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HDMI Licensing Offers Online Training for Consumer Electronics Installers

HDMI Licensing Offers Online Training for Consumer Electronics Installers


Course Eligible for CEDIA Continuing Education Units


SUNNYVALE, Calif., Sept. 18, 2006 — HDMI Licensing, LLC, the agent responsible for licensing the High-Definition Multimedia Interface™ (HDMI™) specification, today announced it will offer a free 40-minute online training program for consumer electronics installers, providing a technical overview of HDMI, installation techniques and common installation issues.

In addition, the Custom Electronic Design & Installation Association (CEDIA) has notified Silicon Image that qualified installers receiving a passing grade of at least 70 percent through the HDMI online training program may apply for 2.0 Continuing Education Units (CEUs) through the CEDIA Professional Certification Program. CEDIA is an international trade association of companies that specialize in designing and installing electronic systems for the home. CEDIA has notified Silicon Image that it will list the HDMI Training for CE Installers program on CEDIA’s website as an authorized course for CEUs.

The HDMI Training for CE Installers program will be available on the HDMI website, www.hdmi.org, beginning September 14, 2006.

HDMI is the de facto standard digital interface for high-definition consumer electronics devices. By delivering crystal-clear, all-digital audio and video via a single cable, HDMI dramatically simplifies cabling and helps provide consumers with the highest-quality home theater experience.

“As HDMI products proliferate, installers need a convenient way to learn more about the technology and get comfortable working with it,” said Rich Green, owner of Rich Green, Ink, a custom electronics design and installation firm, and CEDIA’s Certification Council Chair.

"The installer community is key to introducing new home theater technologies and standards" said Les Chard, president of HDMI Licensing. "This new training module is a powerful educational resource for installers who are looking to use the latest technologies in their home theater installations."

The program can be accessed by visiting www.hdmi.org and clicking on HDMI Training. Upon successful completion of the exam, students will be sent via e-mail a “Certificate of Completion.”

About HDMI
HDMI is the first and only consumer electronics industry-supported, uncompressed, all-digital audio/video interface. By delivering crystal-clear, all-digital audio and video via a single cable, HDMI dramatically simplifies cabling and helps provide consumers with the highest-quality home theater experience. HDMI provides an interface between any audio/video source, such as a set-top box, DVD player, or A/V receiver and an audio and/or video monitor, such as a digital television (DTV), over a single cable.

About HDMI Licensing, LLC
HDMI Licensing, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Silicon Image, Inc., is the agent responsible for licensing the HDMI specification, promoting the HDMI standard and providing education on the benefits of HDMI to retailers and consumers. The HDMI specification was developed by Hitachi, Matsushita (Panasonic), Philips, Silicon Image, Sony, Thomson and Toshiba as the digital interface standard for the consumer electronics market. The HDMI specification combines uncompressed high-definition video and multi-channel audio in a single digital interface to provide crystal-clear digital quality over a single cable. For more information about HDMI, please visit www.hdmi.org





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Intel Viiv remains a 'work in progress'

Intel Viiv remains a 'work in progress'
By Tom Sanders 26 September 2006 10:19AM Email to a friend Print this story



Much hyped entertainment PC platform in need of a reality check.

Intel's Viiv entertainment platform is lacking in the features and content necessary to gain traction with consumers, according to a poll of industry analysts conducted by vnunet.com.

Richard Shim, a senior research analyst at IDC, described the system as an incomplete effort. "It is too early to call it a failure, but it is still a work in progress," he told vnunet.com.

"Initially there was a lot of hype about the common experience. The reality is that there is still potential here, but it will take a while until we see something. Intel needs to be a little more realistic about the time line for the success of Viiv."



Intel launched Viiv last January at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, essentially bundling a dual-core processor with free access to a set of premium online video services.

Intel intends for consumers to put the devices in their living rooms and connect them to high definition televisions.

Merlin Kister, director of consumer client marketing at Intel, said that the company is "pretty pleased" with Viiv sales.

Citing a mandatory quiet period prior to the chip firm's upcoming quarterly revenue release, he was unable to give any recent sales figures for the systems.

Kister argued that it will take time to build awareness of the Viiv brand with consumers.

"It's a challenge to make it clear to your audience what you stand for. Hope fully, people understand that Viiv is a PC that has been optimised for digital entertainment," Kister told vnunuet.com.

Steve Kleynhans, research vice president at Gartner, believes that consumers still do not understand the benefits of Viiv.

