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To: BillyG who wrote (39235)3/11/1999 6:07:00 PM
From: Don Dorsey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Star Wars: Episode I - the Phantom Menace to be First Motion Picture
Released in Digital Projection

LAS VEGAS (March 11) ENTERTAINMENT WIRE -March 11, 1999--Marking the
first time in motion picture history that a widely released feature
film will be made available to moviegoers via digital projection,
George Lucas announced at the ShoWest convention in Las Vegas last
night that digital projection of Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom
Menace will take place on four screens beginning June 18, 1999. (The
film will open nationwide on May 19, 1999.)

Earlier in the day Lucasfilm concluded separate agreements with
CineComm Digital Cinema and Texas Instruments, two of the industry's
leading forces in digital projection of motion pictures, to provide
this opportunity to showcase this new technology to the public using
The Phantom Menace.



To: BillyG who wrote (39235)3/12/1999 1:26:00 PM
From: DiViT  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 50808
 
LG Electronics Projects Earnings Of $1.7 Billion From The Chinese Market

03/11/99
Korea Economic Daily
Comline Daily News Financial Markets COMLINE NEWS SERVICE
(Copyright C (1999) COMLINE Business Data, Inc)

LG Electronics Co. is targeting a 30-percent growth to $1.7 billion in 1999 sales in China, which the Korean consumer electronics maker seeks to develop as a "second domestic market".

To reach its goal, the company plans to continue to invest in increasing manufacturing and marketing capabilities while concentrating management resources to extend sales of color TVs and air conditioners among other home appliances.

LG Electronics also selected digital video disks and CD-ROM drives as new strategic items for the Chinese consumer electronics market.

( The Korea Economic Weekly 1999/03/03 )



To: BillyG who wrote (39235)3/13/1999 7:48:00 AM
From: J Fieb  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Anything really new here BillyG........

techweb.com

LSI Logic nearing SOC with mixed-signal magic
Crista Souza

Silicon Valley- In what may amount to a monumental leap forward for
system-on-a-chip design, LSI Logic Corp. has added mixed-signal modules to its
forthcoming 0.18-micron G12 ASIC process.

The first offspring from last year's marriage between LSI Logic and Symbios
Inc., the digital G12 process will incorporate two mixed-signal transistors,
allowing mixed-signal cores to operate at higher speeds and lower voltages than
in the past.

According to industry watchers, the Milpitas, Calif., ASIC supplier has now
mastered two of the three fundamental SOC elements: high-performance RISC
processors (both ARM and MIPS), and mixed signal.

LSI Logic has yet to promote the third SOC component-embedded
DRAM-although it's been coy about revealing what capability it gleaned from
an earlier technology exchange with DRAM manufacturer Micron Technology
Inc.

When compared to the gains inherent in the acquisition of mixed-signal
technology, however, analysts said, embedded DRAM would have a much
smaller payoff for LSI Logic, given its targeted markets: cellular handsets and
consumer mass storage.

While the company has offered various mixed-signal cores since 1993, it is
hoping with the new process modules to earn a reputation as a leader in
mixed-signal integration. By pairing its strengths in mixed-signal ICs and
embedded-RISC design, for example, LSI Logic could use its G12 process to
combine previously disparate system blocks.

Customers are particularly interested in integrating devices such as
cellular-phone chipsets to keep pace with ever-shrinking system designs,
according to Irene Song, LSI Logic's mixed-signal product marketing manager.
"We're seeing a lot of demand for integration of IF [intermediate-frequency]
capability," as well as certain RF functions, Song said.

Indeed, by integrating mixed signal-the so-called "real world" interface in
applications such as computer graphics, networking, and
telecommunications-OEMs can realize significant cost and power savings. For
this reason, more than 70% of system-level ICs will contain some mixed-signal
functions by 2005, up from about 10% in 1998, according to International
Business Strategies Inc. (IBS), a Los Gatos, Calif., research firm.

Through its acquisition of Symbios, and more recently of Ethernet-IP developer
Seeq Technology, LSI Logic is quickly building momentum to challenge the
reigning mixed-signal champions-Texas Instruments and Lucent Technologies'
Microelectronics Group, said IBS analyst Handel Jones.

Since 1995, LSI Logic has transformed itself from a designer primarily of gate
arrays into one of the top three suppliers of standard-cell ASICs. And of the
company's $1 billion standard-cell ASIC revenue last year, as much as 40%
was derived from mixed-signal designs, said Jones.

"That's a good achievement for a company that five years ago was not even in
mixed signal," he said.

The G12 process, set to sample in the third quarter, will enable LSI Logic to
integrate 1.8-, 2.5- and 3.3-V mixed-signal cores, 1.8-V digital logic, and
5-V-tolerant I/Os on a single chip. With the added on-chip features, the
company will aim to create designs for satellite and digital TV receivers, and
disk-drive applications.