AMD Launches Sempron on Wednesday

AMD launches its Sempron processor brand today with twelve new processors – eight for desktop PCs and four for laptops. The new processor is aimed at the low-cost PC market, with prices for the Sempron as low as US$39 (€32) in quantities of 1000.

As the chip is on sale now, you can look forward to it showing up in PCs and laptops in time for Christmas.

AMD are keen to maintain the image of their Athlon processor as a quality, high-spec product, so have not produced a low-cost version of flagship product. Instead, the Sempron will allow them to compete in the sub-US$550 (€456) PC market whilst keeping the Athlon brand intact.

John Morris, manager of desktop product marketing at AMD said: “If you look at the brand promise of the Athlon, it’s been about performance computing, so we want to make sure that (chips like the) Athlon 64 continue to stand for performance computing… Sempron reflects a completely different strategy that says, ‘There’s a growing group of people that have basic computer needs…so let’s provide a solution for them.'” However, Sempron will eventually replace the Athlon brand at some point in 2005.

AMD will be offering the desktop processor with the following model numbers: 2400+, 2500+, 2600+, 2800+ and 3100+. The 2200+ and 2300+ are to replace the Duron in emerging markets. Please note that AMD model numbers do not reflect the internal speed of their processors.

The Semprons have lower clock speeds than their Athlon cousins and have a smaller cache, but if they are powerful enough may encourage more PC manufacturers to produce media centre PCs featuring them.

AMD Sempron

The IBC Digital Lifestyles Interviews – Simon Perry – Part II

Second part of on an interview with Simon Perry on the Digital Lifestyles conference theme day at IBC The first section is also available.

  
SP: If you think back to things like a normal non-video editing suite. The ways that you can drop in videos and get it to expand the time line drop isn’t something, it’s not – you have to learn to do it that way. It is not a natural way that people will work or think.

FL: It is not stopping Dixons from selling dozens of video cameras per branch per day.

SP: Yes. Well I think it is going into people’s cupboards. I think it is sitting in the chest of drawers in the lounge and it is being brought out at Christmas and the equivalent of boring people with photo slide shows well that is happening again now. There is a resurgence of that, but, it is content that is just sitting there that isn’t being fiddled about.

 Now we know the processing power of computers is huge now. No problem whatsoever in manipulating video. It takes a long time to actually learn to use the tools, but, it also takes a long time to understand the language of video and how to get a cohesive piece of video together – to present something.

 Before you asked me for some examples – Talking Lives – BBC

 It is BBC funded and it has grown out of a project in Cardiff and it is in Hull as well and it’s really what they call digital story telling and that sort of shows the difficulties involved with it. Because everyone who goes along to create a digital live story goes on training, I think it is five or six days worth of training, where they might turn up with no idea of what they want to talk. Some people have got a very clear idea, lots of people do not have idea and they will be tutored by media professionals, for want of a better phrase, who teach them how to tell a story, pull the pertinent parts of the story out and drop the other parts out and they create a two / three minutes piece about something in their lives and it’s some of the most emotional content I have ever seen on a TV screen. It is so personal.

 Some of the pieces have been about people’s difficulties but some things have been about people’s relationships or people’s joyful events that have happened to them and it draws that something out. The results are a real contrast to the way TV media is at the moment – sanitised – you don’t have the true emotion of someone expressing their own story. That’s a fantastic example.

FL: We have a convergence industry and people will quite happily go out and spend £1500.00 on a video camera but will not then take the tiny extra step of actually learning how to produce the content with it. The only evidence that I see of these billions of pounds that are being spent on convergence media appliances – well actually the standard of clips on You’ve Been Framed is just as bad as it has always been.

SP: I disagree that it’s a small extra step. There is the significant barrier that video editing isn’t simple. It is currently very easy to go out and shoot a piece of video and, as you say, spend £1500 on a Camcorder or even significantly less than that these days. You wander round and you point it at someone and you get them to talk. The results of which can be either well framed or not and there is a certain at traction in both, but, it is the barrier of making the editing process simple that I don’t feel has been conquered.