"It is not clear that most users would see [the current video services] as a huge benefit. They are nice to have, but not enough to drive sales," Kleynhans told vnunet.com.

He argued that Viiv PCs currently fail properly to differentiate themselves from a regular PC running Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center Edition.

This premium version of Microsoft's operating system allows users to record video on a system's hard drive, but lacks access to the online video services that Viiv offers.

Kleynhans added that Intel has done a poor job at marketing Viiv, causing a lack of consumer awareness.

Rob Enderle, principal analyst with the Enderle Group, blamed Viiv's failure on Intel's former marketing chief Eric Kim, a one-time executive at Samsung who was hired by Intel last year.

In a corporate restructuring last July, Kim was appointed general manager of the Digital Home Group which includes Viiv.

"He screwed up Viiv so badly that he got a chance to fix it," said Enderle of Kim's new role in the platform.

IDC's Shim added that Kim's experience with consumer electronics might help him in keeping Viiv afloat, but warned that there is no guarantee of success.

"Just because you have experience in consumer electronics does not mean that you will be an expert in consumer behaviour in the downloading of new media," he said.

Shim recommended Intel to focus more on delivering compelling content through the platform. The rise of the YouTube online video site, for instance, has proved that there is a demand for online video.

"YouTube demonstrates that consumers are aware of streaming video," he said. "If you see what Apple's iTunes did for online music, you have to wonder if there can be something similar for digital video. It does not seem to be that way with Viiv."


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Production Availability of JM2020 Makes Sub-Ranging Pulse Width Modulation Techn

Production Availability of JM2020 Makes Sub-Ranging Pulse Width Modulation Technology a Reality for Consumer Electronics





AUSTIN, TX, September 26, 2006 – JamTech today announced the production availability of its game changing product, the JM2020 True Fidelity® sub-ranging pulse width modulation (PWM) digital audio amplifier. The JM2020 delivers premium 16 bit audio quality with a 98 dB range of linearity, enabling consumer audio equipment to achieve true fidelity sound even at low signal levels. JamTech is the world’s first to market with this unique architecture that provides the efficiency of Class D, fidelity of analog, and robustness of digital.



Focused on designing audio system interface chips for consumer electronics, JamTech has introduced the JM2020 at a time of increased demand and pressure by consumers for higher fidelity audio in electronics. Targeted to flat panel TVs, compact audio, PMP docking stations and powered speakers, the JM2020 is an audio digital amplifier that offers not only power efficiency and digital system compatibility but also a sonic experience that is warmer, clearer and crisper.



According to Susie Inouye, research director, Databeans, “Consumers no longer accept the trade-off of poor audio fidelity for the convenience of the digital lifestyle and consumer electronics manufacturers are trying to find cost effective solutions. With its impressive performance measurements, JamTech’s product line should accelerate the adoption of digital amplifiers in the quest to replace analog amplifiers.”



With 23 patents awarded and 17 pending, JamTech, a fabless mixed signal semiconductor company, has pioneered new ground with the JM2020 and aims to dominate the new frontier of system interface chips that bridge the digital world with the real world. The JM2020, features a monolithic design integrating both the modulator and power stage into a single chip, and delivers best in class audio fidelity at a price comparable to traditional Class D amplifiers and newer delta-sigma PWM digital amplifiers.



The JM2020’s sub-ranging PWM architecture extends usable operating range beyond 98 dB, reduces zero crossing distortion by more than two orders of magnitude, and delivers instantaneous transient performance. The direct digital, open loop scheme avoids the non-linearity caused by pulse width timing resolution limitations of silicon technology and does not use complex delta-sigma modulation, linearizing feedback loops, DSP error-correction or predictive error-compensating circuitry. The result is a dynamically responsive, cost effective digital amplifier capable of faithfully reproducing even the smallest audio signals



Results from initial testing done by manufacturers match the recent findings made by JamTech and Bascom King, an independent audio industry consultant. In August, JamTech announced the results of performance measurement testing of its technology. Findings verified that JamTech’s technology exceeds measurements typically achieved by traditional analog pulse width modulation (PWM) Class D amplifiers and delta-sigma PWM digital amplifiers for both absolute dynamic range and spectral noise floor, two important measures of fidelity in digital audio systems.



According to Rick Beale, JamTech vice president of marketing and business development, “The JM2020 sets a new performance bar for digital audio amplifiers. The benefits of sub-ranging technology have now been reduced to practice in production silicon – we’ve made it a reality.”



