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News
CEA Publishes New Digital Home Networking Standard
(21/8/2006)
The Consumer Electronics Association's (CEA's)
R7 Home Network Committee has published a new standard that will
allow consumers to control their CE devices from virtually anywhere
via a UPnP device. CEA-2014, Web-based Protocol and Framework for
Remote User Interface on UPnP Networks and the Internet (Web4CE),
lets a UPnP device offer up its user interface (display and control
options) as a Web page to display on any other device on the home
network.With this, consumers can control devices from virtually
anywhere via a browser-based communications method for CE devices
on a UpnP home network using Ethernet and a special version of HTML
called CE-HTML.
"The upcoming era of the digital home, in
which products will be connected through a UPnP home network, will
see users accessing a variety of features and applications from
various products in their home," explained Mark Walker, Senior Platform
Architect, Intel Corp. "In addition, consumer products are extending
their functionality by providing direct access from consumer devices
and home network PCs to Internet-based news and entertainment services
delivered to the home over broadband networks such as ADSL and cable.
Currently, however, there is no single cross-industry standard that
simultaneously ensures home network device interoperability and
a good user experience with Internet Services. The new CEA-2014
standard addresses both needs."
Web4CE is a new framework for transmitting
user interfaces over both the Internet and over a home entertainment
network, enabling consumers to control applications remotely on
UPnP devices regardless of whether they originate in the home or
from the Internet. CE-HTML is the other portion of CEA-2014 that
allows consumers to interact with Internet or home network service
applications that are optimized for CE devices, like television
sets. CE-HTML is specifically designed to allow user interaction
to take place using a remote control, keypad or a touch screen;
and it has the built-in ability to scale appropriately for the user
interface.
"CEA-2014 is an important addition to CEA's
home networking standards and shows our continued support for the
clear industry trend to use Internet Protocols in home networks,"
added Virginia Williams, Director of Engineering Standards at the
CEA. "CEA's R7 committee is providing key home networking building
blocks, such as the Remote User Interface method contained in CEA-2014,
to facilitate growth and interoperability in the digital home."
The R7 Home Network Committee is chaired
by William Rose, President, WJR Consulting, Inc. Participation in
CEA standards activities is open to companies and organizations
with direct and material interest. CEA membership is not required
to participate.
www.CE.org/standards
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