The WAVE Report on Digital Media
3D --- Media Creation --- Shared Space
---Published by 4th Wave, Inc.---
Issue #2047------------------9/8/00

 

The WAVE Report is Searchable on

http://www.3dlinks.com
http://www.wave-report.com

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2047.1 Hot Topics

    InQuest Market Research Update

    FirewireDirect.com Double Times FireWire Storage

      with RAID Solution

 

2047.2 Story of the Issue

    Information Appliances – A Competitive Place to Be

 

2047.3 Television

    ReplayTV to Ship 60-Hour Single-Drive Digital Video

      Recorder

 

2047.4 Wireless

    Lucent and PacketVideo Collaborate to Optimize

      Multimedia Features on Next-Gen Wireless Devices

    Swedish Mobile Contest May Fuel More Services,

      Broader Networks

    International Datacasting Introduces Broadband Satellite

      Datacasting Receivers

 

2047.5 Financials

    3i Leads $12.5 Million Investment in Intrinsic

      Graphics

    National Semiconductor Reports Earnings for Q1 of

      Fiscal 2001

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2047.1 Hot Topics

 

***InQuest Market Research Update

 

1. Update on Intel's Platform Roadmap. More details on P4, Tualatin, Almador, etc.

 

2. Reminder, the article, "Intel P4 Roadmap Analysis" was released shortly before IDF.

 

3. InQuest is also announcing a one-time release of all technical presentations from the recent Platform Conference held in the Silicon Valley. You can find these at http://www.platformconference.com. Take the Presentations Archive link when you get there.

 

http://www.inqst.com

 

***FirewireDirect.com Double Times FireWire Storage with RAID Solution

(September 7)

 

FirewireDirect.com, a company specializing in 1394, FireWire and i.LINK peripherals and accessories for Windows, Macintosh and Linux based computers, announced they are expanding to offer a RAID solution for their FireWire SlimLine-Ultra Series hard drive (HDD) systems.

 

A RAID configured pair of SlimLine-Ultra Series HDD offers approximately 24MB/sec reads and 21MB/sec writes.

 

Available now, configurations and prices include:

150GB SlimLine-Ultra RAID      $1598

80GB SlimLine-Ultra RAID       $898

40GB SlimLine-Ultra RAID       $658

 

FirewireDirect is also offering an opportunity for existing customers with registered SlimLine-Ultra HDD products previously purchased and registered with FirewireDirect to update their existing drives to RAID Level 0 through upgrade available by contacting the company's technical support department.

 

The SlimLine-Ultra Drive RAID Solutions are available for Macintosh FireWire users and shipping now. Support for Windows customers will be available soon. All other FirewireDirect products support Windows 98SE, Windows 2000 and the upcoming Windows ME, as well as MacOS and Linux 2.4.

 

http://www.firewiredirect.com

 

2047.2 Story of the Issue

 

***Information Appliances – A Competitive Place to Be

By Amanda Rogos and John Latta

(September 8)

 

Is an information appliance the microwave cooker of morsels of information or the freezer of data to be preserved? Or is information appliance an oxymoron? To many, it is the convenience of marrying the ubiquity of information with the convenience of an appliance. Yet, there are few conventional appliances which one carries around with them – a watch is hardly called an appliance. Thus, the literal transliteration of these terms into a larger meaning remains vacuous. Some of the major market research firms only see the PDA or tablet as information appliances - and maybe the set top box. Thus, there is no coherency in what is an information appliance and the terms do not describe what it is.

 

--Information Appliance Defined

 

We offer the following definition of an Information Appliance:

 

An information appliance is a horizontal product based on electronics technology, which performs useful functions for an individual and uses a network to access, retrieve, interact with, report and/or handle information or media.

 

Note that we have not explicitly included the Internet – the type of network is not important. Further, we have not included industry specific devices that are vertical products.

