DiviCom selected by Australia's Optus Communications for full suite of systems, integration and training solutions
BusinessWire, Wednesday, March 26, 1997 at 08:13
MILPITAS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 26, 1997--DiviCom Inc. (NASDAQ:CUBE), one of the world's leading providers of digital video networking solutions, announced today that it has been selected by Australian telecommunications giant Optus Communications to provide the MPEG-2/DVB systems for Optus' domestic satellite service. The service, which will go live between June and August of this year, will include ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) transmission to remote uplinks, and DiviCom's ability to provide ATM-compatible systems played a significant role in securing the multi-million dollar contract with Optus. Optus has also chosen DiviCom to design and build its head-end facilities, including integration with Irdeto's conditional access system, and for the training of Optus personnel responsible for maintaining the service. DiviCom's Australian distributor, Techtel, will provide ongoing first line technical service and support for this joint DiviCom/Techtel project. Today's announcement affirms DiviCom's growing presence in the Asia-Pacific region, and its unique ability to provide complete end-to-end, ATM and DVB-compatible solutions for a variety of digital broadcast applications. "DiviCom's ability to provide both the equipment and integration together with the training expertise required to set-up and operate a head-end facility was absolutely key to winning the Optus account," said Chris Patten, Transmission Products Manager for Techtel. "DiviCom gave us the ability to offer Optus what they needed for rapid implementation of their satellite service -- a 'one-stop shopping' experience." Essential to winning the Optus business was DiviCom's focus on ATM and the ability of its products to plug-and-play into almost any type of wireline or wireless network. Optus is investing more than US $25 million to build a world-class digital satellite infrastructure for improved communications to the four million Australians living in remote areas. That cost jumps to US $50 million when the company's investment in ATM is taken into account; Optus will rely on an ATM network to transmit from remote head-end facilities much of the programming that it will send over satellite. DiviCom's products are designed for ATM output, so its MPEG-2 encoders, for example, can compress digital video, audio and data and send the digital streams out over an ATM network to its final destination. The satellite service offered by Optus, called Optus Aurora, will enable residential consumers in remote areas to use a single dish to simultaneously receive television, audio music channels and data. The service is also aimed at corporations, government offices and educational institutions for applications such as training, staff announcements or company broadcasts, and information dissemination. "Optus is an exciting new customer for us because they truly represent the future," said Nolan Daines, president and CEO of DiviCom. "This system illustrates the merger of data communications technologies like ATM with MPEG-2/DVB technology, the foundation for media communications in the next century. This is exactly the area that DiviCom's expertise is ideally suited to -- the melding of networking and broadcasting. It's a privilege to be involved with Optus in the development of an innovative digital satellite system that will bring the rest of the world even to the most remote regions of Australia." The majority of DiviCom equipment will be installed at the primary satellite ground station at Belrose, near Sydney, Australia. In order to extend Optus' reach to its more remote customers, DiviCom will also be installing encoders and multiplexers (which remultiplex and groom MPEG-2 transport streams generated by DiviCom and other system components into the desired MPEG-2 transport stream rate) at other Optus sites around Australia. DiviCom is currently providing training to Optus Communications' personnel in how to use and maintain the complex products and systems that are being integrated into the head-end facilities that will form the heart of the Optus Aurora digital satellite service. "DiviCom's customized approach to training was also a big plus for us with Optus," added Patten. "No other encoding systems provider or integrator can offer such comprehensive support in the way of training. A well-trained staff is really the key to a well-run service."
DiviCom Inc.
DiviCom develops and integrates products and systems that make digital video networking possible. Products include audio/video encoding and decoding systems, and integration consulting and implementation services. Based on the MPEG-2 and DVB international standards, DiviCom's products enable digital video broadcasting over a variety of networks including satellite, wireless, fiber and cable. DiviCom is a wholly-owned subsidiary of C-Cube Microsystems Inc. (NASDAQ:CUBE), and both companies are based in Milpitas. C-Cube is the leading provider of digital video semiconductor solutions, which implement international standards for digital video, including MPEG-1 and MPEG-2. DiviCom can be reached by phone at 1-408/944-6700, by fax at 1-408/944-6705, or via the World Wide Web at divi.com .
CONTACT: DiviCom Inc., Milpitas Lisa Croel, 408/944-6530 lcroel@divi.com Anne Hohenberger, 408/953-6688 anneh@divi.com
KEYWORD: CALIFORNIA INDUSTRY KEYWORD: COMED COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS TELECOMMUNICATIONS URL: divi.com |