they play.
"In my new show on HDNet, viewers will be entertained, informed
and educated about some of the leading personalities in the sports
and entertainment world," said Firestone. "Imagine being inside
the home of your favorite actor, on the field with a pro athlete,
or in the studio with a Grammy-award-winning musician. With a
spectacular high-definition picture, 'Up Close with Roy Firestone'
will take you there in a way that you've never seen before."
"For 22 years, we have seen Roy get up close and personal with all
of our favorite athletes," said Mark Cuban of HDNet. "Now we'll
see him in all-new interviews with his subjects in intimate
settings and choice locations, only on HDNet."
Critically acclaimed for his work in broadcast journalism, Roy
Firestone has won six Emmy Awards and six ACE Awards for Cable
Excellence. He has interviewed more than 5,000 people, including
nearly every major sports figure. Pulitzer Prize winning columnist
Jim Murray calls Firestone, "the best interviewer I've ever seen.
That's not the best interviewer in sports, that's the best
interviewer period." Firestone is also known for his appearance in
the Academy Award-winning film "Jerry Maguire."
About HDNet HDNet, (www.hd.net), the leader in high definition
broadcasting, produces and televises more hours of original HDTV
sports, entertainment and news programming each week than any
other network. Original HDNet series include the groundbreaking
HDNet World Report, Across America, Hollywood HD, True Music,
HDNet Concert Series, Bikini Destinations, Get Out, and Higher
Definition. Licensed programming includes series from Paramount,
Warner Brothers and Sony. Live HDNet sports productions include
National Hockey League games, Major League Soccer games, NASCAR
and CART auto racing, the HDNet Horse Racing Challenge, boxing,
and college football, basketball and baseball games. HDNet Movies
broadcasts 24/7 full-length feature films from Warner Bros, New
Line, Paramount, MGM, Buena Vista, Lions Gate, Artisan and Sony
Pictures Television. HDNet Movies also features movies produced
and finished in true 1080i high-definition. Co-founded by Mark
Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, and General Manager Philip
Garvin, the HDNet networks are available on Adelphia
Communications, Charter Communications, DIRECTV, DISH Network,
Insight Communications, Mediacom Communications, Time Warner Cable
and several NCTC cable affiliate companies. A high-definition
television set and receiver is required to view HDNet. Viewers
should contact their cable or satellite service provider to
request HDNet service.
VOOM
Announces
Partnership With National Distributor O'Rourke Sales Company
Distributor Relationship Is
Significant Step for Increasing VOOM Availability and Number of
Retailers
JERICHO, N.Y., May 4 /PRNewswire/
-- VOOM, the first comprehensive high- definition (HD) television
service, announced today an agreement with O'Rourke Sales Company
granting the distributor national distribution rights for VOOM. In
a preview period since its October launch, VOOM began ramping up
its outreach to potential customers in March and launched a
compelling offer, which essentially eliminates the barrier for
consumers to experience HDTV. Now, for the first time, VOOM will
be available to key independent electronics dealers nationwide.
Under the relationship,
VOOM and O'Rourke Sales Company
will work closely together to identify and evaluate top-tier
specialty retailers for VOOM. Additionally, the two companies will
collaborate to execute the dealer application process, provide
equipment and start-up kits to retailers, establish co-operative
programs, as well as perform dealer sales and installation
training. "This national distributor partnership is significant
for VOOM because it allows us to reach consumers who shop at
high-end specialty retailers," said Bill Casamo, executive vice
president, marketing and sales for Rainbow DBS. "Additionally, the
independent retailers have highly-trained staff who will ensure
the utmost quality in both VOOM sales and installation. O'Rourke
is an ideal distribution partner for VOOM because of their solid
industry reputation, extensive DBS experience and commitment to
serving independent retailers." O'Rourke Sales Company will
aggressively market VOOM to its retailers, which number
approximately 10,000 with locations in all 50 states.
The company will stage regional
events where retailers can experience VOOM and its programming
with the goal of generating dealer excitement. "HDTV is the only
new viable profit center that puts retailers at the cutting edge
of technology," said Jeff O'Rourke, president of O'Rourke Sales
Company. "Adding VOOM to our existing HDTV lineup including TVs,
surround sound systems, audio receivers and accessories allows us
to offer our dealers a complete package to satisfy the increasing
HDTV consumer demand. We are currently accepting dealer
applications and anticipate a huge response to our regional dealer
events."