 

--Information Appliance Product Categories

 

In the context of today’s products and this definition we offer the following as product categories:

 

Digital audio

Digital jukebox

Digital radio

eBooks

Digital frames

Internet telephone

Pocket PCs

Web appliances

PDAs

Wearables (including wrist devices)

Personal TV

Web phones – web enabled cell phones

 

What is not on this list?

 

-Digital Cameras - Not explicitly linked to a network – possible future category to include:

 

-Set Top Box - Potential candidate but these come close to a vertical market product.

 

-Pagers - Especially the latest 2 way that have limited keyboards. These are viable candidates.

 

--Information Appliance Competitive Space

 

At 4th Wave we maintain databases on the products in each category. The data assembled includes specific products, their functional details, cost, and category specific information such as content or services. Shown in the table below is the list of the products and the number of companies providing them. This already is a very competitive market. The information appliance space is an embryonic market and there is a proliferation of companies seeking a first mover advantage. Consolidation will take place in the next several years and, at 4th Wave, we expect the number of companies and products to decline significantly.

 

Product line           Products               Companies

                      on the Market

 

Digital audio               35                       28

Digital jukebox             2                         2

Digital radio               5                         5

Ebooks                      3                         3

Digital frames              4                         4

Internet telephone          6                         7

PocketPCs                   10                        6

Web appliances              24                       22

PDAs                        10                        8

Wearables                   5                         5

Wrist devices               14                        9

Personal TV                 4                         4

 

Total                       122                      103

 

To better understand the marketplace, we examine each category below.

 

--Digital Audio

 

The digital audio market is one of the furthest along, if for no other reason that the number of products and companies. According to Forward Concepts, in 1999, 750,000 MP3 players were sold with an estimated 4 million to be sold in 2000 and 30 million in 2010. We counted 35 digital audio players ranging from $99-1,499.

 

Digital audio players come in every shape and size, but small seems to be the operative parameter. The players vary by design and storage capacity but most have storage capacity between 32MB and 96MB contained in a handheld device with a small LCD screen. There are exceptions though, like HanGo’s PJBox that uses technology from Fraunhofer and Compaq to store up to 4.86GB. This 150 x 80 x 26mm device downloads songs with a USB connection from the PC/Internet, has an audio cable for playback on home audio systems and comes with a car adapter kit. It is a bit pricier than other models (on average between $100-350) at $749.99. The extra storage capacity is linked to the higher cost.

 

Other notables include the Diamond Rio players and MaxTech’s Moveman which offer Mac compatibility in additional to the traditional Windows functionality. There are several Diamond Rio players. The Rio 500 and Rio 600 support multiple formats in addition to MP3 (including WMA, ADPCM, audible.com content and MPEG-2 (may need upgrades to get these)) and offer up to 96MB (Rio 500) and 340MB (Rio 600) with flash card and expandable snap on packets. The Rio 600 has a car adapter, an add-on FM tuner and personalized snap on faceplates as well. The Moveman offers 80+MB of CompactFlash storage and an LCD with track number, time-elapsed, and equalizer settings (no ID3 tag support) for $99-299.

 

Digital audio devices lie in a quagmire of uncertainly. MP3 song files are at the core of the digital audio product and an implied association with the lack of regard for property ownership. Currently copyright protection is a significant issue and the future of free downloadable content has a black cloud over it. Flash memory, the dominant storage technology in these devices, is expensive and in short supply. For this reason, despite the success of the line of Rio players, our estimate of units sold is a rather low 2 million. Digital radio (detailed below) is another audio category we are not bullish about. The products sound interesting and could be very exciting, but the quality of the actual audio is marginal and broadband is needed to improve quality.

 

--Digital Radio

 

The digital radio market is led by Kerbango and AudioRamp, which both plan to offer standalone devices that offer access to streaming media and audio as well as some two-way capabilities, e-commerce and additional data about broadcasts. Both devices (Kerbango Radio and iRad respectively) will use a range of ISP connections including 56k modem and Ethernet in order to connect, but have no need of a PC in order to provide service. Both device releases have been shifted to later this year, and prices range from $399 for the Kerbango Radio and less than $300 for the iRad.

