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Ed's View - Threats, Volume 2 | |
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By Ed Milbourn Correspondent Posted on November 30, 2006 Category: General Interest |
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In Volume 1 of this dissertation regarding various factors that threaten the viability of HDTV, I discussed those that, in my view, are the top three: Compromised Production Values, Bandwidth Conservation, and Spectrum Super Packing. The next three are somewhat less critical, but nonetheless threaten to compromise DTV in general and HDTV in particular.
To solve this problem (and it can be solved), the industry must develop a one connector "plug-n-play" A/V interconnection standard that is media transparent. There are at least five different industry standards groups working on this problem or parts of it. However, the political solutions are much more difficult to find than those electronic. And the political complexity rises exponentially with the addition of each well meaning "standards group."
I am reluctant to pose problems without possible solutions. So, the global answer to these problems is to be an active critic. Regulators do listen, producers do listen and manufacturers do listen. Those that get a hearing aid too late find themselves being trampled from behind. Just ask Ford and GM.
Ed
Sphere: Related ContentPosted by Ed Milbourn, November 30, 2006 10:01 AM
Reader Commentary Nov 30, 10:34am Hi Ed, To solve this problem (and it can be solved), the industry must develop a one connector "plug-n-play" A/V interconnection standard that is media transparent. Once HDMI becomes the standard connector on al Nov 30, 11:45am Thanks for your question. HDMI is designed as a baseband secure digital A/V point-to-point interface connector technology to couple a display system to a baseband source. The HDMI protocol does not support packetized compressed data, have a user contro Nov 30, 11:59am What product(s) would I buy or subscribe to making these other parameters an issue? Thanks Nov 30, 1:05pm Essentially, any source of unidirectional or bi-directional A/V systems would be compatible, ranging from games, disc, broadband (wired and/or wireless), Cable, OTA, DBS, camera, camcorder . . .the list seems to be endless. Basically, the idea is t Nov 30, 1:38pm I get the wireless part but I guess I am missing something... Isn't HDMI unidirectional already for the application you have described? While not plug and play yet that only requires software from the source to take the EDID from the display and config Nov 30, 4:53pm Yes, certainly you could use the HDMI physical layer for a hard wired network, but the rest of the layers would require additions and extensive modifications. In addition, HDMI would not be extensible to a wide area network if the traffic were to carry m Nov 30, 5:34pm Hey Ed, Thank you for your patience. I think I finally get it... You are referring to multimedia networks such as Voom as a simplisitc example where 5 people could feasibly be watching something different but using one server for all. Another crude More on General Interest
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About Ed MilbournAfter graduating from Purdue University with degrees in Electrical Engineering and Industrial Education in 1961 and 1963 respectively, Ed Milbourn joined the RCA Home Entertainment Division in 1963. During his thirty-eight year career with RCA (later GE and Thomson multimedia), Mr. Milbourn held the positions of Field Service Engineer, Manager of Technical Training and Manager of Sales Training. In 1987, he joined Thomson's Product Management group as Manager of Advanced Television Systems Planning, with responsibilities including Digital Television and High Definition Television Product Management. Mr. Milbourn retired from Thomson multimedia in December 2001, and is now a Consumer Electronics Industry consultant. |
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