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  • Silicon Image Appoints New Vice President of Worldwide Marketing


    Silicon Image
    has announced the appointment of Tim Vehling as vice president of worldwide marketing.

    Vehling will be responsible for product marketing, corporate marketing and technical marketing operations worldwide Silicon Image, which specialises in semiconductors and intellectual property for the secure distribution, presentation and storage of high-definition (HD) content.

    His expertise includes identifying and fostering strategic partnerships, driving system-on-chip (SoC) product roadmaps and definitions, and leading global teams.

    Steve Tirado, president and chief executive officer at Silicon Image, said Vehling would be driving the company’s advanced digital connectivity strategy, initiatives and solutions to emerging and established markets.

    Vehling joins Silicon Image from Micronas GmbH, where he held the position of vice president of marketing and applications engineering and managed a global organization of over 150 employees.

    Prior to that, Vehling was vice president of consumer marketing at LSI, where he helped establish LSI as an industry leader in DVD recorder processors and launched the DVFX video quality branding program.

    Previous appointments include product and technology marketing positions with C-Cube Microsystems, ATI Technologies, Chromatic Research, and VLSI.

  • SiBeam CEO Welcomes Wireless HD "Competition"

    INTERVIEW: With a third group now entering the race to deliver a high-speed wireless technology in the home – and wireless HDTV products hitting the market – momentum is building.

    John LeMoncheck, president and CEO of SiBEAM, and a leading member of the WirelessHD (WiHD) consortium, tells hdtv.biz-news that he welcomes the addition of the rival Wireless Gigabit (WiGig) Alliance to the fray.

    Over the past few years a number of wireless technologies have announced their intention to rid homes of cables and stream content around the home.

    Their number was enlarged recently when the newly formed WiGig Alliance declared that it is to develop a high-bandwidth wireless specification before the year end.

    The fact this group has the backing of household names such as Microsoft, LG, Dell, Samsung, Marvell, Nokia, NEC, Intel and Broadcom (among others), might have been cause enough for the competing groups to worry.

    But WiGig’s plans to use the 60 GHz spectrum would have been a particular worry for the WirelessHD (WiHD) consortium, which also uses 60 GHz to send signals.

    Not so, said John LeMoncheck, president and CEO of SiBEAM, and a leading member of WiHD.

    He told hdtv.biz-news that, in general, WiGig’s arrival was very good for the 60 GHz spectrum.

    "This is the way in which the rest of the wireless world is going," he said. "There is room for multiple uses of the spectrum."

    For LeMoncheck the adoption of the 60 GHz spectrum is also something of a personal vindication.

    "When we first started talking about 60 GHz, they laughed me out of the meeting," he said.

    "Now it is satisfying to see the big guys focusing on this technology."

    He added: "There’s not a better or more cost-effective way to do this."

    Growing Interest

    WiGig joining the other competing groups – WiHD and the Wireless Home Digital Interface (WHDI) – also highlights the growing interest in wireless technologies.

    However, LeMoncheck said he would question whether WiGig was actually in direct competition with WiHD – which he described as very consumer electronics focused.

    "WiGig have not been able to clearly elucidate what they want," he said.

    "They are trying to be a lot of things to a lot of people, which can lead to a standard that’s not any use to anyone."

    That’s definitely not the case with WiHD, according to LeMoncheck, who said he was very happy with the progress being made.

    This year has seen the first WiHD-enabled products come to market in Japan and Korea, with launches from Panasonic, LG and Toshiba.

    Panasonic’s Z1 WirelessHD Plasma

    He said more HDTVs are going to be launched in the US and Europe this summer.

    "It has been a very exciting first half of the year for the rollout of the product," he said.

    "We are working hard to have products come out and work seamlessly."

    This has included publishing compliance test procedures in January – tests that all products have to pass before being able to carry the WiHD logo.

    And facilities offering WiHD testing are now also operational.

    A further boost has come from Philips joining the WiHD consortium as a promoter company.

    This brings the total number of promoter companies up to 10 and there are 40 firms associated with the WiHD standard.