 

Another company, PenguinRadio will offer a Linux-based device that streams Internet radio stations and MP3 files to a user’s stereo for playback. The device will connect to the Internet (not specified with what connection) to search via Ellipso satellite for audio sources and can also use PDAs and cell phones to connect for searches. The device, scheduled for release this year, will be sold for less than $200.

 

Command Audio will approach audio a little differently, offering a device and service that allows users to select their favorite audio and television programs and even written publications for playback on demand. The RCA CA 1000 Audio-on-Demand receiver will use satellite transmission and FM subcarriers to transmit programming wirelessly to subscribers in the car or in the home. The service is available to consumers now in Denver and Phoenix for $199 and $11.95/month and will be available nationwide in 2001. Command Audio expects to sell the software to OEMs and car manufacturers in the future.

 

--Electronic Books

 

MP3 files and devices have gotten a lot of attention lately, perhaps at the expense of other electronic products. Such a product, the electronic book, has not gained the popularity that was previously expected. There are three of these products, Gemstar’s Rocket eBook Pro, SoftBook Press’ Softbook Reader and Everybook’s Everybook, each with its own set of features.

 

Everybook is the only product that offers a color screen – well actually, 2 of them, similar to a traditional book. The Everybook is not available now, but will be released in two stages. The Professional Edition, which will be 11 x 8.5 x 1.75” and will cost $1,600 - $2,000 will be released at the end of this year. A Personal Edition will be a bit smaller at 9 x 6 x 1.25” and will be released in the second half of 2001 (price to be determined).

 

The other two products have one grayscale LCD screen, much like a Web tablet. The Softbook reader, which offers 8MB of memory, costs $599.95 if purchased outright and $299.95 with an agreement to purchase newspapers, magazines or books in the amount of $19.95/month for 24 months from the SoftBookstore. The Rocket eBook Pro, with 16MB of memory, can be purchased at Barnes&Noble.com, Powells.com, eBookEmpire.com or eCampus.com for $269 (regular version is a bit less). E-books cost $18-25.

 

All three products offer similar functionality with touchscreens, a dictionary/thesaurus, and searching and highlighting capabilities. Additional features include the Rocket eBook’s scrolling, animation and audio (WAV) capabilities and Everybook’s stylus. Despite these features, we believe the acceptance of eBooks will be low in the near future. A lack of standards and compatibility between readers and electronic formats and exclusive partnership deals with publishing and e-commerce sites has resulted in a decrease in content and an increase buyer uncertainty.

 

--Digital Frames

 

Digital frames have just arrived on the market and offer connectivity for long distance family members and friends. Four companies offer mostly 5-6” LCD frames of varying colors that can be filled with digital images from remote PCs with a phone line connection or Compact Flash card. Weave Innovations StoryBox will not be available till later in the year 2000, but the other three, Sony’s PHD-A55 CyberFrame, Ceiva’s Ceiva and Digi-Frame’s DF-560 are all available today.

 

Sony’s frame allows a user to display not only digital images but MPEG movies using Memory Stick media and a Cybershot or DCR-TRV 10 digital video camcorder. Users can also print images from the frame. This functionality comes at a price though, the frame is $899, Memory Stick (4-16MB) is about $79.95 and the video recorder is $999-1499.

 

Ceiva and Digi-Frame offer more traditional devices (if you can call sending electronic images cross-country to a frame on a family member’s desk traditional) with a slide show format. Ceiva, which uses a phone line and a local number to upload images each night, holds 8 pictures on the frame. The Ceiva Web site offers the ability to handle images in the inbox and on the frame as well as create personal albums to store additional pictures. The Ceiva sells for $249 and has a monthly fee of $2.99 or $7.99 (depending on the phone number) service fee for the connection. Digi-Frame comes in two sizes, a 3.9” and 5.6” LCD screen and uses Compact Flash cards that can store between 200-500 images. The frame sells for $399 or $599 depending on the frame size purchased.

