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To: tech101 who wrote (13)1/6/2003 10:56:40 AM
From: tech101  Respond to of 28
 
LSI Logic Delivers Industry's First Single-Chip Hard Disk Drive/DVD Recorder Processor for Dual Drive Recorders

Monday January 6, 8:00 am ET

- DMN-8650, industry's first single-chip HDD/DVD recorder processor, benefits manufacturers with higher integration and advanced video features, including full DV camcorder support (http://www.lsilogic.com/products/consumer/dvd/index.html) - Digital video recording, time-shift of live TV, and high-quality, high-speed video archiving functionality in one box drives consumer interest in dual-drive devices

LAS VEGAS, Jan. 6 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- LSI Logic Corporation (NYSE: LSI - News) today announced the industry's first single-chip hard disk drive (HDD) and DVD recorder processor, the DiMeNsion(TM) 8650 (DMN-8650), for use in dual-drive digital recorders. The new processor enables the time-shift of live TV, enhanced archiving to DVD disks, and full support for DV camcorders. In addition, the DMN-8650 delivers superior video quality and significantly reduces system-level costs and design complexity for consumer electronics manufacturers with its high level of integration. The new solution will be demonstrated this week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas at booth #15744.

"Some of the obstacles to the adoption of hard disk drive-based personal video recorders have been device cost and the inability to archive content as you can with a VCR," said Michelle Abraham, senior market analyst for In-Stat/MDR's Converging Markets and Technologies Group. "By combining a hard disk drive with a DVD recorder in a single system, manufacturers can address these issues; and with continued consumer education, we will see accelerated adoption of DVD recorder products." The Scottsdale, Arizona market research firm, In-Stat/MDR, expects that HDD/DVD combination units to be a major segment of the consumer electronics market worldwide, with the number of units shipped exceeding 15.5 million by 2005.

LSI Logic's Senior Marketing Director of Home Media Products Timothy Vehling agrees, "We believe that the combination HDD/DVD recorder market will represent a significant part of the overall worldwide DVD recorder market, as has been demonstrated in Japan where HDD/DVD combination devices represent greater than 50% of DVD recorder sales. With our DMN-8600 (single-drive) and DMN-8650 (dual-drive) products, LSI Logic allows manufacturers to address all segments of the worldwide DVD recorder market."

Integrating the core digital processing of a dual-drive recorder system, the DMN-8650 enables the concurrent recording and playback on both HDD and DVD. With this capability, consumers can: record their favorite TV programs to the HDD while viewing a DVD; time-shift live broadcasts while copying, uninterrupted, another program to a DVD disk; and record from the HDD to a DVD disk, optimizing speed, video quality and storage space. Using the DMN-8650, manufacturers can give consumers a new level of flexibility to record and store more than TV programs -- photos, MP3 files, and content from DV camcorders can now be archived by one system.

LSI Logic's proprietary pre- and post-processing technologies, TrueView Pro(TM) and TrueScan Pro(TM), produce the highest video quality for display or recording purposes. These motion compensation-based technologies provide advanced progressive scan output and impressive noise handling on analog inputs. Unique to DoMiNo(TM)-based products, these technologies represented by LSI Logic's DoMiNoFX(TM) brand and logo help manufacturers differentiate their products for quality-conscious consumers.

"LSI Logic was one of the first semiconductor players to market with a DVD recorder chip and, with this full-featured chip, is well positioned to be a major player in the combination HDD/DVD recorder market," continued Ms. Abraham.

The DMN-8650 is the latest addition to the LSI Logic DiMeNsion family of consumer recordable products and is based upon the company's powerful system-on-a-chip (SoC) DoMiNo architecture. Lowering the total bill of materials with its high level of integration, the DMN-8650 features a dual-150MIPS RISC architecture and integrated MPEG-2 and DV codecs, audio DSP, storage and Fire Wire (IEEE1394) interfaces, and 2D-graphics engine with DVD sub-picture decode and a 32-bit RGBA. In addition, the DMN-8650 is software compatible with the field-proven LSI Logic DMN-8600 DVD recorder system processor, minimizing software development costs and maximizing software reuse for DMN-8600 customers.

