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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jacob Snyder who wrote (52594)9/19/2001 9:53:40 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 70976
 
Texas Instruments licenses new MP3Pro
By Gwendolyn Mariano
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 19, 2001, 5:10 p.m. PT
Texas Instruments said Wednesday that it has agreed to support a new digital music format that creates files using half the space previously required for MP3s.

Texas Instruments said it is licensing Thomson Multimedia's MP3Pro format, which compresses standard audio tracks without significantly compromising sound quality. Manufacturers will be able to support the new format by updating their Internet audio devices using Texas Instruments' DSPs (digital signaling processors), which handle audio and video compression in real time.

"It makes sense that TI will support it. They support everyone, and so it was a matter of time before they supported it to show how flexible their DSP is," said P.J. McNealy, a media analyst for GartnerG2, a division of research firm Gartner. "But I don't necessarily see hardware manufacturers or consumers demanding support for this because there's so many codecs out there and this one isn't leaps and bounds better than the rest."

Forthcoming music-subscription services such as Pressplay and MusicNet, which are backed by the major record labels, have yet to adopt MP3Pro. They have instead struck deals to use rival digital music formats from companies such as Microsoft and RealNetworks. Until label-backed services pick up MP3Pro, there's not going to be "screaming demand for it," McNealy said.

Still, Thomson Multimedia and the Fraunhofer Institute, the companies behind the digital music format, have been interested some software and hardware developers in the new technology. MP3.com signed on last week to make songs available in MP3Pro on a joint Web site with Thomson. A new plug-in for AOL Time Warner's Winamp online music player is also available from various Thomson sites. In addition, InterTrust has integrated MP3Pro with its digital rights management platform, Thomson said.

Launched in June, MP3Pro includes a new player and "ripper," or file creator, which enables music fans to create near-CD quality digital music files around half the size of the previous format. In addition, MP3Pro files will work with software and devices based on MP3, Thomson said.

MP3Pro files are recorded differently from the previous format, however, and the new files may sound worse on systems designed for standard MP3s. MP3Pro uses two separate streams of data to improve audio quality; only one of those streams can be detected by older players.

Support for the MP3Pro by Texas Instruments "is instrumental in helping us expand our reach to portable Internet audio devices and will help to carryover the momentum of MP3 to the more advanced MP3Pro," Henri Linde, vice president of new business, patent and licensing unit for Thomson Multimedia, said in a statement.

Research analyst Susan Kevorkian of IDC agreed that to keep sales high it's important for consumer electronics manufacturers to build devices that support an array of the emerging file formats.



To: Jacob Snyder who wrote (52594)9/19/2001 10:31:32 PM
From: Gottfried  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 70976
 
Jacob, you've mellowed beyond recognition. :) A friend sent me this Power Point slide show.
suite101.com

Clicking on it begins the download [about 500 KB]. It has beautiful images and text and looks professionally done. Brian, Mike and James and anyone who considers himself a Mensch will appreciate it. A free PP viewer can be had from Microsoft.

Gottfried



To: Jacob Snyder who wrote (52594)9/20/2001 10:40:05 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 70976
 
The S&P Equipment Index bottomed in '98 at around 100. We are not too far away. Keep in mind that the high was 1232 last April:

quote.yahoo.com^SPTKSM&d=d