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To: CPAMarty who wrote (27119)12/27/1997 11:09:00 AM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 50808
 
Marty, Maybe DELL will need that
low cost DVD solution that CUBE
will have ready soon for their
low end line?
Here is a Q posted on the USENET
that hasn't been answered yet.
Can anyone help Geno?

ww2.altavista.digital.com@43110@rec%2evideo%2edesktop%26c+cube

Who is going to manufacture DVx
Based Consumer Cards ? Any info ? (DVx
DVD Codec by C-Cube)

Another usenet Q on DVx;

ww2.altavista.digital.com@43165@rec%2evideo%2edesktop%26DVx

I saw a small piece in the November
issue of Videomaker about a new
MPEG2 codec from a company called C-CUB
(c-cub.com) I went to their
home page and found their press release
on the new codec and one
paragraph said
"MPEG-2 Based Editing Applications
Until now, MPEG-2 was too cost-prohibitive
and difficult to address
the non-linear editing market. DVx makes
high-quality MPEG-2-based
editing feasible for the first time by
supporting dual-stream decoding
and providing frame-accurate MPEG encode
and decode functions in a
single, cost-effective package.
DVx also decreases the overall cost of
editing by providing superior storage
savings over existing editing
formats and by integrating video
post-processing functions that today
can only be achieved with the use
of costly external hardware. "

I know that MPEG1 is not particulary nice
but is good on disk space.
What are peoples comments on MPEG2
regarding disk space and video
quality. Is there a future in MPEG2
for NLE and can it be frame
edited??



To: CPAMarty who wrote (27119)12/28/1997 11:18:00 AM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
Koreans shipping generation 2 DVDs.......................................

asiansources.com

Steep price of hardware, software seen as temporary setback

<Picture>Korean giants already make second-generation DVDs, expect strong worldwide demand for the line

Contents

EVEN THE staunchest proponents of the DVD player admit that the line has yet to meet sales expectations. But with this year's first-quarter rollout in the United States successfully achieved, and a market foothold won, optimism is at last running high. Distributors, dealers and retailers alike see DVD as the driving force behind a forecast resurgence of consumer electronics sales.

All probable obstacles to the growth of the line are being addressed, including the key issue of software shortages. Entertainment suppliers, movie studios and manufacturers have all vowed to step up the release of DVD titles this year, and this is bringing down prices to more reasonable levels, they say. Typically, a movie on DVD currently retails for between $24.99 and $29.99 in the United States.

And a US industry association promoting the product said that from fewer than 300 going into the fourth quarter, the number of DVD titles is forecast to more than double by the end of 1997. As Hollywood now appears to have bought into the technology, further, rapid growth can be expected.

Developments have been slower in Europe, where standardization issues have held up business. But a similar picture is now emerging, with a group of movie studios planning to launch about 100 DVD titles in Europe in the first quarter of the year. By year-end, they expect the total to top 250.

Their move is being complemented by the leading hardware manufacturers, which have unveiled plans to release LD-compatible DVD players by spring. Predictions also see the eventual lowering of hardware prices in the same way that prices of CD players fell. A top-end, multifeatured Sony model sells for about $1,000 in the United States. One Hong Kong manufacturer expects to produce its own DVD player for less than $300, FOB.

That's when the mass market is ready. Elsewhere in Asia, production is already underway. The Korean chaebols are moving into second-generation supply, including production of a portable model by Samsung. And in China, one firm launched the country's first DVD player in August last year. Full production is scheduled to begin mid-1998. - Asian Sources Electronics, January 1998