Over 20 manufacturers in Asia have resoundingly confirmed the higher audio fidelity of the JM2020. According to Beale, “Primary targets for our products are the common household names in consumer electronics and most are reviewing our chip now.”



The JM2020 is currently available in production in a 48 pin QFN package and cost $3.10 each in 1000 unit quantities. JamTech’s next generation sub-ranging PWM digital amplifier will be available for sampling in the fourth quarter and features even better fidelity with more than 20-watts of output power. For more information on the JamTech product line



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Rowland Cottage Is Sold To Sisters

Rowland Cottage Is Sold To Sisters

LITCHFIELD-The infamous Bantam Lake cottage owned by former governor John Rowland and his wife, Patty, was sold last week for nearly $600,000-almost half a million dollars more than the couple paid for a seasonal dwelling on White Memorial Foundation land where free improvements by contractors began a scandal that led to the governor resigning and going to jail.



The cottage, at 37 Van Winkle Road, was sold to sisters Susan Pollack and Elizabeth Boynton, daughters of William Mitchell Van Winkle, Jr., a founder of the White Memorial Foundation and Conservation Center. White Memorial's 4,000 acres of nature preserves spread like a blanket of green over parts of Litchfield and Morris.
Local and state conveyance taxes were paid on a purchase price of $590,000 for the cottage.
Mr. Rowland bought the four-room cottage in 1997 for $110,000 from the White Memorial Foundation, which retains ownership of the land and gives the owners of structures on its holdings long-term leases. The foundation was given the first right of refusal on the cottage, and it also must approve the purchase.
"They rent the property from us, plus pay all the taxes on the building and the land, but the town sends the tax bill to us so we are ultimately responsible for those," explained Keith Cudworth, executive director at White Memorial Foundation.
Ms. Pollack and Ms. Boynton were renting the cottage during the summer and eventually showed interest in purchasing it. They spent their childhood in the cottage two doors down for the one owned by the Rowlands, who now live in West Hartford. Their grandparents owned the neighboring cottage.
"We spent many happy times down there," Ms. Pollack said Tuesday afternoon. "Our grandchildren will be the fifth generation to spend summers there. ... We're really excited about it; it feels like going home."
Their father, William Van Winkle, Jr., was a founder of the White Memorial Foundation, and the road accessing the cottage was named after him. The sale of the cottage involved a trustee and was handled by Torrington attorney Charles Ebersol, Jr.
The sale includes the cottage and all kitchen appliances, window treatments, furniture, patio furniture, outdoor grill, dock, boats, canoe, kayak and yard equipment on the property. It does not include a hot tub, one of the highly controversial gifts Mr. Rowland received from an aide.
He also benefited from renovations and repairs for which the Rowlands were not charged, or only paid a token amount. In the larger investigation into corruption within Mr. Rowland's administration, there were many claims that contractors' actions concerning the governor and his staff members were meant to help them secure lucrative state contracts.
It is unclear how much Mr. Rowland and his wife will profit from the cottage sale. The former governor's ex-wife, Deborah Rowland, filed a lien last year claiming she was owed money from the divorce settlement. The lien was lifted Aug. 17 to allow for the cottage's sale.


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Boise not a boxing-venue contender after all

Boise not a boxing-venue contender after all



BOISE, Idaho The promoter of a big-name title fight last month in Boise says Idaho's capital city is a nice place.

Just not for Wholesale Boxing.

If Ritch Danner, vice president and director of Sports and Entertainment Media, had to do the Roy Jones Junior-Prince Badi Ajamu fight on July 29th all over again, he'd stage it in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

The Arab state had offered 500-thousand dollars.

In Boise, only about 2,000 people paid 50-dollars to 350-dollars for tickets.

Danner says he thought he could beat the Arab offer with gate receipts.

He says, "Obviously, we couldn't."

Lackluster interest could deal the knockout blow to the sport in Boise.

Danner says he won't be back _ unless he's guaranteed money.

He says "We rolled the dice with Boise. It was a bit of a gamble, and we knew that going in."



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Dish TV set to create niche channels to beat the competition

Dish TV set to create niche channels to beat the competition

Indiantelevision.com Team


(7 August 2006 4:25 pm)


NEW DELHI: With a second player in the DTH arena round the corner in the form of Tata Sky, Dish TV is finalizing creation of new channels for its subscribers.

According to Dish TV CEO Sunil Khanna, work has started on new niche channels to be introduced on the DTH platform over the next 12-24 months.

Pointing out that the target is to have a between 190-200 channels on Dish TV, Khanna said, "Some of the new channels would be created within the Zee group, while few may be brought in as part of third party distribution."


