Blog

  • 2011 Peak For SD DTT STB semiconductors


    High-definition Digital Terrestrial TV (DTT) set top boxes (STBs) offer semiconductor makers a short term spike in opportunity.

    But standard definition (SD) DTT STBs will be a more sustainable market for manufacturers, according to In-Stat.

    The researchers forecast that the semiconductor opportunity in SD DTT boxes will peak at nearly USD $500 million by 2011.

    Gerry Kaufhold, In-Stat analyst, said the US analog shut off has driven a surge of HD converter boxes in 2008 and 2009.

    "However, this bubble will wane, while the SD DTT market continues to grow across a broader set of geographic markets," he said.

    Other findings from In-Stat include:

    • The European DTT STB Market Value will peak in 2011 at $1.6 billion.
    • On a European country basis, UK leads the market, followed by Spain, France, Germany, and then Italy.
    • Total DTT STB unit shipments will peak at 44 million in 2009.
    • Key component categories include the Demux/CPU/AV decoder and the MPEG-2 MP@HL/Graphics IC
  • VholdR Offers First Wearable HD camcorder


    VholdR has unveiled what it describes as the first wearable HD camcorder.

    Weighing just four ounces, the 5 Megapixel ContourHD can record 1280×720 video at 30fps or SD video at 60fps with H.264 codec.

    Designed to snap onto a helmet or goggles – the company’s owners are extreme sports enthusiasts – the anodized aluminum camcorder has a 135-degree wide-angle lens with rotation and dual laser alignment.

    There’s a 2GB microSD card included and it supports MicroSD cards up to 16GB – giving up to 8 hours of HD and 16 hours of SD on a single card.

    The ContourHD, which comes with a removable Lithium-ion battery, starts shipping on May 15th for USD $280.

  • Sprintcam V3 HD Demos Slow-Motion Capabilities


    I-Movix’s new SprintCam V3 HD produces slow-motion output equivalent to 20 to 40 times slower than normal speed.

    That sounds great – and the showreel below by David Coiffer proves just how great it looks as well.

    Made for NAB 2009 exhibition, the short video is mostly 1000FPS shots, made during a recent rugby competition in the Stade de France, Paris.

    The camera is the first broadcast-integrated, native HD, ultra-slow-motion solution offering frame rates of 500 to 1,000 fps with instant replay.

  • HD Videoconferencing – A "Compelling" Option For Business


    High definition video has "raised the game" for videoconferencing and telepresence systems.

    That’s the opinion of Rick Snyder, president of Tandberg Americas, who says HD videoconferencing offers a "really compelling visual experience".

    He says this – and the fact the current economic climate has required business travel budgets to be cut – means more and more companies are looking seriously at HD videoconferencing.

    "We think that in the next few years, HD will become the norm," he said

    Speaking at the recent VoiceCon 2009, Snyder suggests that today’s HD videoconferencing systems offer a very compelling ROI – in some cases their cost is equivalent to a couple of international business trips.

    So as well as increasing productivity he says they can have a positive impact on a company’s bottom-line – and on the environment.

    Below is a video interview with Rick Snyder (his comments on HD start at 4.12mins) from VoiceCon.

  • Zoho Expands Mobile Device Coverage For Business Apps


    Zoho has extended mobile support for its free web applications to all the major smartphone platforms.

    Initially only available for the iPhone and Windows Mobile, Zoho Mobile now supports Android, BlackBerry and Symbian mobile platforms as well.

    It offers six apps geared towards collaborative business productivity:

    • Zoho Mail
    • Zoho Calendar
    • Zoho Writer
    • Zoho Sheet
    • Zoho Show
    • Zoho Creator

    Zoho’s Raju Vegesna said mobility was an important aspect for its on-line applications.

    The company has so far launched 19 different applications — from CRM to Mail, Reports, and Wikis.

    He said all its current and future mobile initiatives will be available under Zoho Mobile as mobile support is expanded to all upcoming applications.

    Zoho is entering an increasingly competitive market, with Google upgrading its apps’ mobile experience.

    Microsoft has also been making noises about providing mobile support for its Office products.

    Zoho is certainly taking the right approach by ensuring that its apps function across all the major mobile platforms.

  • Mobile App Revenues To Reach $25bn By 2014


    Mobile app revenues are expected to climb to more than USD $25bn by 2014 – fuelled by the launch of a raft of new application stores.

    But while one-off downloads currently account for the majority of revenues, that will change with the increasing utilization of in-app billing, according to Juniper Research.

    Its Mobile Applications & Apps Stores report suggests that rising revenues from additional mobile content will see value-added services (VAS) providing the dominant revenue stream by 2011.

    It also notes that many Tier 1 operators will seek to deploy their own app stores in a bid to maintain content revenue share.

    However, the report’s author, Dr Windsor Holden, said that in the longer term, the greatest benefits to operators would be derived from data revenues associated with app usage rather than from the retail price of apps and content.

    She said this was providing that the operators rejected the walled garden approach.

