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


To: BillyG who wrote (24901)11/5/1997 7:02:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
Recordable VCD for both PCs and Players...........................

exchange2000.com

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In China as in the West they have to keep up with the Joneses - and this will drive the market onward and upward. Unfortunately price is collapsing faster than volume is going up and that poses a major problem for the manufacturers. So where do they go from here? One guess is that everyone is working madly on a recordable version. VCD-R, you heard it here first, folks.



To: BillyG who wrote (24901)11/6/1997 7:46:00 AM
From: Bill DeMarco  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Billy,

Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't there some mention after the recent earnings release with regards to C-Cube having one or more large deals in the works? Thanks.

Bill

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DVD to break through in PCs
By Paul Festa
November 5, 1997, 6:10 p.m. PT

DVD technology may turn the personal computer
into a primary home entertainment platform,
possibly displacing such traditional products as the
TV as the focus for electronic recreation, according
to a study from a major marketing research firm.

The study emerges as the home PC metamorphoses
into a high-tech multimedia hub, controlling a wide
range of devices including DVD-ROM drives,
cameras, and communication devices.

"DVD's entertainment capabilities will be
inextricably linked to computers for the next two to
four years...Consumers will increasingly accept the
PC as a viable and unique entertainment
alternative," according to the Forrester Research
study.

DVD technology will make its first and fastest
inroads in the PC industry--not the consumer
electronics realm--according to the study. By the
year 2002, DVD-equipped PCs will have an
installed base of 53 million units. By the turn of the
century, DVD-ROM titles will begin to outnumber
CD-ROM titles.

And as early as next year, study author Mark
Hardie expects computer manufacturers to start
scrapping CD-ROM drives in favor of DVD-ROM
drives.

DVD-ROM drives will read CD-ROM titles and
eventually provide storage capability as well. DVD
will also bring film titles to the PC, and together with
the expanded gaming possibilities of DVD, PCs are
expected to become vehicles used as much for
entertainment as for information.

Generally, because of increased storage capability,
DVD allows for a quantum leap in multimedia- and
video-rich applications on the PC.

"It's not that you're going to watch more movies on
the PC than the TV," said Hardie. "But what we'll
get initially is that movies and television and
movie-like content on the DVD-enabled PC will get
audiences used to fact that the PC can do more
than just calculate Quicken spreadsheets. And after
that you'll see new forms of entertainment that use
the inherent advantage of interactivity."

The next five years will prove less favorable for the
video and music industries' DVD efforts, however,
which target the TV- and home stereo-centric
crowd, according to the study. In 2002, only 5.2
percent of households in the U.S. will own a
standalone (non-PC) DVD-Video player, while
only 2 percent will have a DVD-Audio player. As a
result, Forrester believes that the PC will be
transformed into a more viable consumer
entertainment device.

Though standalone DVD Video promises clearer
images and sound, a convenient CD-sized design,
and added features like subtitle language options,
the new format faces numerous hurdles including
lack of available titles, cost, the need to add
expensive home theater components, and the lack
of recording capability, according to the study.
Therefore DVD Video is not a compelling
replacement for a VCR.

Another consumer issue plaguing DVD is the
continuing uncertainty over standards. While
consumers currently are buying one format, some
companies are considering a rental-based format
known as Divx. The uncertainty makes widespread
adoption less likely, according to Hardie.

"There's been no effort on the part of manufacturers
to reach one standard and agree on it," he said.

DVD Audio discs face an even steeper uphill battle
for market share. The biggest hurdle is that CD
audio is already digital.

"For the average consumer, there's no reason to
buy it," said Hardie. "What DVD Audio offers, the
majority will never want to buy: six-channel audio
surround-sound. Not only do you need to buy the
player but also the receiver and the speakers. And
consumers just recently switched from vinyl to CD."

But DVD on the PC still has a ways to go too.
Non-movie DVD-ROM titles have been extremely
slow in coming. Games designed for DVD-ROM
number less than five, according to an analyst at
Dataquest, and only a small number of CD-ROM
gaming and other content titles have been
re-released on the more compact new discs.