CMP | United Business Media

EE Times
Home
About
Feedback
EETimes Network
EETimes AsiaEETimes ChinaEETimes FranceEETimes GermanyEETimes KoreaEETimes TaiwanEETimes UKSubscribeNewsletterContactMedia Kit



 
Search
departments
Semiconductors
Systems & Software
EE Times' Resource for Design Tools & Methodologies
Technology
EE Times' Work & Career Community
EE Times' Resource for Comms Designers
EE Times' Analog & Mixed-signal Resource
EE Times' Resource for Embedded Designers
The first stop for the latest ICs and components

























NeSeminar Services
A list of upcoming NetSeminars, plus a link to the archive.

EE Times' Future of Semiconductors NetSeminar Series

High Speed Memory Debug Challenges

Embedded Technologies for Enhancing Semiconductor Yield and Quality

"See The Power" Of Accurate AC/DC Power Analysis

Archive



Network Resources
eLibrary
EE TIMES NETWORK
 Online Editions
 EE TIMES
 EE TIMES ASIA
 EE TIMES CHINA
 EE TIMES FRANCE
 EE TIMES GERMANY
 EE TIMES KOREA
 EE TIMES TAIWAN
 EE TIMES UK

 Web Sites
 • Career Center
 • CommsDesign
 • Microwave
    Engineering
 • EEdesign
 • Deepchip.com
 • Design & Reuse
 • Embedded.com
 • Embedded Edge
   Magazine
 • Elektronik i Norden
 • Planet Analog
 • Silicon Strategies
ELECTRONICS GROUP SITES
 • eeProductCenter
 • Electronics Supply &
    Manufacturing
 • Conferences
    and Events
 • Custom Magazines
 • EBN China
 • Electronics Express
 • NetSeminar Services
 • QuestLink

This Weeks Issue

This Weeks Issue


  EE Times -Forum to weigh Microsoft's Corona as DVD encoder

Forum to weigh Microsoft's Corona as DVD encoder

By Junko Yoshida
EE Times

December 12, 2001 (4:15 PM EST)
 

NEW YORK — A working group of the DVD Forum will scrutinize Microsoft Corp.'s next-generation Windows Media technology and several other codecs when it meets next week in Japan to explore encoding schemes for the upcoming high-definition DVD specification.

Code-named Corona, Microsoft's technology is capable of encoding high-definition video at 24 frames per second at a compression ratio superior to MPEG-2. The company said Windows Media, which was previewed Tuesday at the Internet World conference here, will enable movie streaming over the Web. But it will also pack high-definition video on a DVD and offer disk and DVD player makers an alternative to costly blue laser technology on upcoming HD-DVD players.

The DVD Forum's consideration of Corona is unnerving to Japanese consumer electronics vendors, some of whom are interested in exploiting the blue laser technology they've invested in for years. While a blue laser could use MPEG-2 encoding to cram 9 Gbytes of high-definition content onto a two-layer DVD, Corona could accomplish as much without a shift to blue laser technology.

One Hollywood studio executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that some DVD Forum members would like to see MPEG-2 continue, but that a complete switch to blue laser technology would involve a "very costly" overhaul of disk manufacturing and result in more expensive disks.

"Our view is that encoding improvements could deliver an HD-DVD visual experience on a DVD-9 [dual-layer DVD with a 9-Gbyte capacity]," the same executive said. "We have been encouraging Microsoft and a few others [including some MPEG-4 codec players] to attain these encoding goals."

Industry sources from both the Hollywood studios and the consumer electronics industry agreed, but said they see Corona as another effort by Microsoft to establish a strong position in the consumer electronics market. "The question you'd have to ask yourself is whether you want to lock yourself into one solution — whether a coding scheme or a digital management system — offered by Microsoft, forever," one source said.

Rob Koenen, president of the MPEG-4 Industry Forum, said that different profiles of MPEG-4 can provide 1,920 x 1,080 resolution for both progressive and interlaced video at up to 60 frames/s. "These profiles are geared towards HD applications," he said.

And the recent decision to incorporate H.26L into the spec will greatly improve MPEG-4's coding efficiency, sources said.

Recent Articles
EET
  • Smart Processor Picks for Digital Video
  • The Revolution Will Be Televised
  • Video: Coming Soon to a Processor Near You
  • Matsushita to offer Blu-ray Disk recorders by July
  • Nanotech momentum grows as planners define goals
  • Foundry sales in 2004 running 50% ahead of 2003
  • Philips, IMEC renew agreement on research collaboration

    Archives

    Free Subscription to EE Times
    First Name   Last Name
    Company Name   Title
    Business Address   City
    State

      Zip
    Email address  

     


    ~*~ Download Free Technical Publications ~*~
    Read about EDA Innovations, New Techniques, Tools, Reference Guides and more. Click Here >>

    FREE Monthly Newsletter - Aeroflex Test Update
    News and Information to make wireless testing easier. As a subscriber, you will receive all of the latest Aerflex news including upcoming products, specials, articles and application notes.

    Signal Integrity for High Frequency Board Design
    "Learn for GHz designs: relevant interconnect standards, BER prediction and analysis, signal integrity performance factors, via and power plane design, NRZ and 4PAM signaling differences, 8B10B encoding benefits, eye diagram analysis. Free webinar"

    Smith Charting Muscle!
    Engineering, Scientific, Financial, and Serious Business Charting components fit seamlessly into your EXE or Web Site. Includes WinForm, WebForm, ActiveX, and DLL interfaces. GigaSoft ProEssentials v5

    Prototype Circuit Boards from PCBexpress
    Leading Internet supplier of prototype circuit boards. Successfully selling pcbs online since 1997. Easy order process for quick turn pcbs (24-hrs) 2-6 layers up to 20 pieces. No tooling charges for our quality prototype boards. Try us out today.

    Buy a link NOW:



    All material on this site Copyright © 2004 CMP Media LLC. All rights reserved.
    Privacy Statement | Terms of Service