 

Digital frames are a strong product concept. However, their potential is limited and pricey which results in a narrow market. The product also has limited appeal, especially with the growth of services that save traditional photographs on a CD-ROM or make digital photographs into printed replicas. That said, one of the WAVE editors purchased a Ceiva frame for a grandparent and is very pleased with the ease of use and ability to send family pictures across the country.

 

--Pocket PCs, Web Appliances and PDAs

 

Pocket PCs, Web appliances and PDAs have begun to flood the market. We have counted 10 Pocket PCs, 24 Web appliances and 10 PDAs either available or in development. The variety of products share certain functions, and many appear visually similar. For our research, we have defined three separate categories by form factor and function.

 

Pocket PCs are devices that fulfill more functions than a simple organizer and may have full (or close to full) PC capabilities. The devices must be smaller than a small portable laptop, preferably handheld. Pricing in this market is rather steep, and we predict this will hold sales down till product pricing falls to a more PDA level.

 

The form factor of a Web appliance varies, but most are small PCs or Web tablet shaped devices. The devices have limited functionality and are designed for Internet access and e-mail, rather than word processing usage. These limitations are by design, hoping to capture the non-PC literate population, but may also be the devices’ downfall. Companies are struggling with high component costs and consumers may not be willing to pay hundreds of dollars for a machine with limited usage. It has yet to be demonstrated whether a less capable device selling for more than $500 can compete with a PC at the same price. Neither the content nor the user interface is compelling enough to justify the cost differential.

 

The PDA market is driven by Palm and Handspring, with devices that offer organizational functions and recently some e-mail capabilities. Limited networking ability is the only catch with these devices. Advances in Bluetooth and piconet technologies, which would allow devices to communicate and sync wirelessly, could add another dimension to these products in the next couple years.

 

Examples of products in each category are detailed below.

 

The Casio Cassiopeia E-115 is a Windows CE Pocket PC. This device has a color display that offers movie viewing, e-mail/Internet access, and most PC functions for $599. Casio will also offer future models - the EM-500, EG-80 and EG-800 line of smaller PCs that add MP3 compatibility, USB support and LAN connections, in the future. Other models include Hewlett Packard’s Jornada, Compaq’s Aero 1550 and iPaq H3650 and Psion’s Series 7 which offer similar functionality.

 

Web appliances, for the most part, are a product of the future. Aqcess Technologies’ Qbe Personal Computing Tablet, Hitachi’s ePlate and Netnote’sWebnote are the only products that we have seen on the market and these have been strangely unpublicized. Dell released it’s WebPCs (fun, wild and blast) earlier this year, but has recently discontinued the product line.

 

The Qbe is a Windows 98 SE device with a Pentium processor that offers desktop capabilities on a Web pad. According to the company, the pad also offers an onboard camera with still image, motion video and video conferencing capabilities and can be used with a cellular modem card to transform into a phone. A built in 56k modem, Ethernet card and 10/100 Base T functionality will complete the package with Internet access. The device will be sold to the consumer and business market for between $3,995 - $5,395 depending on the memory and processor included.

 

Hitachi’s ePlate is a Windows CE device with an LCD touch panel and stylus. It comes with a 56k modem and USB connections. This device will offer PC-like functions as well as e-mail and Internet access starting at $1,199.

 

The Webnote, from Netnote is a PC-looking device (rather than a tablet) that was released in Ireland in 1999 to offer easy Internet/e-mail access. The smart card-based device is has a built-in 56k modem offers connectivity through a telephone line but is also compatible with Ethernet and ISDN. A mobile model offers wireless connectivity using the dual GSM (9600 bps) standard. Netnote has just recently begun to bring publicity to the United States.

