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News
30/7/2003
CEA Adopts DENi (Digital Entertainment Network Initiative)
Standard
CEA-2008 Establishes Standard Approach for Sharing Content Over
a Home Network
The Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) announced today that
its Home Network Committee (R7) has adopted a new standard for home
networks, designated CEA-2008 - The Digital Entertainment Network
Initiative (DENi). The standard was created to make it easier for
consumers to share content over a home network and to establish
consistent interoperability between consumer electronics end devices.
The standard collects existing standards and specifies how they
work together.
'The DENi standard represents a generational
leap forward for home audio and video products,' said John Gildred,
vice president of engineering for Pioneer Research Center USA Inc.
and chairman of CEA's R7.6 subcommittee that developed the standard.
'With DENi, consumers will be able to choose compatible home networking
products from different CE manufacturers and literally plug-and-play
them together with no user setup required. Now that we have agreed
on how to do audio/video networking, we can start building products
which share content with other vendors' products over the network.'
'This is a precedent for CEA as it demonstrates
the viability of a new standard development model,' said Virginia
Williams, director of engineering for CEA. 'The broad support behind
CEA-2008, and our collaboration with the DENi consortia, resulted
in increased industry interest and rapid adoption of the standard.
We're pleased with the flexibility and ease-of-use that the DENi
standard will help deliver to consumers and their home networks.'
CEA-2008 leverages widely-used open Internet
and CE industry standards. By clarifying how more than 60 different
standards interrelate, DENi makes interoperability between different
manufacturers' audio, video and imaging products possible. This
compatibility is achieved using Internet Protocols (IP), with Ethernet
as the common network platform, UPnP(tm) as the middleware, and
a core set of supported audio and video formats. In addition, DENi
supports a quality of service scheme for Ethernet that was developed
in CEA's R7.5 A/V Networking subcommittee to allow for better interoperability
between devices that support bandwidth reservation and those that
only support prioritization.
Upcoming plans for the DENi standard include
an interoperability 'plugfest' in August 2003, which allows manufacturers
to evaluate their prototypes and product designs to ensure compatibility,
and the rollout of an accompanying logo program for manufacturer
self-certification, which will be handled by CEA's Home Networks
and IT (HNIT) division.
CEA-2008 is available from Global Engineering
Documents at http://global.ihs.com.
www.ce.org/standards
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