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To: John Rieman who wrote (39574)4/4/1999 2:53:00 PM
From: J Fieb  Respond to of 50808
 
Some more details on JVC/SONY partnership...

techweb.com

Pair will codevelop interface spec based on 1394 -- JVC,
Sony push D-VHS as home digital recorder
Yoshiko Hara

Tokyo - Victor Co. of Japan Ltd. (JVC) and Sony Corp. have allied to jointly
develop the interface for the D-VHS recorder. The partnership will combine
IEEE-1394-related technologies that Sony is promoting as i.Link with JVC's
D-VHS format, with an aim to position the D-VHS recorder as the most
practical digital-video recorder for home networks that use the 1394 serial
interface.

The D-VHS format enables digital-video recording with 44-Gbyte capacity per
cassette tape in the same size as today's VHS format, ensuring full compatibility
with that analog standard. One tape can record for 7 hours in standard-definition
mode at a transfer rate of 14.1 Mbits/second, and 3.5 hours in high-definition
mode at 28.2 Mbits/s.

Though JVC proposed D-VHS as early as 1995, use has been limited to
dedicated tuner built-in recorders for JVC's Ecostar line and for PerfecTV from
Hitachi Ltd.

"Sony's participation will make it more certain that D-VHS will be the world de
facto standard," commented Hiroki Shimizu, senior managing director of JVC.

Katsumi Ihara, president of Sony's Home A&V Products Co., said, "Through
the joint R&D, the two companies will combine D-VHS and i.Link interface
technology to provide a means of digital recording for digital broadcasts in the
world. Furthermore, we want to propose new usage of D-VHS on a digital
network."

IEEE-1394 has already been adopted in the consumer realm for output of
digital-video camcorders. But JVC and Sony plan to devise technology to send
MPEG-2 data through the 1394 link, making it possible to connect D-VHS
decks to set-top-boxes for recording digital broadcasts.

"IEEE-1394 defined the road of the signal, but what runs on that road has not
been defined," said Takamichi Mitsuhashi, a Sony development engineer. "We
will build a protocol to define what will be transmitted."

A place for tape

JVC, as the licensor of D-VHS, will provide the 1394-related technology to
licensees. A total of 13 major VCR manufacturers have lined up behind
D-VHS, with three companies-Hitachi, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. and
Philips Electronics-serving as technical advisers.

Consumer manufacturers including Sony and JVC are working on the
next-generation disk system with a capacity of around 15 Gbytes, which they
expect to be suitable for a home video-disk recorder. But that doesn't mean
there's no place for tape.

"People said that tape had no future," said JVC's Shimizu. "But in terms of cost,
tape media have an incomparable advantage. D-VHS will vitalize the huge asset
of VHS that has already accumulated."

The D-VHS format features bit-stream recording, in which an input signal is
stored and output as is-scrambled data is left that way, without descrambling.
This is one way to avoid copy-protection problems
.

For 1394, Hitachi, Intel, Matsushita, Sony and Toshiba have proposed the Digital
Transmission Content Protection scheme to prohibit illegal duplication. A
1394-equipped D-VHS deck will thus have ample copy protection.

"But to avoid later troubles . . . we are discussing with copyright holders ways
to settle copyright issues" for D-VHS licensees, said Shimizu.

JVC plans to introduce a D-VHS recorder with the codeveloped 1394 interface
by summer in Japan. Introduction in overseas markets will follow soon as
copyright hurdles are cleared. Sony has a similar marketing timetable, according
to Ihara.