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


To: CPAMarty who wrote (29)11/30/1997 10:37:00 AM
From: John Rieman  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 324
 
Divi's encoder was tested by Cable Labs for MPEG-2 compliance. Cable labs has approved 3 encoder vendors: Divi, SA and GI(now Next Level)

divi.com

23 companies addressed the Open Cable RFP.........................

opencable.com

These are the APIs.........................

opencable.com

And of course, Pegasus.........................

timewarner.com



To: CPAMarty who wrote (29)11/30/1997 9:39:00 PM
From: Maya  Respond to of 324
 
To: +Bill DeMarco (25898 )
From: +John Rieman
Sunday, Nov 30 1997 2:46PM EST
Reply # of 25902

European Commission moves to slow C-Cube's sales/earnings...................................

techserver.com.

European Commission stops German digital TV pact
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright c 1997 Nando.net
Copyright c 1997 Reuters

BONN (November 30, 1997 1:23 p.m. EST nando.net) - German media
groups Kirch and Bertelsmann confirmed over the weekend that the European
Commission had provisonally blocked their planned digital television alliance.

Bertelsmann unit CLT-Ufa and the Kirch group said in statements that the European
Commission had asked them both to cease the joint marketing of their "d-box"
decoder system.

"However, the letter from the Commission is a provisional one and is not a final
decision. We will have intensive discussions about this extremely complex issue at the
start of next week," Rolf Schmidt-Holtz, management board chairman of CLT-Ufa,
said on German television.

The deal would have united Bertelsmann's Premiere and DF1, Kirch's digital pay TV
company.

CLT-Ufa and Kirch said during the summer that the two groups wanted to co-operate
in the area of pay TV. To receive the programs, both agreed to use the d-box decoder
system.

Another potential blow for digital television came from the general secretary of the
world soccer federation FIFA, Joseph Blatter, who said FIFA would decide if, when,
and where games from the World Cup Finals in 2002 and 2006 would be shown.

He said that FIFA had a veto over the broadcast of games in the World Cup finals and
that if necessary, it would tear up its contract with Kirch.

Kirch paid 3.4 billion marks ($1.9 billion) in 1996 for the TV rights to the 2002 and
2006 World Cup finals, but some pundits have expressed concern that the games will
only be available live on pay TV.