To: wily who wrote (9388 ) 11/9/1998 7:36:00 PM From: MileHigh Respond to of 93625
To all serious RMBS investors. Read (or skim) first old article announcing Panasonic/RDRAM DTV support- then read second article on next weeks COMDEX announcement from CPQ/Panasonic on DTV- Looks like more RMBS inside!? MH ===================== Fast memory for digital TV By Michael Kanellos Staff Writer, CNET News.com March 9, 1998, 4:55 p.m. PT Matsushita Electric said today that it is licensing high-speed memory technology from Rambus, a move that will likely boost the performance of that company's high-definition digital TVs and other optical consumer technology in the near future. Matsushita will incorporate Rambus's Direct Rambus memory interface technology, which radically speeds up data flow between microcomponents, the company said. These products would likely start coming out after the first quarter of 2000. In all likelihood, that means that the high-speed memory will be used in high-definition televisions--which produce high-quality images--or receivers capable of capturing digital TV signals and converting them for use on a normal TV, said John Cassell, consumer products analyst at Dataquest. "In the digital television architecture, what is required is a lot of memory for video decompression," he said. It's very bandwidth-intensive. You need very fast access memory to do this." High-definition television sets are set to start hitting the market by the fourth quarter of this year, when more digital TV trials begin in earnest. Matsushita is the parent company for Panasonic and other consumer brands. The Direct Rambus technology speeds up the rate at which data flows to and from microprocessors, graphics chips, and other central microcomponents and main memory, said a Rambus representative. Memory chips that incorporate Direct Rambus can now send memory data at a rate of 600 MHz and will run at 800 MHz in the near future, the representative added. Current memory runs at a maximum data rate of only 100 MHz. Rambus itself does not make memory chips. Instead, it licenses its technology to semiconductor manufacturers, who then incorporate it into memory chips and other parts. To work, Direct Rambus must be incorporated in both the memory chips and processors performing logic functions. So far, 25 semiconductor manufacturers and the 14 largest memory manufacturers have licensed the technology. Chips that utilize the technology can be found in microcomponents in computers from Hewlett-Packard and IBM as well as in the Nintendo 64 game player from Nintendo. The full impact of Rambus technology inside of computers, however, has yet to hit. ========================================== Compaq to bring TV to PCs By Brooke Crothers Staff Writer, CNET News.com November 9, 1998, 1:50 p.m. PT Tapping into interactive digital TV on your PC will be one of the big messages emanating from the Comdex computer show. Compaq and Panasonic will debut at Comdex next week hardware for viewing digital TV (DTV) on a PC, as the computing industry seeks to establish computers as one of the first big markets for receiving these high-quality broadcasts. Compaq's initial foray into PC-TVs was not a commercial success and the company eventually stopped promoting its "PC Theatre" system because it was too pricey and there was little demand for these hybrid products. This time Compaq will target hardware that can be added to a PC. With the start of high-definition digital broadcasts earlier this month, the two hardware giants will launch one of the first DTV circuit boards for personal computers, joining others such as Intel and Philips who are also trying to promote DTV on the PC. The device enables computers to receive and playback digital television signals on the screen of a PC. The two companies say the device is compatible with major standards for both traditional "analog" broadcasts and digital ones. "The new PC-DTV device leverages the computing power already in the PC to provide an alternative digital TV solution," the companies said in a statement. Panasonic will initially market the device to PC makers, broadcasters, content creation studios, content developers, and "others with a stake in the developing DTV industry," the company said. This "allows PCs to become, in effect, high-definition televisions," said Trey Smith, vice president, Advanced Technology, Consumer Products Group, Compaq Computer Corporation