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


To: ftmp who wrote (34130)7/1/1998 9:23:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
I read EE Times, it said there is a start up
company called iCompression which is going to
sell an encoder for less than $200. They said
they are a few years ahead of the competitions.
Anyone knows anything about them?


They have 11 employees. Good luck selling their chip for $200.

2Real from C-Cube is being designed into encoders boards today. They will be on the shelf for Christmas. It costs less than $100. It is a VBR encoder. It decodes as well as encodes. It can decode two streams at a time, which will be important for home editing. Much lower up-grade cost.(and they include 7 Ginsue steak knives with each prepaid order:-))

If iCompression's chip works, they may find a market. They have on chip transport and a few features that are not in c-cube's chips. Maybe they will find a place to sell it, but not for $200.



To: ftmp who wrote (34130)7/2/1998 5:11:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
Chip sales down in May..................................

news.com


Chips pounded by supply, Asia crisis
By Kurt Oeler
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
July 2, 1998, 1:25 p.m. PT
URL: news.com
Global semiconductor sales slumped by 12.7 percent in May, a consequence of Asia's economic slowdown and a worldwide glut of both microprocessors and memory, the core chips used in computers.

Yesterday's news that Intel will furlough 1700 workers at two Oregon manufacturing plants for nine days confirms that even the microprocessor giant isn't immune to the collection of forces that have hit the chip industry in 1998.

May chips sales totaled $9.99 billion, down from $11.46 billion in May of 1997, according to World Semiconductor Trade Statistics figures released by the San Jose, California-based Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). May sales were also down 3.9 percent from April 1998 revenues of $10.40 billion.

The decline touched all four marketing regions--the Americas, Europe, Japan, and Asia-Pacific--with Japan and the Americas falling by 19 and 17 percent, respectively, on a year-by-year basis.

The Asian financial crisis continues to be a prime factor in the slide, according to the SIA. The trade group earlier projected that more than half of this year's expected $3 billion contraction in Japan, the world's second-largest computer market, will come as the result of the currency troubles.

Of course, currency problems have also hit other countries in Asia, whose economic straits have in turn compounded the general malaise Japan has suffered over the last few years. Combined, Asia-Pacific and Japan make up more than half of the world's chip sales, according to SIA's numbers.

"A number of observers were optimistic that it [the financial crisis] would be a one or two-quarter event, but those predictions haven't quite come true," said SIA spokesman Jeff Weir. "There are clear dynamics of the marketplace being felt in semiconductors."