Thanks to an FCC ruling, you'll
either need to get a high-definition television or you'll have to
get a high-definition converter.
Wives, though you may hate the
argument from your husbands that you need a new TV, he's going to
ultimately be right on this one - and soon.
Because if you don't own a high-definition television or a
converter within the next couple of years, you'll be unable to
view any of your favorite shows, said Marty Overgaard, general
manager of Rex TV and Appliance, 2210 W. Broadway.
The FCC ordered digital tuners to start appearing in televisions
with 35-inch screens or larger starting in 2004 and in all sets
with screens larger than 13 inches by mid-2007.
Back in 1997, Congress mandated that television broadcasters
convert from their current analog signal to full digital signal by
Dec. 31, 2006.
"Realistically, it's not enough time for people to switch over,"
said Bob Kinne, electronics manager at Lake Manawa's Wal-Mart.
MORE
Vigoto Introduces the First
Digital Set-Top Box Serving Multiple TVs, Requiring Only One Box
Per Household for Full DVR Capabilities in Every Room
Monday May 3, 10:02 am ET
VigoBox Also Records Multiple
Channels Simultaneously
NEW ORLEANS, May 3 /PRNewswire/
-- NCTA Show -- Vigoto today introduced the first DVR-enabled
digital set-top box that serves all TV sets in the home through
the existing coaxial cable, reducing equipment needs to just one
unit per household instead of one set-top box per room. The new
VigoBox significantly lowers costs for cable operators as well as
substantially increasing potential margins on monthly set-top box
fees by making it possible to equip up to five rooms for a
fraction of the price of multiple conventional DVR-enabled units.
The VigoBox goes beyond currently available DVR features. Users
can record up to five channels simultaneously from any room in the
home, pause a program on one TV set and continue watching it on
another. In addition, providers can now offer to record select
premium channels daily at specified times on an ongoing basis,
eliminating the need for subscribers to program their DVRs for
regularly viewed shows.MORE
PanAmSat Welcomes Every Major
Cable Movie Programmer to Its HD Neighborhoods
Monday May 3, 11:52 am ET
Unique Sky-and-Ground Infrastructure Ensures Seamless Delivery
to 11,000 Cable Headends
NEW ORLEANS, May 3 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/
-- PanAmSat Corporation (Nasdaq: SPOT - News) today announced that
every major cable movie programmer has introduced its HD feed on
the PanAmSat hybrid satellite and fiber network. In addition, the
company announced that its Galaxy 13/Horizons-1 neighborhood is
the first and largest in the industry, enabling cable programming
networks to bring high-quality
HDTV content to over 11,000 cable headends throughout the United
States.
"PanAmSat is the unquestioned leader in HDTV delivery to cable,
with 100 percent penetration into every cable system offering HDTV
signals to their customers. PanAmSat is also the only satellite
operator that carries signals from every single HDTV movie
service," said Mike Antonovich, senior vice president, Global
Sales and Marketing, PanAmSat. "We will continue with our
long-term commitment to HDTV through additional initiatives,
including our half-a-billion dollar investment in three 'HD-ready'
satellites being deployed through 2005 and our continued
investment in the Power-of-Five Antenna program, the terrestrial
component to this system. "MORE
TV Recording Pioneer Fights for
Survival DVRs Start to Grab More Market Share
The Associated Press
Jeff and Debra Baker, and
their 21-month-old daughter, Mara, sit on the floor of their
apartment on New York City's Upper West Side while using their
Time Warner Cable digital video recorder.
Debra Baker tells people she has TiVo. But she really doesn't.
The 33-year-old New York tax consultant has a variant -- a digital
video recorder offered through her cable company. She didn't know
what ''DVR'' stood for until then.
''I thought DVR was Time Warner's name for TiVo,'' she said.
So, like many others, Baker simply uses the leading DVR brand as
the catchall term for the new love in her lounging life: a machine
that lets her easily record her favorite TV shows and watch them
whenever she wants.
