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To: Gordon Hodgson who wrote (58274)6/18/1998 5:11:00 PM
From: Ali Chen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Gordon, <..Intel using some software DVD decoding>
The software DVD decoding requires something like
PII-350 PC. It costs about $2000. I can suggest more
economical solution. To play the high-quality
digital movie on your 35" TV go buy a $399 Toshiba
DVD player - nice looking box, with power supply etc.
While your family is enjoying the movie, go buy a
$1000 computer (monitor included) and enjoy Web
chatting. For the rest ($600) you can buy a lot
of beer, or 10 Intel shares (if you prefer).



To: Gordon Hodgson who wrote (58274)6/18/1998 6:38:00 PM
From: Petz  Respond to of 186894
 
Gordon, a Pentium II-350 costing $534 could conceivably do a good DVD decoding job, but 80% of the CPU capactiy would be taken up by the task, leaving little CPU capability for animation or gaming. A Pentium II-350 is only capable of 350 MFlops peak computational ability. An AMD K6-2-300,costing $165, with 1,200 MFlops of peak computational ability could do the job at 25% load. Which CPU would you design into a set-top box?

Petz



To: Gordon Hodgson who wrote (58274)6/20/1998 2:39:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
Gordon - Re: "could you talk about Intel using some software DVD decoding rather than hardware to decrease costs of having DVD equipped computers."

Here is a recent reference to software DVD decoding and Intel's plans.

Paul

{========================}

207.240.177.145

Intel Board Would Enable 'Ultimate DVD
PC'

Aaron Ricadela
New York
5:34 PM EDT, Mon., June 15, 1998

At PC Expo tomorrow, Intel will announce plans to bundle a software DVD
solution with its Express Graphics video boards sold at retail stores,
industry sources said.

Express Graphics is an accelerator board marketed by Intel that uses the
Intel740 2D/3D graphics processor. The product began shipping to OEMs
last month, but isn't yet available as a boxed product for retailers. However,
sources said Intel plans to ship an Express Graphics retail package that
would enable VARs and specialty retailers to help customers build the
"ultimate DVD PC," according to one source familiar with Intel's plans.

Intel, Santa Clara, Calif., will reportedly bundle a combination of products,
including a software package that allows DVD decoding on the system's
CPU, with its Extreme Graphics video cards. It's likely that Intel partner
Zoran, Santa Clara, Calif., will supply the software DVD solution.

Intel's Retail Products Division wants to differentiate Express Graphics from
cards made by other manufacturers, such as Diamond Multimedia
Systems and STB Systems, that also use the 740 chip, a source close to
Intel said. "The graphics board business is extremely competitive," he said.
"One edge is a nice compatibility with a soft DVD product.

Intel declined to comment on tomorrow's announcement.

Strategically, Intel supports software DVD, because it drives demand for
faster processors and reduces the need for costly add-on boards to
decompress the MPEG-2 and AC-3 audio code in DVD movies. Rajesh
Shakkawar, Intel's technology development manager for DVD and Digital
TV, said decoding DVD playback in software allows PC manufacturers to
offer DVD at less than 10 percent of the cost of hardware decoding. Soft
DVD requires at least a 266MHz Pentium II processor, he said.

In the channel, a value-added bundle could fuel sales of Intel's product.
Michael Warner, director of purchasing at Datel Computer Center, San
Diego, said consumer response to boards using the 740 chip has been
lukewarm so far.

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