 There were moves with some video cameras of trying to do the editing on camera and this is something that is now being re-visiting with the DVD Camcorders, DVD-recording Camcorders where you can do editing on the machine. But, you know what it is like editing video. That is not the right interface. You have this tiny little screen that’s got touch screen on it and you are trying to drop pieces of video and do that kind of stuff. Not idea, but worth exploring.

FL: So the alternative – for people to actually produce a DVD at home – I think that’s currently beyond their reach if they can’t edit AB track video, they won’t be able to alter a DVD.

SP: I think there is a huge market for it. As we have discussed, all of this stuff’s been shot. There’s hours of it sitting in people’s cupboards. Surely they are going to get to the point where just say let’s make something of this. Maybe it is the point of retirement and that is the space where producing edited home videos are going to be cut together and home videos are going to be massive?

 Well there are a lot of people now retiring and they have got Camcorders and they shoot their kids or grand-kids and are editing things together. That could be an interesting trend.

FL: What for you is the most exciting form of convergence? Is it in mobile phones? Is it in enabling people to do things? Is it in what it means for broadcasting?

SP: I really think the user-generated content is an exciting area.

FL: Do you generate much digital content yourself?

SP: Photos, yes, I have given up on video because I don’t have the time to edit it as does take a lot of time to do it properly. I have 12/13/14 thousand images, not all of them brilliant images and this is something I want to pick up when you were saying about photographers. I think that in digital photography we are going through a remarkable time at the moment. I have heard two sides of this argument. My personal feeling was that there are images being created today which are as good as the professional photographer can take because people have a freedom in taking images with digital cameras. In effect, many people early on when they get their digital cameras take as many images as they can to get the value out of their digital cameras because, they’re having to buy films and, therefore, feel they have got to make up the cost of buying an expensive camera: The difficulty is – and this is a thing of education over a period of time – is that not everyone has a strong eye and so won’t necessarily have an understanding of what is a strong image and what isn’t. So I think probably there are far more amazing images being taken today. Whether we will ever see them, whether they will sit on a crashed hard disc or backup CD/DVD’s somewhere and never get dragged off is another matter.

 The opposing argument is on the side of professional Press photographers. Where they’ve been taking a series of photos and deleting all their images that they don’t want, that they don’t think are relevant. So those moments that were previously caught in time, such as Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, frozen for a camera, will disappear because professional images are huge, 15 MB, and they understand that sorting through 14 thousand images is a total nightmare so they immediately pare down as they shoot.

FL: This means that each of us generates a mass of data throughout our lives, much of which we are not even interested in, which will probably be deleted when we die or whatever.

 Do you think that there will little archives around individual people in the future and that’s really where it lies?

SP: Yes, and I think blogs are the first step towards that.  A person’s blog or URL is their zero index. Their reference point.

FL: But who is going to curate that?

SP: The individual.

FL: When they’re gone it all gets washed away.

SP: To a lot of people, them living beyond the time that they are around is quite important. So I guess for those people they will spend quite a lot of time preening and displaying what they want to display to the world after they’ve gone.

 I think it is tremendously exciting to think that you could have access to any piece of music, video or TV show or film. A huge potential to stimulate. What is disappointing about the way it appears to be going at the moment is that you won’t be able to use that content yourself to generate further content yourself. That’s the way that most of the media is going, with the notable exceptions like the BBC, with their Creative Archive project they are opening the doors for a new form of creativity.

 I have thought of another one of those user-generated content pieces – One Minute movies.

FL: One Minute Movies – BBC.

SP: Yes, when people – and this is something that we thought was going to be exciting on TV was the idea of very short form content for mobile devices and creating a piece of content within one minute is an incredible challenge. It is very difficult to get everything across that you want to say within one minute.

 There is also the side of what is going on with the mash up video as well.