 

Future Web appliances include products from Acer (I-station), Boundless Technologies (iBrow), CMI Worldwide (iCEBOX), Epods (EpodsOne), Global Converging Technologies (Cendis), Netpliance (i-opener), Qubit (Qubit Web Tablet), RS Cordless Technologies (WebPAD), Samsung (Yopy), Siemens (SIMpad), Simpliance (eMailBox), Virgin Entertainment, Intel and Gateway/AOL. Most of these devices offer Internet and e-mail access with a 56k modem and some PC functionality. The I-station, iBrow, icebox, and Qubit also have DSL options and wireless connectivity is offered by SIMpad, RS Cordless’ WebPAD and in the future EpodsOne.

 

Prices on these devices vary by functionality and connectivity options – the most expensive being the Aqcess Qbe at $3,995 – $5,395 and the least expensive, the Samsung Yopy which is expected to retail for around $99 (late 2000). Many of these devices will also be sold in business markets that will then subsidize costs for their customers/clients.

 

The PDA market, much like the Pocket PC, has been dominated by familiar players – namely Palm’s Palm Pilot and to a lesser extent Casio’s pocket organizers and Psion’s Series 5MX (Revo late 2000). Handspring’s Visor is the newest entrant to the market offering a small device using the Palm OS that offers the typical organizer functions, 2MB and 8MB storage options and USB, serial port and infrared connections to a PC and the many module options. The Visor retails for about $179/249 depending on storage and cradle options.

 

--Wearable Information Appliances

 

The introduction of wearable information appliances is the next step up in personal devices. At trade shows prototype jean jackets contain musical appliances, eye glasses double as LCDs and padded gloves become input devices. At this early stage though, these types of applications are rare in the consumer market – although VIA, Xybernaut and AnthroTronix have products for use in vertical markets and businesses.

 

Xircom offers the Rex line of products (5000/5001 and 3000), credit card-sized wearables that offer storage and synchronization of contact information, calendars, and lists/memos for $79.95. The MicroOptical Corporation in partnership with the MIT Media Lab is developing ClipOn Displays and Integrated Eyeglass Displays that allow a user to see a computer display and the surrounding environment simultaneously. These special glasses will connect to a PC or other device (hopefully a mobile one) for connectivity and offer standard VGA, a female DB-15 connector and standard NTSC, and RCA plug. These will be sold to OEMs and system integrators, not directly to consumers.

 

There is also a variety of wrist devices entering the market offering MP3 playback (Casio WMP-1V), organizer functions (Casio PC Unite and Matsucom (Seiko) Ruputer/onHand PC), digital imaging (Casio WQV-1) and in the near future, cell phone capabilities (Samsung Cell phone watch, Swatch Swatch Talk and Motorola Accompli). These devices are in the early stages, and will obviously be very limited due to screen size, but offer a fashionable set of data and voice services.

 

--Market Estimate

 

Our estimate for the units quantities that will be sold in year 2000 includes:

 

Product line                   Estimated Units Sold in 2000

 

Digital audio                              2,000,000

Digital jukebox                              100,000

Digital radio                                 35,000

Ebooks                                        15,000

Digital frames                                25,000

Internet telephone                            10,000

PocketPCs                                    350,000

Web appliances                               250,000

PDAs                                       3,000,000

Personal TV                                  100,000

Web Phones                                15,000,000

Wearables                                      2,000

Wrist devices                              2,000,000

 

Our analysis of today’s information appliance market shows that it is about products which leverage infrastructure. There is little in the way of new infrastructure behind these products – they just use largely what exists. This is a key reason why web enabled cell phones dominate the market. In many respects infrastructure remains a significant impediment to the emerging market. Be it the limitations of V90 lines for audio downloads or the lack of capabilities to handle VOIP phone calls, infrastructure plays a key role as both an enabler and inhibitor. Typically infrastructure is long term, expensive and reliant on up front cost. Thus, the development of the information appliance market is dependent on many factors that include:

 

-Infrastructure;

-Content & Applications;

-Services and;

-A relentless pursuit of lower costs and higher volume products.

