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  • Price Deals Fuelling Surge in HDTV Sales

    Sales of high definition plasma TVs have risen by 37 per cent in the third quarter compared to last year’s figures.

    A survey by DisplaySearch has shown that consumers are being enticed to buy plasma sets by sweeping price cuts, especially on 32-inch sets.

    The leading brand is Panasonic, with around 40 per cent of revenue on plasma TVs, followed by Samsung (29%), LG (22%), Pioneer (5%), and Hitachi (4%).

    The clear favorite in terms of screen-size for plasma is 42-inch sets (49%), although 50-inch sizes are increasingly popular (29%).
    Shipments of 32-inch screens accounted for 12% of the market.

  • WD Brings Simplicity To Streaming


    Storage expert Western Digital has launched a standalone media box that streams content from your USB drive.

    Rather than hooking your computer to your HDTV and streaming video and other multimedia files, the WD TV HD Media Player accepts content from a separate WD portable backup drive.

    The media player has two USB ports that will also connect to flash drives and flip video players, and connects to your HDTV via an HDMI cable.

    It can playback virtually any type of multimedia file including most picture formats and H.264, DivX, and MPEG-2 video in 1080p resolution.

    The media player costs USD$129, but compatible storage devices are sold separately.

    As friendly to use as it is, WD’s new product is entering a market which is attracting increasing attention.

    Various companies are focussing on consumers’ living rooms, including Netflix which is working alongside Microsoft, Roku, and several Blu-ray manufacturers to make its streaming service more widely available in the living room.

    The WD TV HD Media Player’s basic features:

    • Compatible with My Passport portable hard drives and other USB storage devices
    • Full HD 1080p video playback and navigation
    • Dock-and-play convenience
    • Provides access to 2 USB drives simultaneously
    • HDMI and composite video interfaces for easy connection to a TV
    • Ultracompact design for easy portability
    • Includes My Passport hard drive stand, compact remote with batteries, composite A/V cable, AC adapter, media converter software and owner’s manual
  • FootageBank Launches HD Content Service For Mobiles


    FootageBank HD has launched a new royalty-free division offering high def content for online and mobile platforms.

    Called footagehead.com, the service provides web accessible HD content for use in PodCasts and webisodes.

    Paula Lumbard, founder and president of FootageBank HD, said the new service had more than 10,000 new clips with more coming weekly.

    "Early on, we recognized the value of HD footage, which allowed FootageBank HD to prepare for the high demand," she said.

    "With an eye on the future, we anticipate the same need for programming and tools to create content for PodCasts, webisodes or anything in the mobile media space."

    The LA-based HD footage specialists shot most of the content with Panasonic P2 and Sony XD cameras within the last year.

    All the clips are offered in their native codecs, without compression.

    The HD 16 X 9 widescreen format is immediately downloadable and royalty free.

    footagehead.com is offering the clips at one price point.

    "It is our intention to be the leader in serving the growing demand for downloadable 16 x 9 content in digital files created with the new mobile HD camcorders," states Lumbard.

    "We are seeing growth in this market around the world, and expect demand to continue as the consumers of media more and more turn to their mobile ‘third screens’ for their entertainment."

  • Mobiles To Receive Unprecedented US Election Coverage


    Whatever the outcome of the Obama-McCain contest, the unprecedented level of mobile US election coverage is expected to do much to introduce mainstream consumers to mobile content.

    Media companies and mobile operators have teamed up to offer extensive coverage of the US presidential election results direct to mobile phones.

    The hope is that huge numbers of people unfamiliar to the world of mobile content will continue using it long after election day.

    News, analysis and results will be available across a wide range of operating platforms.

    For Microsoft Windows Mobile-enabled phones, NewsGator Technologies is providing content from WashingtonPost.com and Newsweek to wireless users via its free Campaign Tracker app.

    iPhone users can receive a mobile version of online magazine Slate.com’s Election Scorecard thanks to its partnership with Seattle’s Chimp Software, which is offering a downloadable version of its interactive polling application for the Apple handsets.

    Google is offering an array of elections-based mobile offerings, including a mobile election site with links to election-related news, mobile YouTube channels from both John McCain and Barack Obama and links to search results for both candidates that eliminate the need to type in names for every search.

  • Shoppers To Be Tempted With Reduced Price HDTVs And Bundled Blu-rays


    Greatly reduced HDTV price tags and packages bundling sets and blu-rays are among the retailing treats likely to be on offer to US shoppers this holiday season, according to DisplaySearch.

    With the US economy ailing, Paul Gagnon, DisplaySearch’s director of North America TV market research, said stock market declines have impacted on people’s investments and consumers weren’t generally saving very much money.