    Pieces in Place

    "All the infrastructure is there to bring products to market," said LeMoncheck.

    "We have had tremendous traction in the market and other tier 1 guys should be launching in the fall."

    While products using the WiHD technology are in the high-to-mid range price bracket, LeMoncheck said they were working on bringing the cost down.

    The use of general-purpose complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology is expected to help with this, and he expected to see products in 42" range and lower as a result.

    "We can pick very friendly CMOS geometry, so we have room to migrate down as smaller geometry gets further down the cost curve," he said.

    "We can cut a lot of the cost from a system."

    That will undoubtedly be welcomed by consumers – as will the fact that wireless-enabled products are finally making their way onto the shelves.

  • Online Video Viewing Rates "Grossly Overstated"


    The amount of time US viewers spend watching online video and mobile video is growing rapidly – but still accounts for a small fraction of total video content viewing.

    That’s the conclusion of a study into how people spend their time consuming media, including live TV programming, time-shifted television, DVDs, video games.

    Another key finding was that households buying a new HDTV viewed more live TV – up to double – initially, but that over time, this increased usage began to subside.

    Jim Spaeth, of Sequent Partners, which collaborated with Ball State University’s Center for Media Design on the Video Consumer Mapping Study on behalf of the Nielsen-funded Council for Research Excellence, said the results showed that the amount of time Americans spend watching online video is vastly overstated.

    He told MediaPost that the new findings indicate that even the relatively small amount of time Americans spend watching online video has been, on average, grossly overstated by conventional forms of media research and audience measurement.

    "This may be the first study to document the dramatic overstatement of online video and mobile video," he said.

    The project, which cost USD $3.5 million to field, directly observed how people spent their day using media.

    Conversely, Spaeth said traditional TV viewing has been "pretty drastically under-reported" by research that asks people how they consume video.

  • AMD Launches Chip For HDTV-on-the-PC


    AMD has launched a chip offering HDTV viewing capabilities on desktop and notebook PCs around the world using analog, digital and free-to-air broadcast signals.

    The company says the ATI Theater HD 750 PC TV chip uses advanced video processing and signal reception technologies to give an authentic HD home theater feel on the PC.

    Matt Skynner, vice president and general manager, GPU Division, AMD Products Group, said that with the proper connectors, the chip allowed notebook users to enjoy TV on their PC virtually anywhere in the world.

    He said the ATI Theater HD 750 is compatible with HDTV/DTV/analog broadcast signals including NTSC, PAL/SECAM, ATSC, ClearQAM and DVB-T.2.

    The ATI Theater HD 750 is scheduled to be available later this year in a variety of solutions including PCI Express add-in cards, USB "stick" and others.

    Other features offered include:

    • Ability to take recorded content on the go by capturing and converting recorded TV shows into popular video formats such as H.264, AVI, MPEG, DivX, WMV and MPEG4 for use on portable media devices.
    • By using Windows Vista Media Center, Windows® XP Media Center Edition or the forthcoming Windows 7, consumers can schedule recordings and watch, pause and rewind live TV programs
    • Consumers can also store recorded programs on the PC hard drive, eliminating the problem of limited storage capacity found with most digital video recorders (DVR)

    A preview trailer is embedded below:

  • T-Mobile Deutschland Reverses VoIP Ban, Levies Surcharge


    T-Mobile has confirmed that it is to end its ban on mobile VoIP applications within its German network – but will charge customers upwards of EURO € 9.95 per month for the service.

    The operator justified the surcharge by explaining that billions of euros invested by operators in the roll-out of networks in recent years were based on rate costings with income from voice telephony and mobile data.

    Georg Pölzl, managing director of T-Mobile Deutschland, said that if this basis is no longer certain, then neither is the operational future of the networks.

    "T-Mobile wants to continue offering its customers state-of-the-art technology in future and needs a reliable basis to do so," he said.

    Vodafone is expected to announce a similar policy for the use of Skype or other VoIP applications on smartphones.

    Pölzl said the T-Mobile VoIP service will be available this summer.

