Tracking the tools that decentralize the media. tools process ideas resources eventsav

unmediated

 

October 10, 2005

Chipzilla will pay approximately $70 million for Zarlink Semiconductor.

The deal includes demodulators and tuners for receiving digital audio and video broadcasts to TVs, set-top boxes, recorders, and other devices. They allow the devices to receive, extract, and decompress the broadcast and then display or store the content, said Intel.

Zarlink claims to be the number one provider of terrestrial DTV demodulators and is well positioned to meet the needs of portable DTV equipment designers. Selling the assets will allow Zarlink to focus on its network communications, optical and ultra-low power businesses, it said.

Intel will pay $68 million in cash and $2 million in "other consideration," Zarlink said. The deal is subject to closing conditions, including the retention of Zarlink employees, and is expected to close in November, it said.

Zarlink's radio-frequency front-end consumer business, based in Swindon, England, has annual revenue of $53 million US, developing demodulator and tuner technologies for digital TV products. The acquisition would complement Intel's purchase earlier this year of Oplus Technologies, which makes video processing technologies, Intel said.

Meanwhile, Broadcom signaled its intentions to expand into mobile TV by announcing the purchase of Athena Semiconductors, a fabless radio chipmaker specializing in video, audio and low-power Wi-Fi.

Broadcom is backing up the Digital Video Broadcast-Handheld (DVB-H) standard, backed by most of the GSM community. While its multimedia processors support the H.264 compression used by DVB-H devices, it has not yet integrated a DVB-H tuner into its chipsets or created a standalone DVB-H radio chip. That’s where Athena’s technology comes in, said Robert Rango, senior vice president and general manager of Broadcom’s wireless group. “We will create the core of an industry-leading mobile digital TV market,” says Rango.

ARM's latest core, the Cortex-A8, based on ARM 7 architecture can deliver up to 2000 DMIPS while consuming less than 300 mW and may be used in portable multimedia devices.

Chips and content are going to mix it up.

MobiTV and Denver-based Comcast Media Center will deliver MobiTV to mobile phones. Comcast's 305,000 square-foot satellite center currently originates more than 80 TV networks, including HDTV channels. Its satellite uplink facility transmits more than 400 digital services.

MobiTV is currently available on PCS Vision from Sprint and Cingular but may move to offload their cellular spectrum by multcasting DVB-H on the 1.6 Ghz band owned by Crown Castle and the the 700 Mhz band (channel 55), owned by Qualcomm's MediaFLO.

They'll utilize H.264 compression and VC-1.

The MainConcept H.264 Encoder v2 software ($500) is fully compliant with the H.264 standard and includes a decoder which enables H.264 files to be played in Windows Media Player.

ComVu allows you to webcast live using your smart-phone or PocketPC. The feed goes to ComVu's server where other users, on a computer, smart phone or PPC, can pick it up after a 10-second delay from the Web site. Free video hosting is available at OurMedia.org, Feedburner, Vimeo and Blip.tv.

Nerd TV is ready to roll. So are Brightcove, Major League Baseball, Oxygen, ManiaTV, ChannelBlast, Current TV, RocketBoom, Google Video, Yahoo 360 and a dozen other multi-media content networks.


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on Oct 10, 2005 at 12:57 PM