Pricing and Availability

The LSI Logic DMN-8650 HDD/DVD recorder processor is currently available for sampling to qualified customers with production quantities planned for the second quarter of 2003. Pricing is $29 in volume quantities.

DoMiNoFX(TM)

The DMN-8650 features DoMiNoFX(TM) technologies. The DoMiNoFX brand and logo represent "Visibly Superior" digital media processing for viewing and recording. Consumers can be confident that when they purchase products with the DoMiNoFX logo they are receiving the most advanced technology and the highest-quality digital media products.

About LSI Logic Corporation

LSI Logic Corporation is a leading designer and manufacturer of communications, consumer and storage semiconductors for applications that access, interconnect and store data, voice and video. In addition, the company supplies storage network solutions for the enterprise. LSI Logic is headquartered at 1621 Barber Lane, Milpitas, CA 95035. lsilogic.com.

Notes to Editor:
1. All LSI Logic news releases (financial, acquisitions, manufacturing,
products, technology etc.) are issued exclusively by PR Newswire and
are immediately thereafter posted on the company's external website,
lsilogic.com.
2. LSI Logic, the LSI Logic logo design, DoMiNo, DiMeNsion, TrueScan
Pro, TrueView Pro and DoMiNoFX are trademarks or registered
trademarks of LSI Logic Corporation.
3. All other brand or product names may be trademarks or registered
trademarks of their respective companies.
4. Please do not assign a Reader Service number to this release.



To: tech101 who wrote (13)3/20/2003 11:50:19 PM
From: tech101  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28
 
EMC, Dell push disk-based storage arrays

By Deni Connor and Ashlee Vance
Network World, 03/17/03

Network managers using cumbersome, slow-to-retrieve tape-based storage to protect their data now will be able to back up, archive and restore it faster with inexpensive disk-based storage arrays that EMC and Dell jointly announced last week.

EMC has opted to put low-cost Advanced Technology Attachment (ATA) drives into its Clariion storage systems as an option alongside current Fibre Channel drives. The new ATA drives could attract users who want to substitute disk-based storage system for tasks that slower tape drives handle. EMC and Dell will make the drives available in the Clariion CX400 and CX600 midrange storage arrays.

EMC has long promoted the use of disk-based storage to help keep data readily available and increase back-up and restore speeds. Many companies, however, still use tape because of its low cost. This latest move by EMC and Dell toward ATA drives could give ATA a boost in this battle between disk and tape, analysts say.

"EMC is traditionally a very cautious, conservative company," says Tony Prigmore, a senior analyst at Enterprise Storage Group. "Now what you are seeing is very rapid adoption of a technology you wouldn't expect the incumbent [storage vendor] to be first to market with. No one expected EMC to do this that fast."

ATA drives, commonly used in PCs and servers, allow back-up operations at as much as eight times the speed of tape-based media at a cost that approaches that of tape. But they are not as reliable or as fast as SCSI or Fibre Channel alternatives, experts say.

Enterprise Storage Group says 1G byte of ATA disk space will cost $1.44 compared with 99 cents for Linear-Tape Open I tape drives. By contrast, 1G byte of Fibre Channel storage averages $63, more than 40 times as much as ATA.

Using ATA drives for backing up data and tape for archiving data is not new. Vendors of network-attached storage (NAS) and storage systems such as ATTO Technology, Avamar Technologies, Network Appliance, Quantum and StorageTek ship ATA-based arrays for backing up data. EMC uses ATA disks in its Centera array for storing data that doesn't change over time, such as digital images. What differentiates Dell's and EMC's ATA drives from these products is that CX arrays can attach to either a storage-area network or to the network as NAS devices.

The new ATA enclosure is priced starting at $21,000 with a 1.25-terabyte capacity. For new CX customers, the price is $127,000 for the CX array with 10 terabytes of capacity.

In addition to the disk announcement, EMC says it will offer new storage software for its Clariion and Symmetrix storage systems that lets customers migrate and distribute data between storage arrays. Called EMC SAN Copy, the software can be used to transfer large chunks of data from one system to another at as fast as 4 terabyte/hour.

The software could be used, for example, to move information from a production system to a test system for application tuning, for large backups, or for shifting information from an older system to a new one. It costs $18,000.

nwfusion.com