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News
Me and My Shows: Motorola Unveils Strategy for Moving
Digital Media Throughout the Home (22/6/2005)
The Company Introduces a New Suite of All-Digital
Set-Tops and Progressive Software Options That Will Enable Consumers
to Seamlessly Move Digital Entertainment Throughout Their Homes
At the Society of Cable Telecommunications
Engineers Cable-Tec Expo (Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, San
Antonio), Motorola, Inc. (NYSE:MOT) unveiled a unified hardware
and software strategy that will enable digital cable customers to
move and share digital media throughout their homes.
As the leading provider of digital video
solutions for the cable industry, Motorola's strategy of integrating
its all-digital set-tops with home media networking software presents
operators with a compelling, cost-efficient path for increasing
the advanced digital services they offer to subscribers.
Robust Software Platform Enables Sharing
of Media Throughout The Home
Motorola's software strategy for whole-home
media takes advantage of the industry-leading Ucentric Digital Home
Platform, acquired by Motorola earlier this year. This suite of
applications enables seamless access to digital entertainment --
such as recorded video on a set-top, music on a computer hard drive,
or pictures on a laptop -- stored on any connected device in the
home.
Because of the growing momentum for the open
cable applications platform (OCAP), Motorola plans to offer extensions
for OCAP that will enable operators to tap into the robust networking
capabilities of the Motorola Ucentric platform by Summer 2006. This
will enable cable operators to take advantage of features such as
the sharing of tuners and storage across the network from within
their own custom OCAP applications.
All-Digital Set-Tops Extend the Whole-Home
Media Network
Motorola's hardware strategy begins with
the introduction of the DCT3412, an all-digital, dual-tuner, high-definition
digital video recorder. This model, along with its sister set-top
(the widely deployed Motorola DCT6412, which also includes analog
recording), can serve as the centerpiece of a whole-home media network.
With operator-selectable hard drive sizes (120GB, 160GB, 320GB),
this product can serve hours of digital recordings, along with music,
pictures, and more, to any room in the home.
Motorola will also offer a sneak peek at
cost-effective, all-digital set- top concepts designed for secondary
rooms in the home. These products will support OCAP and the Ucentric
Digital software, and include built-in adapters that will enable
the creation of a whole-home network as easy as connecting a coaxial
cable to the set-top.
These products will include a "proxied" DOCSIS(R)
set-top gateway (DSG) feature that can simplify the operator's ability
to administer multiple set- tops in the home. With this functionality,
operators can independently access each set-top attached to the
home media network through a single cable modem.
"An integrated all-digital and OCAP software
strategy allows our operator customers to offer a seamless access
experience within their consumers' homes on a platform that offers
maximum flexibility and reduced costs," said John Burke, Motorola
corporate vice president and general manager, consumer entertainment
solutions. "It also affords them an all-digital solution that efficiently
reclaims bandwidth and gets valuable features and functionality,
like DVR, into the second and third rooms in the home."
www.motorola.com
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