    "Data revenue growth is dependent upon operators embracing policies which enable open access – a policy which also involves facilitating app stores which compete with their on-portal offerings," she said.

    The report also noted that, given the fact that app stores currently cater exclusively for smartphones, then operators, developers and content providers would be unwise to ignore opportunities from traditional app and content distribution and monetization channels.

    Other findings from the Juniper report include:

    • Games will remain the largest category in terms of overall app downloads and revenues, although Multimedia & Entertainment apps will attract the greatest share of VAS revenues from 2009 onwards
    • App stores present a significant challenge to traditional content aggregators who may be obliged both to expand the range of their content portfolios and to amend their business models to remain viable
  • VoIP Vendors Failing To Re-think SMB Retail Products


    The economic crisis has frequently been held up as an opportunity for the VoIP industry to introduce businesses to the benefits and efficiencies offered by "non-traditional" telecom services.

    But Kent Hellebust, CMO and general manager of Individual and Digital Phone Services at Telanetix, believes many VoIP service providers are failing to respond to the fast moving pace of the business retail channel.

    He tells voip.biz-news how telecom vendors can effectively capitalise on potential opportunities in the US Small and Medium Business (SMB) market.

    Of the approximately 23 million businesses in the United States, more than 90 per cent have fewer than 50 employees (as reported in a recent AMI Inc Market Study). In total, 15 million have fewer than five employees.

    This is strong evidence that the business of America is truly Small Business.

    The question remains though: how is the current economic climate affecting these small businesses? In particular, how is it affecting their purchase of VoIP services?

    Kent Hellebust, CMO Telanetix

    The smaller the business, the less likely they are to have "redundant staff".

    With fewer than 10 employees, everyone does everything. There are no specialists; no dedicated IT staff, no full time HR person. If the business needs phone service, there’s a very good chance that it’s the owner of the business who does the buying.

    Since all small business employees are generalists, you can count on the fact that purchasing "infrastructure" like phones, phone service, computers, fax machines, etc. is considered an extra burden, not a job.

    The purchaser does not have the time or inclination to become expert and they do not know the industry "standard sources".

    In many respects, they are very close in their purchasing process to that of a consumer.

    These executives are likely to do some quick research online to find what they are looking for, and they are guided by a combination of a need for cost savings, a need for understandability (remember, they are not specialists; they wouldn’t know what "NPA-NXX, PBX, LNP, or RespOrg" meant if you held them at gunpoint), a need for simplicity, and finally, a need to save time and get on with their "real" job of driving revenue for their small business.

    In the current economic environment, the need for savings becomes paramount. You may have noticed that it’s the big companies that are getting offers of federal assistance, not the small ones.

    These small businesses have to reduce any expense they can in today’s market, and phone service is a prime target for them.
    Because of the economic pressures they currently face, they seem to be increasingly willing to try new brands and new services that they may previously not have been willing to try.

    Here at Telanetix, and our VoIP wing of AccessLine Communications, we have been specializing in small business telecommunications services and solutions for over 10 years, and we have never seen the SMB market more willing to consider VoIP as a solution to their infrastructure cost reduction challenge.

    However, this is not to say that selling any type of telecommunications service, VoIP or otherwise, to SMBs is getting easier.

    The SMB purchaser balances a complex set of factors in making their purchase decision. While they are looking for savings, they do not want to be pitched with complex "ROI" savings calculations.

    They do not have the cash flow to invest more upfront in order to achieve greater savings down the road and if the equipment and services they are purchasing have a significant upfront cost component, they are likely to look elsewhere.

    Beyond the savings, they are guided by brands they know and trust. Given that the purchaser is not going to be steeped in telecom industry knowledge, only the very largest telecom brands will have spent enough on brand advertising to be known by them.

    Once you get much below names like AT&T and Verizon, the chance of the customer knowing a non-traditional telecom brand is small.

    However,since the purchaser is a generalist, they are open to non-telecom brands that are affiliated with new telecom services as a sign of vendors they can trust.

    A number of new VoIP providers have taken advantage of this non-traditional business telecom buying process to affiliate with major business retail chains, ranging from Staples to Office Depot.

    Finally, there is the question of simplicity.

    Telecommunications, as an industry, has done its level best over the decades to be as complex as possible in the eyes of the customer.

    Hidden fees and processes, ranging from wiring fees to installation and maintenance fees, have made the acquisition and installation of business phone systems and service an arcane art that only the IT department specialists at midsize and large enterprises are comfortable in navigating.

    Many telecom vendors have failed to re-think their product, making it unsuitable for the fast moving pace of the business retail channel.

    At the same time some of the biggest names in the telecom and IT business have experimented with retail distribution, only to be puzzled and frustrated by their lack of success.

    Only those that have focused on simplifying their message, the offer structure, and the installation of their products and services for the generalist small business purchaser are able to profitably harness this channel.

    At Telanetix, we have taken all these lessons to heart.

