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Technology Stocks : e.Digital Corporation(EDIG) - Embedded Digital Technology -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim B who wrote (3078)4/27/1999 8:00:00 PM
From: bob  Respond to of 18366
 
JimB if the news was circulated to the employees at your company
then it is public knowledge IMO. I can't see any harm in letting
other members of the public know. BTW, what company do you work
for.

TIA.

Bob



To: Jim B who wrote (3078)4/27/1999 10:55:00 PM
From: SteelerStu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18366
 
I dont know if you guys saw this or not -- but its a MUST READ if you havnt:

Lucent, TI team on device to
rival MP3
By Erich Luening
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 21, 1999, 12:20 p.m. PT

update Lucent Technologies has teamed up with
e.Digital and Texas Instruments to develop a handheld
Internet music device that will compete with MP3
systems.

Unlike other handheld devices on the market that play
downloadable music using the MP3 format, the e.Digital device
will play files compliant with the new Enhanced Perceptual
Audio Coder (EPAC) specification, the companies said.

Due to ship in December, the new device, to be manufactured
by e.Digital, will use Lucent's Enhanced Perceptual Audio
Coder (EPAC) chip and will employ e.Digital's MicroOS file
management system, Lucent said. The new e.Digital device
will use a new class of Digital Signal Processors (DSPs)
manufactured by Texas Instruments.

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EPAC is a new version of the Perceptual Audio Coder, an
audio compression technology developed by Bell Labs, the
research and development arm of Lucent. Lucent said EPAC
delivers higher quality audio than MP3. It uses a representation
of how humans hear sound to compress music without
noticeable sound degradation. The music is compressed at a
rate of 11 to 1, thus reducing the transmission time/bandwidth
and storage by the same ratio.

Lucent is also involved in an earlier initiative to build devices to
compete with the MP3 spec. Lucent's New Ventures Group is
a member of the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI), the
recording industry's effort to develop a secure access system
for digital music in response to what it claims is the nonsecure
nature of MP3. The Recording Industry Association of America
(RIAA) in December 1998 launched the SDMI.

Lucent executives said EPAC will be compatible with the
forthcoming SDMI specification, due out by this fall. The RIAA
said the initiative has been in the works for nearly a year.

MP3 competitors are racing to build SDMI-compliant products
in time to ship before the Christmas selling season. e.Digital
plans to launch the new EPAC device by December and sell it
online and through traditional retail channels. No pricing has
been announced. Diamond Multimedia's Rio MP3 player sells
for roughly $200.

The RIAA is touting the SDMI spec as a means for paving the
way for interoperability, much the same way a user can
purchase a CD from any record label and play it in a CD player
manufactured by any company.

As reported, a key objective of
the SDMI is to provide a delivery
architecture that can provide
better protections for copyrighted
music. The announcement is set
against the backdrop of growing
incidences of music piracy
online, via easily obtained
software that produces
high-quality copies.

"The security aspects of the
device will comply with SDMI,"
said Rachael Walkden,
codirector of Audio initiatives at
Lucent's New Ventures Group.
"We will keep up with what
comes out of SDMI."

EPAC is not the result of SDMI,
but will comply with the
upcoming spec, Walkden added.

"The important part is that EPAC is what we developed here at
Bell Labs," said Joyce Eastman, director of audio for Lucent's
New Ventures Group. EPAC was developed before SDMI was
launched.

SDMI is supported by many of the big hitters in the recording
industry, including Bertelsmann's BMG Entertainment; EMI
Group's EMI Recorded Music; Sony Music Entertainment;
Seagram's Universal Music Group; and Time Warner's Warner
Bros. and Warner Music Group.

Several major and independent record labels, as well as
several major consumer electronic and technology firms,
support the initiative, including America Online, AT&T, IBM,
Intel, Microsoft, and Toshiba.

But MP3's popularity has made it what some consider a de
facto standard for music downloading online, and the format
has enjoyed support from the likes of Chuck D and Tom
Petty.

The recording industry has expressed concern about
MP3--and in some cases taken legal action--because
although the format itself is not illegal, it allows for the
free, unauthorized distribution of copyright-protected
material.

Of immediate concern are portable devices such as
Diamond's Rio, to which users can download MP3 files
and play them back on the go. The Rio is the subject of
a pending lawsuit between the RIAA and Diamond