    He said pricing would be staggered and customers would be able to use the VoIP services of different providers.

    "In this way, we are building a bridge between the different customers’ needs for the most competitively-priced and innovative services," he said.

    Pölzl said the charges were necessary because additional investment in the network is necessary for simultaneous, "always on" use of VoIP applications".

    He added: "It would not be fair to customers who don’t use VoIP if these additional costs were to be shared across all customers.

    "For this reason, we are making it possible to use Internet telephony via optional rates, while keeping it otherwise barred."

  • Sipgate Launches VoIP Assault on US Landline Market


    Sipgate has launched a free VoIP service in the US aimed at capturing a share of the 100 million users that make up the landline market.

    Called sipgate one, the new internet-based service uses a VoIP phone – or softphone – and offers a fully-featured service.

    The package provides a free telephone number, no set-up costs and no monthly charges or minimums.Users can also make free calls to other Sipgate users.

    Sipgate says it only charges USD $1.9 cents per minute for calls made or received from wireline or mobile phones – which it says is cheaper than Skype’s rate.

    Thilo Salmon, CEO of Sipgate, said that other features offered include click-to-dial, flexible call routing, and an online voicemail interface.

    Based in San Francisco, Sipgate is a well-established in Europe where it has been operating its "network agnostic" phone service since 2004.

    "There is simply no barrier to people disconnecting their old phone lines anymore," he said.

    "Phone and cable companies have long been pushing voice plans in the region of USD $25 to $40 per month – which end up being as much as $60 or more with extra charges – and that’s just ridiculous.

    "Even with calls to other landlines and mobile phones, most users will spend less than $5 a month using sipgate one.

    "And for those people only receiving incoming calls on their VoIP phone, the service is completely free."

    Sipgate also announced plans to roll out a multi-user edition of the service, which will target small businesses also seeking to drop expensive landline offerings.

    Other features include:

    • Need to write down a number while driving? Record any phone conversation by pressing *6
    • Want to customize your voicemail? Upload an mp3
    • Want your calls to follow you? Have your home, office and mobile phone ring in parallel
    • Left your mobile phone at home? Simply go online and divert calls to your office line
    • Want to talk to friends in an ad-hoc conference? Bridge them with the touch of a button
    • Missed calls while on a flight? A list is waiting for you in your email
  • SoliCall Broadens Reach of its VoIP Voice Quality Software

    SoliCall has signed three international deals with companies from the UK, US and India for its noise reduction and echo cancellation (AEC) technology.

    The Israel-based provider of software for VoIP solutions, mobile phones and IP PBXs has developed patent pending algorithms for audio improvement.

    Shlomi Simhi, director of marketing for SoliCall, said SoliCall SDK would provide the three companies with features for audio improvement that is suitable for all VoIP applications.

    He said the new clients would be using the software for a variety of uses:

    • a British company will be implementing SoliCall SDK across its new video conferencing servers
    • a New-York based company will be using the technology for its gaming applications
    • an Indian software company will integrate the solution as part of distributed Internet-based multiparty, multimedia interactions for on-line education

    Simhi said the new deals align with SoliCall’s vision to deploy its voice quality solution on any voice platform and to ensure high standards of call quality and reliability.

    "The variety of the companies who will be using our solution both on the client side and on the server side, only emphasizes the on-going demand for our solution," he said.

    SoliCall has developed a personalized voice pass filter that identifies the voice of the speaker and extracts it from the audio signal.

    The company offers a free SoftPhone add-On for private users, which controls the filtering of the incoming audio; live graphs of the audio (before & after filtering); recording options (in WAV or in MP3 format).

  • Acer First to Make Android Netbooks


    Acer is to sell netbooks running Google’s Android operating system – with the first likely to be available before the end of the summer.

    The move is a setback for Microsoft, which was already selling its Windows OS at a reduced price to counter the threat posed by Linux.

    Making the announcement at the Computex PC trade show in Taipei, Jim Wong, Acer’s global president for IT products, said the current netbook offerings were "not close to perfection at all".