    Paul Gagnon, director of N.American TV market research,DisplaySearch

    He said this could impact on their purchasing decisions during the Thanksgiving weekend and Black Friday holiday period, traditionally one of the busiest weeks of the year for the US CE and PC industries.

    “It’s an interesting time we’re in now," he said. “To combat this, retailers are expected to pull out all the stops this holiday season—lowering HDTV prices, offering bundled electronic packages with HDTVs and Blu-ray disc players, using ‘creative’ financing deals when possible such as in-store credit or ‘pay when you get your tax return’ options with the hopes of achieving their sales targets this holiday season.

    "Keeping shopper traffic high for the holiday season will be a priority for both retailers and TV manufacturers.”

    Speaking in a webinar exclusively for DisplaySearch clients, Gagnon detailed several potential TV scenarios for the 2008 holiday season:

    •   Consumers will become increasingly conservative in discretionary holiday spending, despite discount and promotion opportunities—leading to negative Y/Y Q4’08 shipment growth.
    • Consumers will take advantage of the best bargains and low price points—causing retailers to hit their unit sales targets, but miss revenue goals and negatively impact margins.
    • Consumers will continue to spend as they have on larger sizes and better featured sets—taking advantage of dramatically lower prices and sggressive retail promotions.
    • Consumers will turn to discount stores such as Costco and Walmart in greater numbers for electronic purchases this holiday season, in order to save money and get more shopping done in fewer trips.
  • Nokia Bets On Smartphone Openness Versus "Dictator"


    So who exactly was Nokia’s Kai Öistämö referring to as a "dictator" when he addressed the recent Symbian Smartphone Show in London?

    No names were named by the executive vice president of devices but his speech made it clear the Finnish giant isn’t resting on its laurels.

    With the iPhone shaking up the smartphone industry and Google’s Android Open Handset Alliance project making good progress, Nokia appears up for the challenge.

    While Apple has been accused of operating an unclear and seemingly arbitrary approvals policy for third party applications submitted for the iPhone, Öistämö said Nokia is firmly in favor of openness.

    Kai Öistämö, executive vice president of devices, Nokia

    His company’s purchase of Symbian – and the formation of the open source Symbian Foundation sometime soon to enable a standardized Symbian smartphone operating systems – is testament to that.

    According to Öistämö, that is where future smartphone success lies.

    "These things are computers and it’s about the wealth of applications," he said. "It’s the consumer who has to make the choice, not us. I strongly believe an open eco-system always wins over one that is run by a captain, or should I say, dictator."

    It was the theme of smartphones as mobile computers that dominated Öistämö’s presentation.

    Mobile Computes NOT Smartphones

    He kicked off by saying that instead of his topic being the ‘future of smartphones’ it should actually have been titled the ‘future of computers’.

    Smartphones today had the processing power, onboard memory, display resolution and always on-line broadband access of computers, he said, adding: "I think they have entered the day when they are fully fledged mobile computers.

    "They are enabling you to use all your internet applications, even those you are used to using in a PC environment."

    Mobile computers were quickly becoming the main source for both consuming and creating media on the internet, Öistämö told delegates.

    He said this in turn was making them the innovation hot spot for the whole internet and made the smartphone industry an exciting place in which to be involved.

    The way people communicated had evolved beyond person-to-person to person-to-many – essentially communicating to communities

    This made it important for people to be part of a community, according to Öistämö, whether that was Facebook, Flickr, MySpace or whatever.

    He said this made the mobile computer a better tool for participating in these communities than the laptop or PC.

    Equally, the context in which the next generation of web services and applications was being created offered unlimited opportunities for innovation and adding new value.

    "It’s about ‘in what place am I today?’, ‘what time is it?’, ‘what people are here?’," he said.

    But Öistämö warned that just adding more and more functionality to drive up prices and sales was an easy trap to fall into.

    He cited the example of VCRs, which he believed ended up having functions that nobody was interested in using.

    "At Nokia, we have the consumer at the heart of our strategy," he said.

    This entailed looking ahead to see what the "next big thing" would be as mobile computers evolved.

    "We are entering an era when we can overlay the digital world with the physical world," he said.

    Öistämö gave the example of him standing outside Madison Square Gardens pointing his smartphone at it and being told who was performing there and how much the tickets cost.

    "If you think about the possibilities this type of technology merging has, this will revolutionise the whole internet," he said.

    Revolutions can either topple dictators or leave them in a stronger position. Is open source the only route to success in tomorrow’s smartphone market?

    Please send us your comments.

