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Crestron ADMS Intermedia Delivery System Wins EH TOPS Award for Best Media Server at CES PDF Print E-mail

Electronic House Magazine Recognizes the Crestron ADMS as One-of-a-Kind at CES

The Crestron ADMS was presented the EH TOPS Award for best Media Server during the recent International Consumer Electronics show (CES) in Las Vegas. Dozens of vendors responded with submissions to the TOPS Awards (formerly EH Product of the Year Awards), and EH editors were joined by a distinguished team of industry professionals to single out the best technology, products and services for the connected home.


ADMS

More than a media server, the Crestron ADMS is the next generation of content delivery and home entertainment. ADMS takes you into a whole new intermedia universe, where it no longer matters where content is located. Whether it's on the Web, in the ADMS hard drive, one of the companion Blu-ray changer or NAS drives, a home or network computer - ADMS brings you not only the content you know about, but related material you didn't even know existed, all at lightning speed. With a single user interface and exclusive WorldSearch® technology, one search is all it takes.

WorldSearch enables you to explore the ADMS environment by title or keyword, browse cover art and scroll through a graphical collection of titles and sources from which to playback, download, rent or purchase - all on your HD display. To make it even easier, Worldsearch organizes and displays results based on relevance and quality. All the best content providers are natively hosted in the ADMS, so you don't need to navigate Internet sites or re-size video windows. Just make your selection - such as a YouTube® video - and it automatically fills your widescreen display without any cropping, in clean and crisp 1080p HD.

The ADMS also has a built-in Web browser that lets you surf the Web, check email or watch live streaming video in HD without leaving the ADMS environment. "For all its unique features, the ADMS has already been dubbed 'the ultimate content machine,'" observed Vin Bruno, Crestron Director of Marketing.

Link Your House congratulates Creston on the this Award, and is proud to be a Crestron Dealer representing their fine products.

 
Four Overlooked CE Trends at Consumer Electronics Show PDF Print E-mail

Websites and cable TV channels are packed with news from the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. But with thousands of exhibitors spread out through several convention halls and hotels, there are always lots of stories that go overlooked. Here are four we found especially exciting:

Energy-saving innovations: The electronics industry has come up with some entirely new products that help save energy without sacrificing convenience. One of our favorite examples is the Klipsch LightSpeaker (www.klipsch.com). The LightSpeaker combines a 2.5-inch speaker with a powerful LED lamp. It fits in a standard recessing lighting fixture, and it installs just like an ordinary light bulb. A wireless transmitter sends sound from an MP3 player, a TV, etc., to the speakers, and a remote dims the light and controls the sound. Klipsch says the LightSpeaker’s efficient LED consumes only 10 watts but puts out the same light as a 65-watt incandescent bulb. A package with two LightSpeakers, a transmitter, and a remote costs $599.

Another great green product is the Regen ReNew Audio Dock (www.regenliving.com). The dock has a solar panel/battery pack that you can hang in a window to change. Place the charged panel in the dock, insert an iPhone or iPod, and you can listen to music for up to 60 hours on a single charge. A backup power supply assures the ReNew will never fall silent. The solar panel/battery pack costs $199 and the Audio Dock costs $249.

Skype on your TV: Lots of people now sit in front of their computers when they want to make video phone calls through Skype. Now LG (www.lge.com) and Panasonic (www.panasonic.com) make it possible to see and hear distant family and friends from the comfort of your couch. Both companies will soon offer Internet-enabled TVs with Skype built in. Using Skype through these TVs should be super-simple. As with many new laptops, the TVs feature a built-in camera and microphone. And you’ll enjoy a much bigger picture than you’re probably getting on your computer monitor or laptop.

Ciao, CDs: More and more consumers are using less and less “physical media” (i.e., CDs and DVDs). Instead, they’re streaming their audio and video entertainment from the Internet, through home networks, or from iPods and smartphones. Many new products at CES were designed specifically to suit these trends—they don’t even have CD slots. One that caught our eyes was the Pure Sensia (www.pure.com), a desktop audio/video system that looks almost like a big Easter egg. Each end of the Sensia has a speaker, and touchscreen fills the middle. The $349 Sensia plays any of thousands of Internet radio stations, and also streams content from computers and hard drives that are connected to your home network. The only concession to old-fashioned media is the built-in FM tuner.

Alpine (www.alpine.com) and Sony (www.sony.com) took the bold step of launching new auto sound head units that have no CD capability. You get your music from a docked iPhone or iPod, or from the units’ AM/FM tuners.