    He said if mobile Internet devices were not continually changed, consumers might not choose then any more.

    Acer recently announced that it is to launch smartphones with the Android platform later this year.

    Wong stressed that Acer will continue to use the Windows OS in its other netbooks.

    However, the cost of the Android-based devices should be less than Windows equivalents since the Linux-based Android system is free.

    Microsoft charges USD $15 for each copy of Windows XP.

    The Android netbooks will still use Intel Atom processors.

    Acer, ASUS and other netbook makers had choosen to use Linux before but had experienced high return rates for those Linux models.

    Users complained about difficulties using the OS.

    Android has promised to simplify the experience without limiting support for 3G or other extras.

  • WiMax Forum Announces Interoperability and Roaming Trials


    The first ever commercial WiMAX interoperability and roaming trials are to be carried out by 14 companies involved with the Next Generation wireless technology.

    Ron Resnick, president and chairman of the WiMAX Forum, said the testing of networks and equipment will demonstrate to all WiMAX operators that they can easily provide roaming services to their customers.

    Among the operators, device manufacturers, equipment vendors, and clearing houses taking part are Aicent, Alvarion, Bridgewater Systems, Cisco, Clearwire, Comfone, DigitalBridge Communications, Intel, iPass, Juniper Networks, MACH, Motorola, Syniverse and Transaction Network Services.

    Resnick, speaking at the Forum’s global congress in Amsterdam, said the trial represents an end-to-end test of roaming over live WiMAX networks.

    He said it will provide a baseline for establishing roaming services and agreements for WiMAX worldwide.

    "Roaming with interoperability is important in order to expand the availability of WiMAX services by enabling users to automatically access networks when traveling outside the geographical coverage area of their home network," he said.

    To date, the Forum tracks more than 475 WiMAX network deployments in 140 countries.

    The WiMAX Forum board of directors has also voted unanimously to change the pricing fee setup for its WiMAX Forum Certified program.

    It is to become a market pricing model at all six of its certification labs.

    The WiMAX Forum has 106 certified products in the market today, with a projection of at least 1,000 certified products available by 2011.

  • Wireless Technology Specialist Option "Optimistic" After Business Model Shift

    INTERVIEW: Known for its hardware products, wireless solutions specialists Option is transforming itself in the face of fierce competition and plunging margins.

    The company’s marketing director, Jan Poté, tells smartphone.biz-news how the company is expanding to offer complete end-to-end solutions – ranging from its Ucan virtual ‘PC on a stick’ to designing the system board for Sharp’s new 3G Sidekick LX messaging phone.

    There is little room for complacency in the technology industry – even for those who pioneer products and establish themselves as market leaders.

    So when wireless technology provider Option found itself facing mounting competition in one of its core markets it went back to the drawing board.

    The company was founded in 1986 and one of its first products was a modem card for laptop PCs – obviously not wireless in those days.

    Jan Poté, Option’s marketing director, said it continued evolving slowly until, in 2001, the firm’s engineers developed the first completely wireless (cellular) PCMCIA data card.

    He said that after interesting Vodafone in Europe in the product, the subsequent growth in the market for data cards "kick-started" Option.

    This helped establish the company, headquartered in Leuven, Belgium, as the market leader in data cards.

    Poté said it then saw USB devices coming – as did others in the industry.

    Major Issues

    However, the company had to face up to two major issues.

    The first was the need to reorganise itself internally after a period of rapid growth.

    The second, and perhaps more concerning, was how to address fierce competition from Asian manufacturers.

    Among them was the Chinese telecom giant Huawei, which had begun manufacturing the new form USB connectors and was quickly gobbling up market share.

    Option responded immediately and last year developed a complete line of USB devices.

    But the economic downturn put enormous pressure on pricing and operators were drastically reducing stock levels.

    To make matters worse, ZTE, another Chinese competitor, had come onto the scene.

    Poté said the result was that by the middle of 2008 the market was in the throes of a "quite ridiculous price war" that drove prices sharply downwards.