The reason behind creating niche channels instead of importing products from outside India is that not all niche channels available are suited for Indian viewers.

For example, Khanna said, if Dish wants to introduce a premium gardening channel, there was no use getting one from outside as the weather conditions and local environment is different in India.


“To give an instance, if we have a gardening channel, then it’s best to create it in India and in-house. This way we would also be able to study the feasibility of such niche channels, which may have limited, but loyal viewership that would be ready to pay even a premium,” Khanna said.

Dish TV, country’s first pay TV platform, is managed by the Subhash Chandra-controlled ASC Enterprises that is the DTH licence holder. Another Chandra company, Zee Network, has a programme supply agreement with ASC.

Dish TV, which is pumping up the noise around the usefulness of subscribing to a DTH service, is also increasing its investment in the project.

“We have spent around Rs 3.5 billion in the DTH project till now, out of which a major part has been spent on customer acquisition,” Khanna said.

He added that investment would be upped “as needed from time to time to expand operations and offerings.”



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Furniture Brands' Q2 profit soars 77%

Furniture Brands' Q2 profit soars 77%


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Furniture Brands International Inc.'s second-quarter profit spiked 77 percent as sales grew by just 1.3 percent, the company reported recently.

Furniture Brands' profit for the second quarter ended June 30 jumped to $17 million on revenue of $601.3 million from profit of $9.6 million on revenue of $593.8 million in the same period last year.


Profit in the second quarter of 2005 was negatively impacted by restructuring, asset impairment and severance charges totaling $7.9 million, or $12.2 million before income tax benefits, company officials said in a release.

W. G. "Mickey" Holliman, chairman and CEO, said he expects third-quarter sales to "be up in the low single digits versus the third quarter of last year and net earnings per diluted common share to be in the 18 cents to 22 cents range."

St. Louis-based Furniture Brands International Inc. (NYSE: FBN) manufactures furniture under the Thomasville, Henredon, Drexel Heritage, Maitland-Smith, Broyhill and Lane


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Wide range of Thai products

Wide range of Thai products

FROM handicrafts to herbal creams, beautiful Thai products can be bought locally at Thai Handicrafts and Images in Ferntree Gully.

Amulets, bags, balms, books, candles, cards, carved soaps, dolls, embroidery, incense, jewellery and lacquer items are only some of the fascinating range of Thai products imported directly from manufacturers in Thailand by owner John Silcot who has been travelling to Thailand for more than 25 years.

“We are unique because we are the only independent Thai handicrafts shop in Australia,” said John.

“Selling to both the retail and wholesale trade, our prices are kept low as there is no ‘middle man’ to deal with.”

Since opening the shop in July 2005 to promote Thai handicrafts in Australia, John has travelled to Thailand three times to replenish and increase stock lines in order to show the Australian public the beauty and quality of these products.

Original oil paintings, puppets, silk bags and ties, Thai silverware, traditional handcrafted pottery and ceramics and woodware are very popular as well as Buddha tables and Buddhist images.

“We display the largest array of genuine Thai Buddhist images and amulets in this country,” said John who is also a licensed second hand dealer and pawnbroker and has recently introduced two new services.

“We are able to lend money and provide pawnbroker facilities. We also buy and sell gold, jewellery, antiques and collectables.”

Lay by is available at Thai Handicrafts and Images, so call in during opening hours, 10am - 5.30pm Monday to Saturday at 61 Station Street, Ferntree Gully, and see the beauty of these products for yourself.

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Sullivan neighbors help flood victims

Sullivan neighbors help flood victims


He didn't even have time to park the truck properly.

Folks like Beth Mastro of Liberty and Marilyn Costa of Grahamsville were waiting for him with bags of food and clothes.

"It's a wonderful thing, God bless you," said Costa as she left.

Eventually, the volunteers did get a chance to get set up. Mike Sakell of Thunder 102 draped the radio station's banner across the back of the truck, and Julian Dawson, administrative assistant for the United Way, stacked the offerings in the truck. And the bags kept coming.

In the store's lobby, other United Way staff gave shoppers lists of needed items and solicited cash donations. United Way board member Sari Rosenheck said, "I live in Rock Hill, and I heard someone say, 'Thank God it wasn't us,' and I thought, 'But it was us.' Sullivan County is a community."

