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To: Michel Bera who wrote (2580)12/6/1997 2:58:00 PM
From: Michel Bera  Respond to of 93625
 
I could not resist to post this from the ATHM thread. Pentium II in
set-top boxes ? Winter Olympics in 1998 as a test market for HDTV ?
Guess what will the the choice for set-top memory architecture....
Maybe they need a pin count reduction too.

Just my two cents.

MiB

----- snip
The set-top computer is the future

By Michael Kanellos
December 5, 1997, 6:05 p.m. PT

The term "set-top computer" is only about 48 hours old, but it could
come to define a major market segment by the year 2000 as it appears
that the much heralded convergence between PCs and TVs is finally taking
place.

The convergence is being driven by technological change in the TV arena
and the need for new markets in the computer world. Digital TV
broadcasting will begin next year, a new means of transmission that is
incompatible with current TV.

Simply put, users will have to get new set-top boxes or new TVs to watch
television in the future.

And rather than let the traditional consumer electronics players
dominate this upgrade market, Intel and its partners are stepping
forward with the set-top computer, essentially a TV-compatible box that
runs on a scaled-down Pentium II.

Further momentum should build next week, as various sources have said
Intel will likely unveil alliances with broadcasters and cable companies
at the Western Cable Show in Anaheim next week and the Consumer
Electronics Show in January. Network Computer Inc. is also expected to
announce new software alliances. (Intel is an investor in CNET the
Computer Network.).

"You will see Intel canvassing the Western Cable Show to get these cable
operators to adopt the set top computer," said Richard Doherty, director
of The Envisioneering Group , a marketing research firm based in
Seaford, New York. "You've got over 100 million households in the U.S.
and two-thirds of them have cable. We could see 50 million by the year
2000.

"We're seeing Compaq and IBM sit in on the working groups," he added,
referring to the organizations devoted to hammering out digital TV
standards and the possibility that these vendors may market set-top
computers.

"It's very possible that Compaq and Gateway 2000 do this," said Dean
McCarron, a principal at Mercury Research, a Scottsdale, Arizona based
marketing research firm.

The problem is that it is taking PC manufacturers a long time to face up
to market realities. "They understand their existing customers who buy
expensive boxes but they've misunderstood the new market," he added
referring to the unexpected surge in popularity of sub-$1,000 computers,
despite the fact that they don't have the bells and whistles of more
expensive machines.

McCarron believes that vendors will come around and begin offering
set-top computers which are expected to range in price from $300 to
$500.

The technological shift within the television and cable industry is
perhaps the strongest force pushing convergence. By the fall of next
year, the ten largest U.S. viewer markets will be conducting digital TV
broadcasting pilots, said Doherty. The 1998 Winter Olympics, in fact,
will be used as an experimental platform for high definition
broadcasting. More will follow.

Although some analysts have stated that a lack of digital content could
slow down the adoption of digital TV, Doherty pointed out that standard
film uses a higher resolution than high definition digital TV. Ergo,
most TV shows will adapt to the format easily.

"It's inevitable," said Jae Kim, associate analyst at Paul Kagan &
Associates of digital TV.

For users to receive digital TV data, however, they will have three
choices: put an add-in card in their PC and watch TV through that; buy a
new TV; or buy a set top box that is compatible with digital TV. The
third alternative seems the most customer friendly, commented Kim.

In set top boxes, Intel and the major computer manufacturers, at least
according to Doherty, may hold the upper hand here. Current set top
boxes run on outdated technology that was developed ten years ago.

Pentium II technology is far more current, and will allow vendors to
incorporate additional functions into the box. While the low-end set-top
computer may only slightly expand the capabilities of current set top
boxes, vendors can build the devices so that users can surf the web, or
even watch films on DVD.

While Intel has said that devices that can receive broadcasts and use
the web will cost between $300 and $500, with DVD the price could go up
to $700 for the luxury models, said Doherty.



To: Michel Bera who wrote (2580)12/8/1997 11:29:00 AM
From: MulhollandDrive  Respond to of 93625
 
Michel, thanks for the article, just another example of the potential for Rambus technology, God only knows how many new products/applications are lurking out there just waiting to be announced. Sure does make valuation a tough proposition<g>....RMBS WineBar sounds good, as long as it doesn't turn into the RMBS Whine Bar...bp