    While operators such as Vodafone, Orange and T-Mobile continued selling Option’s USB sticks, the volumes were much lower than had been expected.

    Changes Needed

    He said there was a growing realisation within the company that a change of tack was required. "We came up with two things," he said.

    The first centered on the idea of selling software with Option’s existing hardware products.

    From this was born the Ucan – a virtual ‘PC on a stick’ – a USB device that connects to the internet via 3G and 3G+ (HSPA) and allows users to take all their applications, data, favorite websites and so on, with them.

    It can be plugged it into any USB port of any computer and automatically creates a users’ personal digital environment.

    Poté said initial feedback from operators about the software platform was very encouraging.

    "It is a differentiator for them because it allows them to offer more than just connectivity time," he said.

    So they can build services to e-shop, to data storage servers or to carry out security checks.

    While Option was pitching the product to appeal to consumers, Poté said operators were keen to offer it into business verticals, such as insurance and banking.

    "So we are preparing for certain operators applications for certain B2B sectors," he said.

    Poté said the strategy of including software applications to its hardware products is adding quite some value for the company.

    "Differentiating in software is the first area where we can make a difference," he said.

    "Huawei and ZTE are not going in the same direction and we have 6-8 months of advantage at this point in time."

    Work to Strengths

    The second thing Option did was to go back to the drawing board and look at its core strengths.

    "We knew we were good at working with 3G connectivity and putting that capability in devices," said Poté. "So we said: ‘Let’s see if we can take things a step further`."

    Sharp had developed the first 2G Sidekick for T-Mobile and was now looking for a 3G version.

    Poté said Sharp came to Option and asked the company to work on the smartphone’s development.

    He said the new handset would have to be thinner, faster and produce less heat than its predecessor.

    "It wasn’t going to be simple and we told Sharp that the only way is if they let us do our own system board," he said.

    The result was that Option’s engineers developed a highly-integrated system board for the Japanese consumer electronics giant, incorporating all smartphone functionalities including 3G mobile broadband.

    The new 3G Sidekick LX messaging phone launched a month ago in the US to favorable reviews.

    Interest Grows

    For Option, the result has been a lot of attention from other device manufacturers, including IBM, HP and Apple, who are interested in complex 3G solutions.

    And this new market offers a potentially more rewarding revenue source.

    "Instead of having to invoice an operator for USB devices, where everyone is negotiating on price like hell, we negotiate with Sharp," he said.

    This initially entailed a development fee for the system board, but once in production Option gets a license fee for every Sidekick sold.

    Poté said this business model shift – with license agreements – was one they were going to repeat with operators for installing software on USB devices.

    He said talks were ongoing with a list of 50 software companies to see how they can integrate their applications onto Option’s Ucan platform.

    Poté admits that the process of re-assessing Option’s products and strategies has been a difficult one – and not without some pain.

    While the company has strengthened its team of software developers it has also is having to reduce staff in other areas.

    As a result personnel numbers are expected to fall from 700 to 570 over the course of 2009.

    "This year, revenues from USB devices will still form the majority of our revenues," he said.

    "We have had to cut costs down and have moved production one hundred per cent to China.

    "We are working on our cost bases and working to strengthen our core competencies. It’s not easy."

    Outlook Promising

    However, Poté said the result will be a company well set up to deal with future competition.

    "If you look at software, it’s an open field. We can pioneer in that field for 2-3 years, then when it’s a lucrative market we will have competition," he said.

    Poté said Option’s partnership with Intel integrating 3G onto its platform for MIDs had enormous potential, as did the possibilities for integrating 3G onto other devices.

    He said digital camera manufacturers have already contacted Option to inquire about having 3G on their products.

    "The opportunities are big. At this moment we make the smallest HSDPA module in the world – the GTM501 – which is half the usual size," he said.

     Despite the difficult economic situation, Poté said he was confident that the company’s result would improve from the end of this year as other products come onto the market.

    "We have seen that the adoption cycle for MIDs is slower than expected because of the economic downturn," he said. "This will improve and we are optimistic beyond 2009."