The relief effort was organized in less than 24 hours by its sponsors, Schmidt's Wholesale, United Way, Thunder 102 and Wal-Mart. Anyone who wasn't able to get over to Wal-Mart can bring donations of gently used clothing (new socks and underwear) and nonperishable food to the United Way building at 33 Lakewood Ave. in Monticello.




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How long should your appliances last?

How long should your appliances last?

My "beer fridge" dates back to 1972, the year my mom moved my little sister and me from a duplex to a newer brick ranch just around the block. We bought new furniture and appliances that year. It was the first time mom had bought anything new for herself since my dad died in 1959.

The big deal was her refrigerator, an avocado Amana side-by-side with automatic defrost and a dispenser that filled glasses with cold water and ice. I remember teasing mom that finally she could get rid of our old fridge, a grayish-white, rounded-door model straight from "Leave It to Beaver."

Today, Mom's old Amana sits in my garage. My "beer fridge" also chills other summer beverages, sports drinks, sodas and juices, as well as preserving cartons of eggs and extra vegetables. "You really are ahead of the game," says Jill Notini, a communications specialist with the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers, a trade association in Washington, D.C.

According to a recent survey by the National Association of Home Builders designed to see how long home appliances and mechanical systems last, our Amana should have died in the late 1980s. Another survey, by Notini's group, says that 21 percent of American homeowners are like me - they keep a second refrigerator, usually in the basement or garage.

At 34 years and counting, the Amana's been one cool bargain.

But it doesn't come close to the bargain Chuck Sozio of Revere, Mass., got with his Frigidaire. Back in 2001, the appliance manufacturer ran a contest to find the oldest operating Frigidaire refrigerator. The winner was Sozio's 1924 model. But thousands of units dating back to the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s were discovered, according to the company.

With electric motors whirring away and gas burners spitting out blue-tipped flames, appliances do have relatively long life-spans, the home builders' association survey shows. While Americans like me bristle because they don't make things like they used to, the survey says otherwise.

"Most of the appliances that last for long periods of time usually are well-maintained," says Al Garrett, who trains home inspectors for The Home Team Inspection Service of Cincinnati. "People seem to take care of them, keep them clean and follow some sort of maintenance schedule." Garrett's company uses the survey to help customers evaluate appliances and mechanical systems during home purchases.

Ranges and ovens, gas or electric, top the longevity list (about 19 years), with refrigerators (17 years) and dishwasher (14 years) next.

Garrett, who entered the home-inspection field the same year my mom bought her Amana, says some of the most durable appliances are old Williamson boilers and furnaces. "Those old Williamsons date back to the 1940s or '50s," Garrett says. "They're only about 60 percent efficient, which is really bad by today's standards, but they just never seem to die." (Established in 1890, the Williamson company has since merged to become Williamson-Thermoflow of Milwaukee.)

Jerry Blecha, who operates Advanced Home Inspections in Malverne, says knowing how long household appliances and mechanical systems last mostly benefits prospective buyer of resale homes. "The information lets people know that they might have to replace something minutes after closing a deal," he says.

For about $400 per home inspection, that's good information to have, especially when it comes to mechanical systems. A common sight in some old Long Island homes are electrical fuse boxes, the predecessors of service panels, Blecha says. He also frequently inspects house with old gas stoves made by O'Keefe or Merritt that date to the early 1950s.

Buyers might want to consider upgrading heating and electrical systems for two reasons - energy efficiency and safety - Blecha says. Newer heating systems burn at 93 percent efficiency or better, and old fuse boxes are a safety issue. Fuse-style panels were not designed to carry the electrical load of today's modern homes and can be fire hazards.

Information on appliance longevity also helps consumers make decisions on big-ticket items, Notini says. If buyers know refrigerators will last 20 years, they just might go for the more expensive models with more bells and whistles, she says. More style, more status.

As for the older models, like my Amana, people keep them around for lots of reasons. Hey, I even have an old stereo console in the basement with a phonograph and an 8-track tape player.

Gregg Richard, president of appliance retailer P.C. Richard & Sons, understands the appeal of old working appliances. His company started saving a few older pieces in good working order a few years ago and display them in the lobby of its corporate headquarters in Farmingdale. The collection features a few ringer washers and an old television and phonograph console. "People see old appliances and are amazed," Richard says. "I think they just really enjoy seeing these old things; it shows them how things used to be. It's nostalgia."

Over time, people change their appliances for one main reason, says the survey by the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers. "People tell us their old one died and they needed a new one," Notini says.

That same survey also makes another surprising statement: Almost 70 percent of consumers want their new appliance to be good, old-fashioned white.


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