Pencil-thin TV: TVs are rightly getting lots of attention at this year’s CES, but our favorite new models—the Samsung 9000 series—got a little lost in all the hubbub about 3-D and Internet connectivity. According to Samsung (www.samsung.com), the 9000 series TVs measure only 0.3 inches thick, which is about the same thickness as a pencil. An ingenious stand (which doubles as a wall mount) provides all the connections. Not only is this slim, silvery set incredibly sexy, it also includes a touchscreen remote control/video screen that lets you keep tabs on the ball game while you’re watching the latest DVD. The sets are 3-D capable, so when the new 3-D Blu-ray Disc players come out later this year, you’ll be ready.

 
Google may call the tune with its new music search feature PDF Print E-mail

 

Google Inc. started out 13 years ago as a simple search engine, but it has grown into a behemoth that has shaken up dozens of industries, including computers and cellphones.

On Wednesday, it jumped into the music industry.

The Mountain View, Calif., Internet giant unveiled a music search feature that lets users play millions of songs for free with an option to buy or rent them from several online music stores.

Although not a direct threat to Apple Inc.'s hugely popular iTunes store, the new feature is expected to bolster the music services that compete with iTunes.

The move was applauded by the music industry, which has been struggling against piracy that has siphoned off billions of dollars of potential revenue from musicians and recording studios.

The industry is hoping the search feature will direct users to legitimate digital music outlets and in turn help them compete with free but often unauthorized sources of music.

"We're trying to get consumers to interact with some of these more legitimate services," said Thomas Hesse, president of global digital business for Sony Music Entertainment.

"Having Google step up and support this is a positive development."

Google formally rolled out the much anticipated search tool Wednesday at the Capitol Records building in Hollywood with scheduled performances by rock groups OneRepublic and Linkin Park.

But Google, which last month accounted for about 70% of Web searches in the U.S., said it wasn't interested in competing with digital music retailers such as iTunes and Amazon.com Inc.

"We're not in the music business per se," said R.J. Pittman, Google's director of product management. "We don't license the music nor sell the music directly on Google. We are merely a music search feature."

But in steering millions of Internet users to its partner sites, Google is indirectly boosting the sites' abilities to compete with iTunes, which was responsible for 69% of U.S. digital music sales in the first six months of this year, and 35% of all music sales, including physical albums, according to market research firm NPD Group Inc. Amazon, the second-largest player, accounted for 9% of digital music sales and 10% of overall music sales.

Up-and-coming start-ups such as Lala Media Inc. as well as longtime players such as RealNetworks Inc.'s Rhapsody have tried to gain an edge over iTunes and Amazon by offering lower prices or different features.

Lala, for example, lets buyers listen to an entire album once free of charge before they buy. It also sells Web-only songs for as little as 10 cents a track, and downloadable MP3s for 89 cents.

iTunes typically charges 99 cents or more per song. Rhapsody, in comparison, gives subscribers unlimited access to more than 6 million songs for a monthly fee.

Millions of people already use Google to look for music on the Internet and learn more about bands.

The search engine last week accounted for 30% of referral traffic to music-related sites, according to Experian Hitwise, a firm that tracks Internet traffic. At any point, two of the top 10 terms searched using Google are music-related, Pittman said.

With the new tool, the song that's being sought would appear on Google's search page. A search for Coldplay, for example, would yield the band's album cover art alongside four popular songs that users can play once free of charge. Once a song has been played, they will be able to hear only a 30-second sample.

To hear more, users would need to click to one of Google's music partners, including Lala, Rhapsody, Pandora Media Inc., Imeem Inc., and News Corp.'s MySpace Music.

"Technology has made music more affordable and more instantaneous than ever," said Bill Nguyen, co-founder of Palo Alto, Calif.,-based Lala. "Google is helping people to find and listen to what they like with virtually no effort. When you make it easier for people, they tend to buy more music."

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How to Use Digital Cable Tuners with CableCARD in Windows 7 Media Center PDF Print E-mail


Last month at the CEDIA EXPO trade show in Atlanta, Microsoft made a major announcement regarding CableCARDs: the company announced that consumers would now be able to install digital cable tuners with CableCARD into their Windows 7 PCs…all by themselves.

At Last! Install Your Own CableCARD-powered TV Tuners

For those of you who don’t use TV tuners in your Windows PC, this news may have flown under your radar a bit. However, it’s actually a rather significant change to the existing rules surrounding the implementations of CableCARDs in Windows PCs.