 

This is a market in only its earlier stages. Also, given the diversity of products it is very doubtful that one or even 2 companies will dominate the market as happened with the PC. Information appliance is a new market for virtually all the players.

 

2047.3 Television

 

***ReplayTV to Ship 60-Hour Single-Drive Digital Video Recorder

(September 6)

 

ReplayTV has announced that it plans to ship a 60-hour single-drive digital video recorder, containing a Maxtor DiamondMax 60 GB hard disk. The ReplayTV 3060’s single-drive will decrease power consumption and produce less heat and noise than dual-drive design DVRs. The 3060 also includes the free ReplayTV Service, and will be priced at $799.

 

With ReplayTV, viewers can pause, instant replay, rewind, QuickSkip, frame advance and watch in slow motion sports events and TV shows. Using ReplayTV personal television technology with the free ReplayTV Service, viewers don’t have to miss their favorite programs because ReplayTV automatically searches, finds and records them for anytime playback. Viewers can also create personal channels based on themes or shows.

 

The free ReplayTV Service gives viewers convenience, choice and control over their television viewing. ReplayZones categorize television entertainment by content and provide ways for viewers to find the shows and movies they want. ReplayZones include editorial zones such as the Movie! Zone that features a variety of selections including action-adventure, drama, classics, comedy, family films, science fiction and teen comedy. By selecting a category such as classics, viewers can see a list of upcoming classic movies in listings and select the desired one for automatic recording.

 

Using the Find Shows feature, viewers can search for keywords by typing in the name of an actor, director, show title or even a topic like “dogs.” Within seconds, all movies, talk shows or other programs matching that keyword that are slated to air during the next week are listed on the screen. These shows can be recorded for on-demand playback at a later time. The ReplayTV Service also includes the MyReplayTV, a web portal where viewers can find out about TV programming, gather additional information about shows of interest and control the ReplayTV Service and digital video recorder via the Internet.

 

ReplayTV 3060 with 60 hours of storage is priced at $799 and includes the free ReplayTV Service. Through September 30th, consumers will also receive a $100 rebate with purchase for a reduced price of $699. The ReplayTV 3060 will ship in late September and can be ordered today from ReplayTV.

 

http://www.replaytv.com

 

2047.4 Wireless

 

***Lucent and PacketVideo Collaborate to Optimize Multimedia Features on Next-Gen Wireless Devices

(September 7)

 

Lucent Technologies Microelectronics Group and PacketVideo have announced a collaborative development agreement to optimize multimedia solutions on next-generation mobile devices. Under the agreement, the two companies will optimize PacketVideo's wireless media software solution for higher performance and lower power consumption on Lucent's General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) and Universal Mobile Telecommunications Services (UMTS)/Enhanced Data for Global Evolution chipset solutions, including the StarCore SC100 next-generation digital signal processor (DSP)-based platform.

 

GPRS, EDGE and UMTS are packet-based wireless standards that enable always on connections for wireless devices and faster Internet data transmission speeds than are available on second generation (2G) wireless devices.

 

PacketVideo's end-to-end multimedia solution, PVPlatform, is a wireless streaming video delivery system for handheld devices. The software platform provides encoding, transmission and decoding capabilities based on the MPEG-4 (Motion Pictures Expert Group 4) compression standard. PacketVideo's software technology is designed to be device, operating system, and air-interface independent.

 

Lucent Technologies Microelectronics Group is a $4 billion Lucent division focusing on semiconductors for communications applications. Lucent has announced it will spin off the Microelectronics Group as an independent company that will include its optoelectronics and integrated circuits divisions. The spin-off, slated for completion by the summer of 2001, will create a stand-alone semiconductor company that can offer end-to-end networking solutions that address the convergence of photonics and electronics based on experience in both integrated circuits and optoelectronic components. The company will also provide wireless computer networking system solutions through its ORiNOCO product line.

