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To: BillyG who wrote (46570)10/27/1999 1:45:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Is that a TV in your PC or a PC in your TV?

Coming Attraction: HDTV on your PC
cnn.com

October 26, 1999
Web posted at: 2:24 p.m. EDT (1824 GMT)

by David Essex

(IDG) -- Soon you'll be able to get
high-definition television without
spending thousands of dollars. How?
Thanks to new PC chip technology
and software.

All you'll need is an HDTV-capable graphics card and high-resolution
monitor, according to companies working to deliver products next year.

Two of the companies, Ravisent Technologies and Conexant Systems,
announced a partnership on Monday to develop HDTV solutions. Ravisent's
CineMaster HDTV software will provide MPEG-2 decoding and displaying
of HDTV signals. Conexant's Fusion 878A chip will convert incoming video
to streaming format and send it along the system's PCI bus.

You'll need at least a 500-MHz Pentium III system and one of the more
powerful graphics accelerator boards to run these, however.
Ravisent has
exhibited CineMaster HDTV running with an ATI Technologies Rage 128
card, and will soon announce compatibility with other cards, company
officials say. The company predicts PC vendors will configure entire systems
with the necessary boards, monitors, and Windows software, and
individually sold graphics cards will come bundled with the software.

HDTV as it is now broadcast by major
networks offers television displays at
resolutions of either 1280 by 720 pixels or
1920 by 1080 pixels. To get the best
full-screen display, you need a pricey PC
monitor that can handle both the higher
resolutions and 16-by-9 aspect ratio
(number of horizontal vs. vertical pixels) of
HDTV. Regular PC monitors (especially
20-inch and larger models) still provide
good display of HDTV images, but the
screen will appear in a narrower "letterbox"
format, says Mike Cristofalo, Ravisent's
product marketing manager for HDTV.

HDTV is available only over broadcast TV.
Cable operators are still working out how
to split up HDTV signals over their channel
lineups within the framework of "must carry"
rules set by the Federal Communications
Commission. "The cable operators have not
made a final commitment," Cristofalo says,
but "they've said they will."

Hardware for HDTV

Video-card makers such as ATI Technologies, Matrox Graphics, and 3dfx
Interactive, which now sell analog TV cards, are likely to offer HDTV,
according to several sources.

Another big card vendor, Hauppauge Computer Works, this week
announced an analog-and-digital card called WinTV-D that runs at
lower-resolution, non-HDTV digital speeds
(see related link at right) using
the new Conexant chip. Hauppauge plans an HDTV version called
WinTV-HD, says company president Ken Aupperle, and is investigating the
Ravisent/Conexant solution.

"WinTV-HD will probably be $100 to $200 more," Aupperle predicts.

Hardware makers will have to decide whether to burden the PC's CPU with
HDTV decoding software or offload that function to a dedicated chip. The
software approach will limit HDTV availability to only the most powerful
PCs, Aupperle says.

But Conexant marketing director Greg Fischer predicts PC vendors will
prefer the software method because it shaves $75 off their costs. "It will
eventually enable a $99 HDTV to play on PCs," he says.