To Bob Mankin,
My background is that I received my Degree from CSULB in Industrial Technology - Electronics Option. This is similar to being 1/2 a EE and 1/2 a Manufacturing Engineer. I worked for TRW as an Engineer for 4 1/2 years in the Microelectronics Group, moved on the Epson America for 9 years as a Senior Engineer, worked at EIZO/Nanao (a computer monitor company) as the Technical Manager for 9 years, and am currently teaching Electronics and Manufacturing Technology at El Camino College for the last 6 years.
I notice that in your last message, you continue to resort to name calling "lobbyist", as if this somehow declares all their arguments null and void.
...But in this case just as with this forum thread, the key facts are missing and you're swallowing the flawed logic and analysis of not one, but now two lobbyist organizations who are commenting based on an agenda....
In the above quote, you have ASSUMED their logic to be flawed and you ASSUMED they some sort of evil hidden agenda. To me it looks like you paint some sort of dark evil image of these people to justify your position. When you ASSUME all sorts of wild things about these people, we are no longer dealing with any reality here. SEE BELOW:
#1...Oh, how about a CEA member sitting on a bunch of dated, power inefficient component inventory?? Is that a possibility? ...
#2 Bob, adding EPG features to an otherwise unsophisticated box will require more complex software, memory and some form of battery backup to maintain the guide. I believe that is talked about in the testimony. Understanding that, is there really any mystery why the NAB would be crying that they don't get to make your life more "convenient" with bloated enhanced guide code embedded in the box? ...
#3 ... You have to consider their motivations because when anyone suggests their viewers will simply be cut off if they don't have their way, I tune out immediately because I know it's pure BS.
#1: I pointed this out before, but I'll say it again; you assumed that some vendors were sitting on a stockpile of old obsolete parts. This makes NO sense, why would any vender hold onto parts that won't be sold until 2008?
#2: You ASSUMED that the driving force behind NAB was to promote power hungry features in the box. This makes NO sense, NAB (National Association of Broadcasters) is worried that if a if a low power box can't be built OR if the cost is excessive, they stand to loose LOTS of viewers in California. Broadcasters make their money from advertising, so a loss in viewers = a loss in income.
#3: You ASSUMED that NAB's motivation could NOT be loss of viewers, you just wrote that off a BS. If you read TV Technology, a trade publication to Broadcast Professionals, on a regular bases (I do), you would see that the potential loss of viewers is a major concern for the Broadcast Industry. Both Cable and Satellite services have diluted their market share. BUT, you just pretend that this could NOT be an issue for them....
Let me spell this out in simple terms,
the California Energy Commission's actions are a Crap Shoot: IF existing Chip designs existed that fit within the 8 watt power limit, there's no need for any manufacturer to put up a fight, unless the cost of the chips are excessive. Thus, the potential for one of two bad outcomes are:
NUMBER 1: Manufacturers find that the 8 watt limit is impossible to meet or impractical to meet. In this case, no converter box could legally be sold in California and the 1.6 million California households that need the box are screwed big time.
NUMBER 2: Manufacturers cut some sort of deal with the chip makers to make a low power version of the chips. (This assumes that it can be done and no one can say for sure.) One thing I learned for TRW, Epson, and EIZO; CUSTOM CHIPS COME AT A PREMIUM PRICE!!! The higher price is unknown at this time. This would mean that
the CEC has signed a blank check that a lot of LOW INCOME families in California are going to have to pay.
In answer to your comment about the EPSON OTA tuner, the LSDT2: I did a search using GOOGLE and only got 6 hits. Only two hits were of any use. The first was a Product Support Bulletin dated October 19, 2004, which spoke about the part numbers. This does not prove that the product was shipping back in October 2004 (about 1.5 years ago), because when I worked at Epson, we wrote many such bulletins months BEFORE the product shipped. The second link was a posting in a forum about the Epson Converter dated August 26, 2005 (about 8 months ago). This suggests that this "older box" might have been shipping for about a year, give or take, but I can't be 100% sure.
Anyway, you ASSUME that newer technology, newer being a year give or take, MUST have lower power requirements. True going from discreet parts to single chip subsystems saved a lot of power, but Moore's Law only predicts increasing chip density. A lot of people think that things like RAM access time and power requirements should also follow the same curve of Moore's Law, but they don't.
There is also another group that has spoken out against the CEC mandate:
CEA and NAB aren't alone in their concerns. David Donovan, president of the Association for Maximum Service Television, which is collaborating with the NAB on a low-cost A/D converter design, also opposes the mandate.
The regulations, Donovan said, may result "in establishing a different, perhaps more expensive, converter box just for California residents. As a result, California viewers may not receive the full benefits of the federal (subsidy) program. In turn, this may have the unintended consequence of delaying the availability of these converter boxes to the citizens of California. Consumer acceptance is the key to the digital transition, and any delay or impediment to the roll out of digital to analog converter boxes could slow down the digital transition."
http://www.tvtechnology.com/dailynews/one.php?id=3852
Before you call them just a bunch of lobbyists, look at their engineering committee and you see there are a lot of engineers on the committee:
http://www.mstv.org/engmem.html
I live in California and what "boils my blood" about the California Energy Commission's actions is that they are unwilling to accept having converter boxes using 10 to 15 watts; no they want 8 watts.
A savings of 2 to 7 watts per box. For this energy savings, they are willing to gamble with the outcome. At risk is 1.6 million California homes who stand to suffer if things don't work out. Why risk a major screw up for just 2 to 7 watts per box?
IF the CEC was really interested in saving energy, let's start with the real energy hog: Light Bulbs. A 100 watt light bulb eats 100 watts of energy, but a 25 watt screw-in compact fluorescent light requires only 25 watts of energy and provides the same light. I'm running out of space, but I can show the engineering math that shows the fluorescent lights cost less in the long run. I consider 75 watts a heck of a better energy savings than 2 to 7 watts and EVERYONE saves. BUT it appears that the CEC wants to go after the high risk, minimal energy savings. Thanks guys...
Bob Diaz