 

PacketVideo is a global provider of wireless media. The company's MPEG-4-compliant encoding, distribution and decoding software enables content providers and carriers to deliver rich media, not just data, to mobile users anytime, anywhere over any digital wireless networks.

 

http://www.packetvideo.com

http://www.lucent.com/micro

 

***Swedish Mobile Contest May Fuel More Services, Broader Networks

(August 30)

 

According to Bloomberg, Sweden's decision to join Finland and Norway in giving out mobile phone licenses rather than selling them for billions of dollars may benefit everyone from consumers to equipment makers. Telia AB and France Telecom SA are among companies competing for four permits to set up networks in Sweden that will let cellular users surf the Web and download video clips.

 

Getting the permits in a beauty contest rather than buying them in an auction will leave the winners with less debt and more cash to spend on boosting their networks and developing services. That may pave the way for the Nordic region, where two-thirds of about 25 million people have mobile phones, to stay ahead in the wireless industry, according to analysts and executives.

 

The high license costs in the U.K. and Germany have pulled down European phone companies' stocks and sparked a wave of plans to sell bonds, assets and shares to help fund the investment. The Bloomberg European Telecommunication Services Index has fallen 20 percent since the U.K. auction ended in April, wiping about 250 billion euros off the member companies' combined market value.

 

Pledging to build a network in Sweden - an area bigger than Germany though with only a tenth of the German population - may also prove expensive, especially for new entrants. Skanska AB, the biggest Nordic construction company that's applying for a license together with France Telecom, estimates the investment at about 2 billion euros.

 

Telia, NetCom AB and Europolitan AB are the country's current cellular operators, while other applicants include a consortium of Western Wireless, Tele1 Europe AB and Rix Telecom AB, as well as a group formed by Investor AB and Hutchison Whampoa, the Hong Kong conglomerate led by billionaire Li Ka-shing.

 

The Swedish National Post and Telecom Agency will decide in November who gets the licenses to offer services based on the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System, or UMTS. Contestants, who each pay an administration fee of $10,560, must pass two stages to win.

 

In the first one, applicants must show they have the capacity and cash to build the networks required. All companies that have the financial and technical ability advance to the second phase, where the agency compares how fast they can increase capacity and coverage. They have to submit a plan for how many Swedes and how big an area they will be able to serve in 2003, 2006 and 2009.

 

The Swedish government is also hoping that the free permits will let phone companies charge consumers less for the services. In countries such as the U.K. and Germany, Vodafone Group and other companies that bought licenses may have to transfer some of the costs to users to make their investments pay off.

 

Whether winning a beauty contest or an auction, though, phone companies are facing huge investments in gear needed to run the UMTS services. In Europe, Middle East and Africa alone, operators may spend $112 billion on networks, handsets and applications over the next four years, according to cell-phone maker Motorola.

 

Companies that have said they will apply for a Swedish license so far include: Telia AB, NetCom AB, Europolitan AB (72 percent owned by Vodafone Group) Telenordia AB (joint venture of British Telecommunications, Tele Danmark A/S and Telenor AS), Utfors AB, Orange (group formed by France Telecom SA, Bredbandsbolaget AB, Skanska AB and Schibsted ASA), Hutchison Whampoa and Investor AB, Ratos AB with Nomura International and Teracom AB, Western Wireless with Tele1 Europe AB and Rix Telecom AB, RSL Communications.

 

***International Datacasting Introduces Broadband Satellite Datacasting Receivers

(September 7)

 

International Datacasting Corporation announced the introduction of three DVB multimedia satellite receivers to its SuperFlex product line. The receivers, which variously distribute data, audio and video services, are targeted at broadband, IP satellite datacasting markets such as Internet, Enterprise Networks, Distance Learning and Multimedia Content Distribution.