    We have created an integrated solution specifically for the SMB market. The product includes a state of the art PBX phone system, sold in conjunction with fully integrated VoIP phone service, serving businesses with between two and 20 employees.

    Business customers hear about the product through major retail channels. We have invested quite a bit of "magic" in the upfront setup and provisioning of the phones and phone system, so that when the customer receives it, it is literally plug and play.

    All the key SMB buying criteria are met: savings, simplicity, and trusted support. There is no need for the business owner to hire a specialist to charge them USD $1,000 or more to install the system.

    There is no need to hire a wiring specialist that charges USD $100 per desk phone to run custom wiring through their office or store.

    We as a company are attempting to meet the SMB business owner on their own turf, talking in clear terms about value, savings, simplicity, and reliability.

    Given that the SMB market drives America’s business, we think that even in the current economic environment, this is a recipe for success.

  • Nirvanix Strengthens Cloud Storage Team With Three Appointments


    Cloud Storage service provider Nirvanix has announced three new appointments to its management team.

    Stephen Foskett joins the company as Director of Consulting, Arvind Gidwani as Director of Solutions Services and Brian Schwarzentruber as Solutions Architect.

    Jim Zierick, President & CEO of Nirvanix, said the new additions will be focused on educating the market in general on how to leverage the benefits of Cloud Storage while meeting or exceeding their existing storage SLAs.

    Foskett has 15 years of experience consulting with leading companies to optimize their storage strategies, as well as serving as a writer, speaker, and blogger in the storage industry.

    A Microsoft File System Storage MVP, he will continue his public writing, speaking, and storage community activities. He previously managed enterprise IT strategy consulting services at Contoural, GlassHouse Technologies, and StorageNetworks.

    Gidwani brings in-depth expertise in infrastructure areas including storage, networking, backup/recovery, disaster recovery, security and data center design, among others.

    In his nearly two-decade career, he has held IT management and system architect positions at Drivecam Inc., Qualcomm, Cisco Systems and Applied Materials Inc.

    Most recently he was at Stratoform Technologies where he worked with leading enterprise customers on IT strategy and the enabling of Cloud Computing for the Oracle E-Business Suite.

    Schwarzentruber brings 20 years of experience in management at startup and public companies to Nirvanix. He most recently served Senior Engineer at Continuity Software Inc., implementing software and service solutions to a market that included enterprise and Fortune 500 accounts.

    He served as a senior consultant in the strategy practice at GlassHouse Technologies, providing storage and backup technology optimization, reference architecture and remediation consultation to businesses seeking storage technology implementations to match their business requirements.

  • Report Aims To Demystify "Hype and Rhetoric" Around Green Data Storage


    Storage vendors worldwide have jumped on the "green" bandwagon in their marketing campaigns, but it’s often hard to determine which technologies move beyond hype and rhetoric to have a real positive impact.

    A new report from Forrester Research suggests, however, that adopting an environmentally responsible approach to storage can help to make it more efficient, reducing capital and operating costs at the same time.

    Entitled Align Green Storage With Overall Efficiency it says that poor measurement capabilities, high switching costs, and overall buyer conservatism have limited green considerations from having significant influence on purchase decisions.

    Its author, Andrew Reichman, says the report is intended to highlight the approaches that make the most economic sense.

    "In a gloomy economy, initiatives that sound good but have little measurable influence on the bottom line are unlikely to receive funding, so sorting through the claims and identifying benefits that are achievable in the near term is key to a successful green strategy in storage."

    He goes on to say that given the current economic climate, there are green storage approaches that are likely to see higher adoption. Among them:

    • Dense drives, such as SATA and FATA, are the greenest storage technology going and can have a tremendous impact on the green and financial bottom line
    • Thin provisioning can reduce the overall footprint of usable data and dramatically increase storage utilization, which is often low because of large upfront allocations that often sit idle
    • Deduplication eliminates redundant copies of data. Forrester expects significant focus on these capabilities, which significantly reduce the amount of disk space required to save a given amount of data, from vendors in the near term.

    An abstract of the report is available here.

  • Adaptec Announces Support For VMware vSphere


    Adaptec has announced that its newly launched Series 5 Unified Serial (SATA/SAS) RAID Controller Family will be providing support for VMware vSphere.

    The VMware Technology Alliance Partner (TAP) program member’s controller family is supported natively via an in-box driver, ready for immediate installation.

    VMware vSphere is the industry’s first cloud operating system. It allows datacenters to be transformed into simplified cloud infrastructures.

    Scott Cleland, director of marketing at Adaptec, said that by supporting VMware vSphere, Adaptec can further extend the value of its Series 5 Unified Serial (SATA/SAS) RAID Controller Family into customers’ next-generation datacenters.

    He said this helps customers to manage large collections of infrastructure — including CPUs, storage and networking — as a seamless, flexible and dynamic cloud environment.

    "Virtualization and cloud computing environments are constantly changing and adapting to meet the demands of growing enterprises," he said.

    "VMware vSphere provides the most feature-rich solution available today to meet and exceed these growing needs."