Back in 2006 when CableCARD tuners first became available for use in home computers, the industry consortium known as CableLabs, the cable industry’s R&D group who licenses the CableCARD specification, decided that they didn’t want consumers to install such tuners on their own. Instead, only pre-approved and pre-certified computers from select OEMs would come with the appropriate tuners installed.

This was clearly a blow for “do-it-yourselfers” who were hoping they could simply upgrade their current machines to take advantage of the new CableCARDs and their related benefits. Specifically, those benefits include access to the full line-up of channels provided by your cable company – even HDTV and premium channels – assuming you have the right subscription.

Now, thanks to the newly announced series of initiatives from Microsoft and CableLabs, anyone can install these CableCARD-powered tuners into their Windows 7 PCs. You don’t have to buy a new PC with the cards already installed.

Will Your PC Support a Digital Cable Tuner with CableCARD?

ATITVWonderDCTusbrgb_lg To see if your PC will support the tuners, a new tool called the “Digital Cable Advisor” is being released by Microsoft which will scan your system and analyze if your computer meets the necessary requirements. If so, then you’ll be able to grab one of the CableCARD-ready tuners (like the popular ATI TV Wonder Digital Cable Tuner) and install it in your PC yourself.. Oh, and while you’re at it, you may want to grab a few more because now in Windows 7, you can install as many as four CableCARD TV tuners instead of two, which was all that was supported in Vista. With four tuners, you can record or watch four channels at the same time. That certainly beats what the cable company’s own DVR can handle! Using multiple tuners is a great solution for all the various TV conflicts that occur thanks to the major networks pitting their best programs against each other all on the same night. 

To be clear, you’re not really limited to four tuners in Windows 7, you’re limited to four tuners of each type. There are actually three types of TV tuners currently available – analog tuners, digital tuners, and CableCARD tuners. So, if you’d like, you can install the other types of tuners as well in addition to your CableCARD tuners.

The Digital Cable Advisor tools will be made accessible on October 22nd from within Windows Media Center under the “Extras” menu. To use it, run the installation program to install the tool into the Extras library. (Note: This tool is for Windows 7 only.)

6 Tuners, 1 Card!

ceton tv card There are other ways to get more than four tuners in a Media Center PC than having to worry about the different types of tuners, though. For example, check out the upcoming Ceton Multi-Channel Cable TV Card. This new card, expected in Q1 2010, allows you to play or record up to six live channels of HDTV at once and stream live HD channels or recordings to multiple HDTVs through the home. Unfortunately, the 6-tuner card won’t be sold as a standalone product, only in PCs manufactured by certain OEMs. That’s because those OEMs license something called the “Advanced Entertainment Pack (AEP) for Windows,” a technology which allows for more than four tuners. The 6-tuner card is a solution for those systems. However, a 4-tuner and 2-tuner version of the card will both be available as standalone retail offerings early next year.

Windows 7 and SDV Support

In addition to the news about customer-installed CableCARD tuners, Microsoft also announced that you’re now able to use the CableCARD tuners with switched digital video (SDV) cable systems, a newer architecture for switching digital video which several cable companies began to use thanks to its bandwidth-saving abilities. Because of this change on the cable providers’ part, many Windows Media Center users who were previously streaming and recording video with their TV tuners were not able to receive the SDV content. Now, by using a device called a “tuning adapter” which is provided by your cable provider along with your CableCARD, you’ll be able to tune into SDV broadcasts when using Windows Media Center in Windows 7.

Your cable company will inform you if you need one of these tuning adapters when you purchase your CableCARD.

You will also need to do a firmware update for your digital cable tuner to enable SDV support. For the ATI TV Wonder Digital Cable Tuner, the 1.19.12 firmware will be made available on October 22nd. The new firmware also delivers stability improvements, UPnP support, and “Copy Freely” support (see below). However, note that the SDV support only works with Windows 7, not Vista.

To install the tuning adapter, you’ll need to plug its USB port into your computer’s USB port as the following diagram shows:

tuning adapter diagram

Image courtesy of The Green Button

If you are using multiple TV tuner cards, you’ll need separate tuning adapters for each and separate high-speed USB ports on your PC as well.

In Windows 7, You Can Now “Copy Freely”

The final announcement was that both Microsoft and CableLabs were going to make it easier for consumers to move the recorded content off their Media Center PCs. For any digital cable TV content marked as “copy freely” (CF), you’ll be able to easily move it from your Windows 7 PC to other PCs, devices, and portable media. Whether or not a show is tagged “CF” depends on the media content’s producer, but in the past, Media Center tended to lock down all the content, whether tagged CF or not. You could then only play back the content via a Media Center PC or extender. Now that will no longer be the case.