FL: This is just sampling. It is not creating new kinds of content.

SP: No. That is true. It is sampling but it is just using more complex tools to do the sampling.

 We were talking about open source and an open source platform is an interesting idea. One of the real expenses of creating video content for Broadband distribution to a number of platforms or any platform is that there is tremendous cost involved in versioning different sizes and different resolutions as well as colour depths as well as the programming side of making the content interactive. It becomes very expensive.

 So the idea of having a defined European or UK platform where small groups of content producers can get together and create content that they know will go to a platform is quite exciting.

 We’ve talked about user generated content. The upshot of this in another exciting area. Very small production companies, micro production companies, creating content. The equipment is cheaply available, so the means of production of video content are within the hands of people who have the skills to do it now. There are lot of people involved with TV whose dream has always been to make a TV show. These tools for creating TV are now within the hands of people. They don’t have to go cap in hand to production companies and say “Please let me make this”, they can just go off and do it. That becomes more and more attainable. This raises one of the big unanswered questions, that we touched on at IBC last year – how will people find the content when there will be so much of it around? When you have got websites full of 1,000 videos;  people’s blogs with say ten movies on them; two of which may be interesting looking over say 1,000 blogs. How do people get navigated or navigate themselves to the point of finding that content and seeing it as – getting to see the tool. When you have got thousands of movies and hundreds of thousands of music pieces – finding access to those is very difficult.

 You find interesting stuff and you become the trusted guide to content and certainly that is undeniably a great way of finding content. The disadvantage with that is you may chose the people who are guiding you to content because you like them and they think in the same way as you, but, that is just one person’s view of the world. So you would have to be quite conscious about thinking well I am going to start picking people that have got a completely opposite view to me but I still – there is a core something that I like there but the rest is completely bizarre. Otherwise you start getting bizarrely – because the frustration of having so much content available to you – your consumption becomes more and more narrow.

FL: This is something that was a fear for a while really. If people could customise a newspaper to things that they were interested in it would mean that their interest areas would then become so narrow they would never find out about things which would otherwise appeal to them.

SP: There are bits of software around that create highlights of content for you.

FL: You need that random seed though.

SP: Perhaps in the future we’ll take our net and scrape the bottom of the media ocean and just see what comes up. You say – give me random – and you sit down there for an hour or however long and you just go through it marking how much you like it with thumbs up and thumbs down on your controller.

FL: Like TiVo I suppose.

SP: With the recommendation from other people who have bought other content you are looking at you get back to that thing of possibly restricting the type of content you are going to see. But, if you just said – using Google as an example – give me results from the last 1000 searches that Google has had literally the last 1000 around the world. Just display all those video pieces me end to end and I will decide to either have the software sitting between which does a quick summary of the video content that has been searched and retrieved. That is of absolutely no interest to me whatsoever. You just basically have gradations of whether is it interesting or not. You can obviously then use that to then gather other information but you still get back to that point of having your view constricted.

FL: That brings me on to horrible topic metadata. Where is metadata in all of this?

SP: Metadata is everywhere.

FL: It should be everywhere but it is not. That is the last thing on people’s minds. They make their content.

SP:  It is a big problem. It has got to be in the production process but that is not what a production budget is to pay for and that is the problem. Hopefully it will get resolved after a number of years – as people understand just how important it is – they will find the budgets to put it into the production budget. At the moment I don’t think it is going to be archived any other way.

 Before we reach that point there is anciliarary way of doing it. Post-broadcast metadata. Individuals creating their own metadata around a broadcast TV programme. I think it’s another fascinating area. If we look at what has happened with radio three website recently where they are putting markers in for each radio show that is created. There is now a place on the web that has a constant URL for it. I don’t know how far they are going to open it up but potentially any content that anyone thinks is relevant could be tied to that URL, either through them creating their own blog entries and then tracking back using a trackback mechanism back to the BBC site or; whether it is all just held within the BBC site and in such a way that anyone can gain access to it.