  • VoIP Call Quality Boost With New Vonage Patent


    A new patent which reduces the likelihood of dropped and incomplete calls has been added to Vonage’s portfolio.

    Louis Mamakos, Vonage’s CTO and executive vice president, said the patent reflected the depth of talent and creativity at the company.

    According to Vonage, the invention, which was filed for patent in 2003, makes it "less likely for customers to encounter dropped calls, incomplete attempted calls or other communication problems resulting from typical router function and behavior".

    “This is an exciting moment for Vonage as we continue to expand our patent portfolio to help create a more reliable calling experience for our customers,” said Mamakos.

    The patent relates to improvements in Internet telephony where Network Address Translation (NAT) is required.

    The patent addresses the issue of a router losing an outbound port during an Internet telephone connection.

    To avoid the router timing out and closing the outbound port, the patent causes the media terminal adapter to send an outbound message to the Internet telephony regional data center.

  • Logitech Snaps Up VoIP Startup SightSpeed


    Logitech International has announced the acquisition of VoIP and videoconferencing startup SightSpeed for around USD $30 million.

    The deal is expected to close in early November, following completion of standard closing procedures and conditions.

    In a release, the Swiss manufacturer of PC peripherals said the addition of SightSpeed’s video technology and research and development team would allow it to develop new video solutions for the home market.

    SightSpeed’s software has received widespread praise and sits at the core of Dell’s Video Chat application. The service allows people to make video calls, computer-to-computer voice calls, and calls to regular telephones, with free and paid versions.

    Logitech claimed the merger would produce "future video calling initiatives that can enable cross-platform video communications with an intuitive, lifelike experience, for people sitting in front of a personal computer or with their family in a living room".

    Logitech, perhaps best known for computer mice it makes, already sells high-end video cameras for online video conferencing and chat, and some VoIP equipment as well.

    Junien Labrousse, executive vice president of Logitech’s Products group, said: "With this acquisition, we are significantly augmenting our current video R&D resources to help us move more quickly toward our goals for video services that complement the way people socialize, communicate and enjoy entertainment."

    SightSpeed’s 25 employees currently work out of offices in Fremont, California, where Logitech’s US HQ is situated.

  • Ditech Offers Network Operators More Deployment Options


    Ditech Networks today announced that its Packet Voice Processor (PVP) is now available in a smaller size.

    The move will give network operators and enterprises greater flexibility to support VoIP, 3G and Web 2.0 services.

    PVP now can be configured and deployed to support 1,000-4,000 sessions at the network’s edge, and up to 16,000 sessions in the core of the network.

    The company says this range and configurability make its PVP product the industry’s most flexible voice quality platform for IP services.

    Although the demand for VoIP, 3G and Web 2.0 services continues to increase significantly, the volume of IP voice traffic can vary widely at different points in the network.

    Network operators and enterprises need the ability to support a wide range of call volumes and the flexibility to increase capacity as demand for IP voice services grows.

    Ditech’s PVP product supports early stage markets and services, in addition to supporting the high-capacity requirements of IP voice services in the core of the network.

    Karl Brown, vice president of marketing at Ditech Networks, said the new low-density PVP chassis had all of the same functionality and performance of the higher-capacity product.

    But he said it was implemented in a way that offered network operators and enterprises more deployment options.

    “Ditech’s new form factor and session capacity ensures that PVP can meet the different network requirements of supporting the growth of IP voice services,” he said.

    Ditech’s PVP product now is available in two platform options: 13RU, 14-slot chassis for up to 16,000 sessions; and 5RU, 6-slot chassis for 1,000-4,000 sessions.

    Cards in the 6-slot chassis can be redeployed in the 14-slot chassis as the demand for network capacity increases.

  • Truphone announces VoIP app for BlackBerry


    The VoIP mobile software developer Truphone has launched a beta version of its iPhone app for RIM’s BlackBerry 8801 and Curve devices.

    While Truphone Anywhere for Blackberry only works on WiFi enabled BlackBerrys at the moment it will be rolled out for 3G at some point.

    Offering similar services and features as found on Truphone’s Symbian S60 and Apple iPhone platforms, the free VoIP service provides discount calling around the world.

    Truphone doesn’t currently offer a Windows Mobile version but one is understood to be in development.

    The software can be downloaded via Blackberry’s built-in browser.

    It integrates with the handset’s address book and the newer version of the software routes calls via the cheapest network available to the handset, be it GSM or Truphone’s service over VOIP, but only if you select this manually.

    Geraldine Wilson, the new CEO of Truphone, said: "There’s no GSM business tariff that gets close to the prices we can offer BlackBerry users with Truphone for international calling."