To determine if a particular program is copy protected or not, you can view the program’s details in Media Center’s Recorded TV library. Here, you’re able to see whether or not it’s listed with the “Copy Protected” label. If not, you can move or stream the content elsewhere.

Installing a TV Tuner and Configuring Media Center

Once you have physically installed the TV tuner and associated CableCARD into your PC, you’ll need to set it up by installing the necessary drivers and configuring Windows Media Center settings. Windows 7 should automatically detect and install the appropriate drivers for you but if, for some reason, there are not Windows 7 drivers available, the Windows Vista drivers will likely do the trick.

Next, after connecting the video source to your PC, launch Media Center and go to “Live TV Setup” under the TV menu. Then choose “Set Up TV Signal” from the options provided. Here, you’ll provide additional information like your zip code and TV signal provider (like your cable company) so Media Center can download the correct program listings. You should then let Media Center automatically detect the tuner – although you can configure these settings manually, it’s much easier this way.

livetvsetup_media_center

Configuring Your Program Guide

After the initial configuration completes, you can then set up the program guide to your liking. To do so, go to “Settings” –> “TV” –> then “Guide” in the Media Center menus. Here, can add or remove channels from displaying in the program guide, place them in the order you prefer, and sort them by name or number – whichever is more to your liking.

media center program guide

In Windows 7, you can also edit the individuals channels’ names and numbers. To do so, select the channel in the Program Guide and then choose “More Info.” If you’re using multiple TV tuners, one that’s copy-protected and one that’s not, you can edit the channel on each tuner to have the same number, effectively combining them. Then, under the channel’s settings, you can go to the “Edit Sources” section and change it so the non copy-protected tuner is the primary source for recording from that channel.

Windows Media Center also supports “Favorite” channels, just like most cable companies’ DVRs do today. With this feature, accessible upon right-clicking the Program Guide, you can configure lineups of channels to group favorites together. For example, you may want to have a lineup of just the major networks, just the movie channels, or just kids’ programming.

Recording TV Programs

Finally, you can configure what programs to record. The easiest way to find your favorite shows (besides browsing through the guide, that is) is to go to the “Search” option from the “TV” menu in Media Center. Here, you’re not just able to search by program title as is common with many of today’s DVRs, but you can also search by actor/actress, director, category, or even keywords.

 media center search

Once you find a show or other listing you want to record, you can do so by pressing the “Record” button on your remote control (if you’re using one) or by accessing the “Details” page for the program listing (Press “OK” with the program highlighted in the guide to show the Details page. Then choose “Record”). From here, you can also choose to record the series or configure advanced options like the start and stop time, how many copies to retain and for how long, etc.

recording_TV_shows_media_center

Watching TV

Now the fun part! After all the configurations are complete and you’ve set up which shows to record, you can simply sit back and watch TV.

You can, of course, watch live TV in Media Center and you’re even able to pause and rewind TV programs on your PC, just as you could if you were using your cable company’s DVR.

To watch your recorded programs, head over to the “Recorded TV” section of Media Center’s “TV” menu. The programs are listed by name and also display a thumbnail image for easy reference. From here, you can select the shows you want to watch, delete those you’ve seen, or copy the video to a CD or DVD.

recorded tv media center

Of course, many people still prefer to watch TV from the comfort of a sofa in their living room on a big-screen TV. That, too, is possible thanks to Media Center extenders. The Xbox 360 is a well-known and popular extender that many people already have in their homes, but there are others too, including products from HP, Linksys, D-Link, and Samsung. You can check out those other options here. No matter what extender you use, any of the programs you record via Windows Media Center will play thanks to built-in Windows Media Codec support.

Windows 7 Features Designed for Media Center

In Windows 7, a new feature of the OS called “HomeGroups” lets you connect your home’s Windows 7 PCs together for easy file and printer sharing. This feature also works with Windows Media Center content which is stored using Windows 7’s “Libraries.” With previous versions of the Windows OS, there was some confusion due to the specialized libraries set up by both Windows Media Player and Windows Media Center. But in Windows 7, the operating itself has built-in Windows Explorer libraries for content like music, video, pictures, and documents. Both Windows Media Player and Windows Media Center use those built-in libraries now instead of creating their own.

You can decide what content in those libraries, if any, is to be shared with other computers on your home network (your “HomeGroup”). If you do decide to share content, however, it will show up within Windows Media Center under the appropriate menus (Picture Library, Video Library, etc.). Just looked for the “Shared” section within each menu.