 When people are able to, through out a broadcast, drop metadata in whether they are able to put markers in a time line to say – OK the point that this was mentioned here, here is some additional information. Stuff that in the early days of interactive Broadband video people were doing – putting in text or photos or additional video clips that can then drilled down in to becomes very interesting.

 That is anther thing that is great about convergence.

 


Simon is chairing ‘The missing piece – Getting paid for content’ session between 11:30 and 13:00 at the IBC conference on Sunday, 12th September in Amsterdam. Register for IBC here

CinemaNow Secures More Financing From Cisco, Lions Gate and Menlo

CinemaNow, the video on demand company has just secured a further US$11 million in financing for its projects. The investment is expected to fund the company’s expansion into the European and Asian markets, as well as acquiring new content and developing CinemaNow’s technology. CinemaNow have developed the PatchBay content on demand distribution system, and their website is based on it.

This new round of funding was led by Menlo Ventures, with additional investment from Cisco Systems (who provide hardware to CinemaNow) and Lions Gate (who provide content).

CinemaNow was established in 1999, and now has a library of 5,000 titles for downloading and streaming over the internet. Content is available on a pay-per-view, subscription and download to own basis. CinemaNow features content from 20th Century Fox, Disney, MGM and Warner Bros, amongst others.

They are currently second place in the market behind MovieLink, and has recently announced that it has been breaking even.

CinemaNow

Tissot’s New Touch Screen MSN SPOT Watch

Tissot have launched a new watch that uses Microsoft’s SPOT (Smart Personal Objects Technology) platform – allowing the US$725 (€595) wristwatch to receive email, news and schedule information through the MSN Direct service.

There are now seven SPOT watches in the market, with two manufactured by Suunto and four by Fossil.

MSN Direct sends information to SPOT devices through part of the FM spectrum. The service is not available in Europe yet, though Chris Schneider, programme manager for SPOT said: “We are looking at expanding into Europe and other geographies where it makes business sense. However, we are focused on the North American market for this holiday season.”

Indeed, since the vast majority of all watches are sold from October to December, this autumn will be a good indicator of whether the public are ready for SPOT. Thousands of watches have already been sold, so Christmas may be a bumper time.

Microsoft are expanding the information and services on MSN Direct to draw more subscribers, and will be featuring information on films and sports, and manufacturers like Citizen are planning to add more watches to the range.

Tissot

SPOT

Mobile iTunes

Motorola and Apple have got together to produce an iTunes compatible phone. Phone users will be able to connect their phone to their computer using a USB cable or Bluetooth connection (hope you’re not in a rush then) and transfer songs to their mobile. The new iTunes application will be the standard music player on Motorola music phones.

This makes a lot of sense because of the popularity and installed base of iTunes, plus the proven security model of the FairPlay DRM implementation.

The mobile iTunes application won’t feature the Music Store for a while, so users will not be able to buy or preview music from Apple’s online shop. Given network bandwidth limitations, this is probably a good thing.

The first handsets with iTunes will be available next year. Steve Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, said: “The mobile phone market – with 1.5 billion subscribers expected worldwide by the end of 2004 – is a phenomenal opportunity to get iTunes in the hands of even more music lovers around the world.”

Will iPod sales be lost if consumers decide that they don’t need an Apple player but decide to use their Motorola phone? Or will exposure to the iTunes application and store encourage more people to go out and buy an iPod?

iTunes

Survey: US Digital Music Sales Will Reach US$1.7 billion in 2009

A new survey from Jupiter Research indicates that the digital music market will grow rapidly from about US$270 million (€221 million) in 2004 to US$1.7 billion (€1.4 billion) in 2009. At that point, digital downloads will account for 12% of consumer music spending.

These new sales are expected to end the four years of declining sales, but won’t bring the industry back to its 1999 level of activities. Nor are downloads expected to start cannibalising CD sales any time soon.

