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Technology Stocks : C-Cube -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Stoctrash who wrote (47651)11/19/1999 1:15:00 AM
From: Steve Fancy  Respond to of 50808
 
How long will the Nasdaq stay at 3400 or whatever crazy level we ended at today...that's the question I'm asking myself? CNBC Nasdaq 4000 special<g>. I'm thinking unloading some more stuff if it rallies out of the gate tomorrow...and maybe if it doesn't.

Have any favorite short candidates lined up?

Thanks,

sf



To: Stoctrash who wrote (47651)11/19/1999 9:27:00 PM
From: Craig Gordon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
I was amazed at how easily Cube went through 48 and that psychological value of 50.

It all really depends on what happens to the price of Harmonic. Cube's price has nothing to do with Cube.



To: Stoctrash who wrote (47651)11/24/1999 5:12:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Duo develops digital video reference design
eetimes.com

By Junko Yoshida
EE Times
(11/24/99, 3:04 p.m. EDT)

SUNNYVALE, Calif. — Hoping to broaden the use of digital video-based
appliances, Divio Inc. and Philips Semiconductors have joined forces to
launch a reference design that uses Divio's DV codec and Philips
Semiconductors' IEEE-1394 chip.

The reference design, called Divio NW701-DAAD, lets system designers
develop standalone digital video systems that can import, edit and convert
digital and analog video.

"We expect our reference design to drive a variety of DV-based consumer
systems, including DVD rewritable drives, D-VHS systems and HDD
[hard-disk drive]-based digital video recording systems," said Isaac van
Kempen, vice president of marketing at Divio.

Incorporated into the reference design are Divio's single-chip DV codec,
Philips Semiconductors' IEEE-1394 chip set, a 9-bit video decoder/scaler
with 4-line combo filter, 10-bit video encoder, 8051 microcontroller and audio
codec.

DV is a DCT-based digital video compression format originally designed for
digital tape recording for camcorders and VCRs. While MPEG-2 is a widely
accepted distribution format for satellite, cable, terrestrial and DVD, DV has
been establishing itself as the video industry's de facto acquisition format not
only for consumer digital camcorders, but also for professional digital
cameras and postproduction editing systems.

Dovetailing with MPEG-2

Discussing the popularity of MPEG-2 encode/decode chips in a variety of
personal recording devices, van Kempen said, "If the storage capacity is not
a constraint, system vendors would love to use DV because of DV's picture
quality." But more important, he added, DV has lately become "a key
interface codec for data interchange, combined with IEEE-1394." And, he
noted, "if necessary, the decoded video stream can be handed over to an
MPEG-2 encoder — also residing in the same digital video appliance — to
create an MPEG-2 video stream."

Because of the unresolved copy protection issues with the Motion Picture
Association of America (MPAA), many consumer electronics manufacturers
still hesitate to output MPEG-2 data through IEEE-1394. But fortunately, the
problem does not occur with DV over IEEE-1394, van Kempen said,
"because DV is an acquisition format."

Applications for the Divio/Philips reference design go well beyond digital
VCRs. While DV-based personal video recording appliances use a
bidirectional DV codec, other applications such as video projectors and
plasma displays will use a DV codec's decoding function only, van Kempen
said. Some system companies are also planning to use the Divio/Philips
reference design to develop a media converter box that can take in analog
video and output digital.

The fully tested reference design kit includes source code, Gerber files and
schematics. The bill of materials for a whole DV/1394 solution, including
chips, boards and connectors, is $160, according to Divio.