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To: John Rieman who wrote (43838)8/12/1999 4:19:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Oak jumps on CD-RW bandwagon with integrated device

A service of Semiconductor Business News, CMP Media Inc.
Story posted 5:15 p.m. EST/2:15 p.m., PST, 8/10/99

By Junko Yoshida

SUNNYVALE, Calif. ( ChipWire/EET) -- Hoping to cash in on the
growing rewritable CD drive market, Oak Technology today
introduced what the company claims as the industry's most highly
integrated CD-RW controller chip.

Called OTI-9790, Oak's new single-chip CD-RW solution is a
mixed-signal ASIC integrated with USB interface, ATAPI interface,
encoder/decoder, servo subsystem, write logic as well as DSP
functions designed for three different levels of error corrections. The
new controller chip is designed to support 8X speed write and 32 X
speed read capabilities.

Oak is sampling the new controller chip today. The OTI-9790,
priced at $14.50 for quantities of 10,000, will be in volume
production in October.

Nicos Syrimis, vice president of marketing for optical storage at
Oak, described the growth of today's CD-RW market "explosive."
Fueled by a hot application like downloading MP3 music files from
the Internet, the rewritability of a CD has suddenly become very
important for many consumers, he explained.

"We believe our solution gives the most highly integrated CD-RW
solution at a very cost effective price point," he said.

The OTI-9790 CD-RW controller chip offers the rewritable CD
system vendors two key features: faster speed and higher level of
interchangeability. By supporting 8X speed for writing, music, worth
of an entire CD, can be recorded onto a CD-RW disc within less
than 10 minutes.

The newly designed on-chip write logic provides a higher degree of
accuracy of writing data onto a disc so that a CD-RW disk
recorded on one PC CD-RW drive can be correctly read by
another CD-ROM drive.

As the system vendors increase write speed, the interchangeability
of CD-RW disks has been always one of the big problems, said
Dan Salmonsen, senior director of technical marketing at Oak.

Because the write logic to control writing pulses is such a "difficult
device to design because of the accuracy it's required to offer, it has
always been designed as a separate device," said Salmonsen. Oak's
OTI-9790 is the first to integrate it right onto the CD-RW drive
controller.

The mainstream PC market has just begun to see some 8X write
speed, moving up from 4X CD-RW drives, according to Syrimis.

Oak's new chip comes to a market at a time when many PC OEMs
begin to recognize the popularity of CD-RW, considering to turn it
into a line-fit item to be embedded into their PC. Meanwhile, the
same computer makers are also trying to decide when to
incorporate a DVD-ROM drive into their PCs. "The landscape of
the PC drive market is in flux," said Syrimis.

Pointing out that the DVD-ROM drive market for PCs has been
slowed down somewhat due to the lack of PC-specific DVD-ROM
titles, Syrimis said, "We see a better opportunity for CD-RW drives
today."

However, he added that Oak will continue to watch very closely the
progress of a combination DVD-ROM/CD-RW product such as
the one recently launched by Toshiba. "Should it unfold on the
market, we'd consider it."

Oak has played an active role as a silicon supplier for the optical
storage market since the founding of the company in 1987. As far as
CD-RW IC products are concerned, however, the company
provided only a part of the solution, not the chips required for an
entire system.

Until now, Oak offered only encoder/decoder solutions, providing
no servo control or write logic. Oak hopes to meet the drive
vendors' performance and cost requirements by building its future
solutions on the newly introduced OTI-9790 architecture.



To: John Rieman who wrote (43838)8/12/1999 4:44:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Cable upstarts challenge industry leaders

By Corey Grice
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 12, 1999, 12:40 p.m. PT

RCN and other upstart communications companies are trying to give large cable
television operators something many of them have never had: a little competition.

A handful of firms like RCN, Knology Holdings, and 21st Century Cable are building
metropolitan networks to attract residential customers with an alternative package of voice,
data, and--for the first time in some areas--video.

If successful, these aggressive companies could siphon video-programming customers
directly from incumbent cable operators, which are counting on revenue from their core
video business to bankroll expensive network upgrades for high-speed Net access,
interactive TV, and other enhanced services.

Increased competition from players like RCN (which stands for Residential
Communications Network) in the market will offer consumers
more choices and could mean lower prices for
communications and entertainment services.

Many consumers have a choice when it comes to their long
distance or local phone service provider. But since major
cable operators like AT&T, Time Warner Cable, and Comcast
are often granted multi-year local franchises by city and
county governments, consumers are forced to go with the
cable provider for their area. Although some could opt to
subscribe to satellite TV service, when it comes to cable,
there often is little choice for consumers.

"It boils down to consumers want choices and an affordable
alternative," said Steven Weinberg, an analyst at New
Paradigm Resources Group, a telecommunications
consulting firm. "I don't think people are happy with TCI
charging $40 or $50 for digital cable when they can go to say
21st Century Cable and get it for less."

The plan
RCN is building a new fiber-optic network that is capable of
delivering local and long distance voice service, cable
television, and high-speed Internet access via a cable
modem. Unlike other providers, the company has its sights
set on the consumer market.

"Most other [competitive local phone companies] are going
after business customers, so by targeting residential users it will lessen the competition
they have to go up against," said Manual Recarey, a telecommunications equity analyst at
Auerbach, Pollak & Richardson.

RCN may have avoided stiff competition with other competitive phone companies in the
business market, but it faces an uphill battle in the consumer market against
telecommunications powerhouses such as AT&T, Sprint, and MCI WorldCom.

But analysts said there is plenty of room for competitors like RCN to find their own niche.
And, AT&T still faces significant hurdles before successfully converting its newfound cable
strategy from a grand idea into a viable revenue source, Recarey said.

RCN, one of three companies spun-off from C-TEC in September 1997, targets densely
populated metropolitan areas. For example, RCN offers service along the Northeast
corridor from Boston, to New York and Washington, and is building networks in California,
from San Diego to as far north as San Francisco.

RCN executives believe their strategy will allow them to compete in regions that comprise
as much as 40 percent of the nation's telecommunications spending, according to RCN
spokesman Jim Maiella.

Analysts believe the population-based plan is sound.

"If there's more people in a smaller area, it is going to allow them to address more
customers more quickly," Weinberg said.

Not alone
RCN competitors are also feverishly laying wires in selected cities around the nation.
Knology offers service in several Southern states including South Carolina, Florida,
Georgia, and Alabama. 21st Century Cable is primarily located in the Chicago area,
Weinberg said.

Unlike other competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs) that lease access lines from the
local phone company to provide alternative local voice service, the "cable overbuilders,"
such as RCN, Knology, and 21st Century Cable, will own their networks once they
are completed. In telecommunications jargon, they are known as "facilities-based"
companies.

Owning and maintaining networks obviously means much higher up-front costs. But,
by doing so, analysts say the "cable overbuilders" could
recognize significant cost savings in the future, making their
low-cost services even more attractive to penny-pinching
potential customers.

"They're able to control their costs a lot more efficiently … that can ultimately
decrease costs and increase revenue," New Paradigm's Weinberg said. Conversely,
"the [CLEC] resellers are working off the margins they get off how cheaply they can
get the access lines. The money they can bring in is fixed."

The firms also could play a limited role in the heated cable Internet access debate.

Many major ISPs want to share networks with cable companies, but without
regulatory intervention, they remain shut out. Alternative cable providers could give
ISPs another option for delivering high-speed Net access to consumers. Already,
MindSpring Enterprises, one of the nation's largest ISPs and a leading proponent of
so-called open access, has a deal with Knology to offer cable modem service in the
southern United States.