In addition, under the “Recorded TV” menu, other HomeGroup computers can access the shared content recorded by your TV-tuner connected Windows Media Center PC. This is an easy way for you stream video from one PC to another, like from your home office PC to your laptop for instance. And because your Windows Media Center content is stored in the same libraries as your Windows Media Player content, you can also take advantage of Windows 7’s “Remote Media Streaming” feature to watch your Recorded TV shows from anywhere in the world as long as you have an internet connection. This feature isn’t turned on by default, but you can easily enable it following the instructions here.

Other Options

If you find out, after running the Digital Cable Advisor, that your PC doesn’t meet the requirements for using CableCARDs, there is the possibility that you can update your system to enable digital cable support. The tool will provide you with additional information about how you can make this happen and what corrective action is needed. After updating your system, you can re-run the tool to be assured that it is now ready.

However, not all PCs, Windows 7 or otherwise, will be able to meet the requirements. If yours doesn’t, you may want to look into installing Windows Media Center plugins instead for viewing TV and movies on your PC. Although you won’t be able to stream live TV or record shows, there are a number of plugins that deliver video content from sites like Hulu, from major TV networks, from YouTube, and other popular web video destinations.

Image Credits for WMC screenshots from The Windows Experience Blog

 
Evolving DVRs offer up new benefits PDF Print E-mail
DVRs aren't just about skipping commercials anymore. They're about providing a digital entertainment connection.

Commercial broadcasters who've seen personal video recorders as an ad-skipping threat might now view them as an audience-capturing opportunity. In global markets where DVRs are just arriving, they're promoted not as recording and storage devices but as "an experience," says TiVo CEO Tom Rogers, a Mipcom keynote speaker.

TiVo's iconic brand is built around the company's much lauded search-and-suggestion interface. Connected to broadband, DVRs can deliver dozens of branded channels like TiVoCast and can access users' digital video and photo libraries. TiVo is also a content retailer for downloadable video.

Rogers sees "the ability to get anything you want whenever you want -- linear or broadcast video, online video, broadband content -- with the consumer not having to know what the underlying delivery mode is. All they know is the Google-of-television approach."

It's "their own videostore in one place," agrees Zodiak Entertainment senior VP of business development Patrick Svensk, whose global resume spans broadcasting, cable distribution and content production. He sees it all coming together in "one single subscription (that) follows them wherever they are," and funnels it all to the TV screen.

That means "growth can also be driven by cable operators," says John Senior, partner at strategy consulting firm Oliver Wyman, "if they upgrade their DVR boxes to make them Internet-capable." In the U.K., the terrestrial Freeview+ service provides 50 free digital TV channels through an antenna-connected DVR that's a one-time retail purchase.

Behind a single interface like TiVo lies a sprawling "ecosystem" of business opportunities, Rogers says, "which extends to ad agencies, television networks, audience research companies, Internet content players, cable, satellite, phone and mobile companies," and beyond. Australia's Seven executives cited future "interactive advertising solutions" at their DVR launch.

"It's a holistic digital media strategy," says TiVo international general manager Joshua Danovitz. "You want to have an ongoing content relationship with the consumer."

In Australia, Seven network partnered with TiVo last year in launching a broadband DVR, to show viewers of the largest broadcast network they don't need cable to get wide choices or nimble program search.

"What they're saying is, hey, why assume broadcast gets marginalized in the world of a la carte and online?" Rogers says. "Broadcast can take the lead on distributing the box and frame the experience, and eventually bring in far more content than cable or satellite might.

"The game is not to try to stop (ad-skipping); the game is to try to mold your business to be lucrative in the new way the consumer expects to receive media."

Strategy guru Senior says that with online video choices mushrooming, "Everybody has their eye on controlling the access point to Internet television or Internet video. " His global report "TV 2013" found "the TV business has not just changed, it has been replaced by the video-distribution business."

DVR users around the world already program their own viewing, the report said, using time-shifting and on-demand options more than half the time.

"We've found people couldn't really see the value in a DVR until they had one," Senior notes, "and then they say, I'll never give it up, it's the best thing ever."

Penetration has reached deep in Japan, where DVRs last year were in half of all TV homes, thanks to brisk retail competition where even game systems can be DVRs. In the U.K. and Scandinavia, penetration reached more than one-third, according to 2008 statistics from ZenithOptimedia, while Nielsen now finds DVRs in 30% of U.S. homes, up from just 12% in 2007.

 
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