 

IDC’s SuperFlex is a digital satellite networking system designed to distribute broadband content (i.e. Internet services, multimedia data, streaming media) by satellite in point-to-multipoint applications. The system incorporates technology using Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB), Internet Protocol (IP) and MPEG international standards. SuperFlex is currently used by world organizations such as: Cyberstar, British Telecom, NonStopNet, Kingston TLI, Telefonica, GTE, Hutchison, ITESM, ILCE and General Dynamics.

 

The SR2001B is a DVB satellite datacasting receiver that can operate at rates from 2 MS/s to 45 MS/s, allowing for full transponder bandwidths. It is DVB transport format compatible up to 78.75 Mb/s, provides Async, Sync, Ethernet (10/100base-T) outputs, and has two Conditional Access (CA) Common Interface (CI) slots and two option card slots. The SR2001B, currently in use by Cyberstar, is geared at commercial customers who want to reliably and securely distribute large amounts of data in point-to-multipoint applications, such as the caching of Internet content at edge servers.

 

The SR2060 is a DVB compliant, set-top video and audio satellite receiver designed for commercial and enterprise applications. It is fully remotely manageable by NetManager, IDC’s network management system. The unit is well suited for broadcast PAL & NTSC video applications including distance education and corporate training.

 

The SR2010 is a rackmounted professional video receiver with IDC’s Network management system, NetManager, built-in. The unit supports SCPC/MCPC operation with full compliance to DVB-S standards. The SR2010 is designed to receive MPEG-2 MP@ML compliant transport streams and provide broadcast quality video and audio. The SR2010 is well suited for cable head-ends, private networks and distance education/business television applications.

 

http://www.intldata.ca

 

2047.5 Financials

 

***3i Leads $12.5 Million Investment in Intrinsic Graphics

(August 31)

 

Intrinsic Graphics announced the completion of their second round of funding led by 3i, an international venture capital company. 3i was joined by August Capital, Beeson &Gregory and several industrial and private investors. Intrinsic Graphics will use the additional funding to increase their staff and launch their Alchemy product sales and marketing efforts. Intrinsic Alchemy will be unveiled at ECTS, Europe's interactive entertainment event held in London on September 3-5.

 

Intrinsic Alchemy is a multi-platform, optimized development and run-time system targeted at game developers and other interactive entertainment content developers. The system provides the framework, building blocks, and customizable working examples that developers need for next generation game consoles, TV set-top boxes and personal computer systems.

 

http://www.intrinsic.com

http://www.3ius.com

 

***National Semiconductor Reports Earnings for Q1 of Fiscal 2001

(September 8)

 

National Semiconductor reported net income of $149.4 million, or 76 cents per share (diluted), excluding special items, on revenues of $640.8 million for its first quarter of fiscal 2001, which ended August 27, 2000. Including $6.4 million in pretax special items, earnings were 74 cents per share. In the comparable quarter of fiscal 2000, National reported net income of $47.1 million, or 25 cents per share (diluted), on revenues of $481.8 million.

 

Due to the continued demand for National's chips used in cell phones and an array of wireless devices that connect to the Internet, National said it expects second-quarter sales to rise 6 percent to 8 percent above first-quarter levels and to climb more than 30 percent over last year's second quarter. National’s chips and products for information appliances now account for 10 percent of total sales. Roughly 72 percent of its sales come from so-called analog chips, which help the real world of sound and light connect with the digital world of ones and zeros.

 

The company attributed the strong first-quarter earnings to improved operating efficiencies at its plants and the targeting of markets like wireless communications and Internet appliances for its analog and mixed-signal semiconductors.

 

National made several announcements during the first quarter. The company purchased Vivid Semiconductor to further expand National's strengths in silicon solutions for flat-panel displays. The company also signed a 10-year agreement with TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) which transfers TSMC's advanced manufacturing processes to National. The company also launched a charitable foundation with a $20-million endowment during the quarter to expand its participation in community, educational and humanitarian activities.

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