Subscription services are expected to become more popular than downloads in the long run – on this, JupiterResearch VP and Senior Analyst David Card says: “The so-called celestial jukebox is in sight. But for now, it will appeal to music aficionados. The U.S. music industry must manage digital music as one of a series of incremental revenue streams, one that is in the same scale as licensing.”

US sales of digital music players are expected to grow by more than 50% per year for the next few years. Interestingly, the survey showed that 77% of consumers who would buy a player did not feel they needed more than 1000 songs on a player at any one time, irrespective of the size of their music collection.

Jupiter Research

Skype Launches VoIP to Phones

SkypeOut has launched, allowing subscribers to make cheap calls to phones around the world. Customers sign up for an account and pre-pay for voice minutes. Accounts can be topped up with between US$12 (€9.85) and US$62 (€51).

The cost of calls depends on where the subscriber is and where the call ends, but are generally considerably cheaper. Calls between Skype clients are still free, of course.

The Skype client runs on the subscriber’s computer (and a Linux version is avaialble) and for best results needs a broadband internet connection.

Skype’s 17 million downloads make it quite a force in the communications world, yet it doesn’t need massive amounts of infrastructure to be able to offer a service to its customers as the customer provides uses their own hardware and internet connection.

As Michael Powell, chairman, Federal Communications Commission, said to Fortune Magazine this year: “I knew it was over when I downloaded Skype,” “When the inventors of KaZaA are distributing for free a little program that you can use to talk to anybody else, and the quality is fantastic, and it’s free – it’s over. The world will change now inevitably.”

Skype

TiVoToGo Under Attack

TiVo’s new TiVoToGo feature – a facility which allows users to transfer content from their TiVo PVR to another device such as a laptop, is under threat from films studios and the NFL. They filed papers with the Federal Communications Commission to have the new feature blocked.

Many see this as another attack on consumer rights – severely limiting what people can do with content. However, the Motion Picture Association of America and NFL cite concerns over TiVo’s anti-copying safeguards, stating that they don’t think they’re adequate to prevent people sharing content outside their households – on the internet for example.

TiVo developed the feature to add more flexibility to subscribers’ viewing, so that they can watch content that they have recorded whilst on holiday for example, and that it plans to introduce proper copy protection measures.

So far, TiVo has only said this on the matter: “We are hopeful (the FCC) rules in favour of technology innovation that respects the rights of both consumers and artists.”

Fritz Attaway, executive vice president and legal counsel for the MPAA described his fears: “We don’t have a problem if you want to move the content to your summer home, or your boat, but the TiVo application does not require any kind of relationship with the sender. It could be to a nightclub in Singapore.”

There are many that are questioning whether content providers like the MPAA will stop there? If the system does become secure and content can only be transferred to authorised devices, will this be freely allowed, or will the public be further restricted to buying a license for every playback device they own? We feel a threat of ‘authorised only’ platforms raises the major problem of stifling the market in competing playback platforms, which in turn is bad for the consumer.

TiVo

Microsoft to Sell Slate

Microsoft is looking to sell off Slate, their online news/culture/politics magazine after eight years of publication. Slate has about five million readers every month, but has never really made a profit until reporting a modest income in Q1 2004.

Microsoft is already in talks with about five or six potential buyers, and ownership could change hands within the next few weeks.

Slate was launched in 1996 and has evolved alongside the internet, and today it carries advertising and is branded with Microsoft’s MSN identity. A condition of sale is that Slate remains affiliated with MSN – which itself posted its first profit in the first quarter of this year.

Slate

Jupiter Plug.IN

Now in its tenth year, Jupiter Plug.IN Conference & Expo is the leading event to examine online music. It represents the music industry – labels, artists, marketing executives and promotions departments, all coming together to discuss the business of music. Attend our panels, which will assess and define the challenges transforming today’s music business and offer insight into current industry trends. Crowne Plaza Times Square, New York, New York http://www.jupiterevents.com/plugin/summer04/index.html