It's a flattering curse for TiVo, whose revolutionary technology
records TV programs without the hassles of videotape, letting
users pause live TV, do instant replays and begin watching
programs even before the recording has finished.
MORE
So Far, Low Returns for Sports on
High-Definition TV
By
Thomas Heath,
Washington Post Staff Writer
When the
horses bolt from the starting gate at the Kentucky Derby today,
viewers watching on high-definition television sets will feel like
they are trackside at Churchill Downs. Dirt will splash into the
air from the horses' hooves. Sweat will shimmer on the animals'
skin. All of it, bridles, whips and saddles, will be richly
detailed in digital clarity for the first time.
The marriage of a major sporting event
such as the Derby and the wizardry of HDTV would, on the face of
it, be just the jolt sports and television network executives have
been searching for over the past decade as ratings for most major
athletic events tracked steadily downward.
With prices declining and more and more
Americans entering the digital television age, the broadcasters
and professional sports leagues have been banking that HDTV, with
its rectangular, movie-screen format and images that are much more
lifelike than those on the square-sized conventional television
sets, would bring fans back. Get viewers back, the theory goes,
and advertisers will pay more for commercials, broadcasters will
pay more for television rights and the leagues, and everyone
associated with them, will get richer.
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Switchover - the UK and US Views
There are contrasting views on
switchover this week (19 April) from either side of the Atlantic.
In America, a leading industry figure said: "The digital
transition is our national opportunity and destiny ... complacency
could make it a [broadcasters'] swan song."
In the UK, the Government had to re-state its commitment to
switchover in the face of Opposition criticism, which described
the Government's plans for switchover as 'in disarray'.
In the US, it was the free, terrestrial broadcasters who were
threatened with oblivion unless they embraced their digital
future. The warning came from Gary Shapiro, President and CEO, of
the Consumers Electronics Association speaking at the NAB
Engineering Conference in Las Vegas. In his keynote speech, he
outlined series of proposals for broadcasters to maintain
relevance.
At the top of his agenda, Shapiro urged the broadcasting industry
to shift to high-definition television (HDTV) quickly. He called
on broadcasters to promote their HDTV offerings more robustly and
broadcast their HD channels at full power. He also warned them not
to be sidetracked by other "technological mirages" such as
multicasting.
MORE
At Convention,
Trying to See Big Picture in High-Definition
May 2, 2004
Among the dozens (thousands?) of
conventions I don't go to each year is the National Association
of Broadcasters meet, which was last month in Las Vegas. More
than 97,000 people showed up.
NAB, as it's come to be known, is aimed at professionals in the
electronics industry, and it isn't quite as ambitious as the
annual CES consumer electronics show in January, but it's
getting there. That's because broadcasting, in this time of
transition to high-definition television, is one of the keys to
providing content in the HD formats.
In the '80s, over-the-air broadcasters were the NAB's exclusive
attendees. In the intervening years, satellite and cable
companies mixed in. But major changes are underway in the
industry at large, as it shifts from analog to digital, and new
entrants - wireless communication companies, DVD-content
producers, video-on-demand providers, the Internet folks - are
challenging the traditional roles and rules of broadcasting.
And at most events like this one, Federal Communications
Commission Chairman Michael Powell gets into the act.
"How have you been?" asked ABC's Sam Donaldson of Powell at the
NAB's Chairman's Breakfast, according to news reports.
"Fine," Powell said.
"Well, we'll change that," Donaldson replied.
While much of the chat was focused on the hot topic of decency
standards in broadcasting, the eventual switchover from analog
to digital television was raised.
MORE
Audiences
Switching from Conventional TV to Specialty Channels: Survey
Fri Apr 30
JOHN MCKAY
TORONTO (CP) - Viewers are developing a growing preference for
specialty TV over old, conventional channels, a survey
commissioned by Alliance Atlantis Communications suggests.
Conducted by The Strategic Counsel, a leading market research
firm, the survey indicates that 53 per cent of Canadians believe
programming is superior on such specialty services as the Comedy
Network, Showcase and Home & Garden Television.
Those viewers polled also said that more than half their viewing
time is now spent watching the specialties, while 40 per cent
report that specialties are their first destination when they
don't have a particular program on their viewing agenda.
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