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To: Mark Oliver who wrote (5094)12/20/1998 1:51:00 PM
From: CPAMarty   of 9256
 
Hard drives tuned for foray into prime-time TV

techweb.com 

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To: CPAMarty who wrote (5096)12/20/1998 6:42:00 PM
From: Stitch   of 9256
 
Marty;

<<With a Tivo receiver and headend connected via modem in a closed loop, the Tivo service learns users' viewing preferences and patterns as the users push "thumbs up/thumbs down" keys on the remote control.

The setup thus would enable video-on-demand without requiring cable- or satellite-service providers to do costly infrastructure upgrades. It also would spare consumers the ordeal of learning VCR time-shifting protocols.>>


I love this. Disk drives for "Joe Six-pack".

Best,
Stitch

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To: CPAMarty who wrote (5096)12/20/1998 7:11:00 PM
From: Mark Oliver   of 9256
 
Interesting that they start out the article getting the companies wrong. They claim WDC is the Sony partner, but it's actually Quantum unless they have 2 agreements.

I sure like the idea of using a disk drive to skip commercials. They skirt around this issue, but in the end interactive TV and random access recording will give the consumer more power to eliminate those annoying ads, which also provide huge income to the service provider.

Also interesting is the fact that one company wants to use a Linux operating system. Microsoft has been busy trying to build the CE operating system as the model of choice. It looks like they've had some success. In the end, you wonder what they are really going to build with the TV of the future?

I believe the move will be toward a total information port that will handle everything from radio, TV, Internet, communications, telecommuting and remote home management. It will be a short term product cycle for a super VCR when a home server would handle all the storage requirements for a large variety of devices. This won't be a model for everyone, but there should be a lucrative market for the people who can afford these systems.

Again, there is a shift coming soon anyway where the standard VCR tape format can't handle the increasing data storage of HDTV. Throw in the ability to censor commercials seamlessly and people will want to buy these new devices. If the market begins to take off in 12 top 18 months, price declines will probably bring HDD's into line with consumer needs.

I suppose a big factor would be if and when the model of total interactive data retrieval is available. Then you can choose any show, be it a how to tune up your car or Spasky/Fischer chess matches, or the latest Bay Watch, if that's really still saleable, and somewhere in cyberspace will be huge data warehouses serving out video content. Sound like a paradigm shift to how companies like NBC. I wonder what GE has in mind to protect their Media empire?

Regards,

Mark

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To: Mark Oliver who wrote (5098)12/21/1998 10:58:00 AM
From: CPAMarty   of 9256
 
Fascinating article in San Jose Mercury about history of Data Storage.

www7.mercurycenter.com 

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To: CPAMarty who wrote (5099)12/21/1998 1:03:00 PM
From: Robert Douglas   of 9256
 
Re: Memory prosthesis.

So a hundred years from now children will be baffled when they are told the impeached president of 1998 answered "I don't remember" over one hundred times in a court deposition.

-Robert

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To: Robert Douglas who wrote (5100)12/21/1998 1:39:00 PM
From: Z Analyzer   of 9256
 

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To: CPAMarty who wrote (5099)12/21/1998 1:56:00 PM
From: Z Analyzer   of 9256
 
Going from 5 to 100 GB/sq in would take only five years at 60% compound growth. What do we do after that although presumably approaching the limit will slow the pace of advancement. Also, it would seem as if 100 GB is the limit even with optically assisted magnetic recording. Maybe you get further advancement from cost decreasing all components since they will be static in terms of performance (a four platter disk drive for the price of three a year or two earlier).

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To: Stitch who wrote (5097)12/21/1998 5:24:00 PM
From: Z Analyzer   of 9256
 
I'd like to hear what people are saying about the potential market for VCR's an TVs incorporating disc drives. Its one I find very conceptually appealing and it appears ready for the mainstream from a cost perspective unlike most leading edge technologies. Seems to me this market could be huge in just a few years time which would radically alter the supply demand balance in the disk drive business. Has anyone seen any intelligent commentary from industry sources or Dataquest? Also, any idea how the PCTV market is faring?

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To: Z Analyzer who wrote (5103)12/21/1998 8:03:00 PM
From: Yogi - Paul   of 9256
 
Z,
Digital Living Room.
digitallivingroom.com 
digitallivingroom.com 
You can link from there to the hardest to read survey you will ever see.
<<Also, any idea how the PCTV market is faring?>>
Dead. The internet appliance/set top box is very much alive however.

This white paper is very interesting for all interested in digital networks. Technical but worth the read.

sel.sony.com 

I have been playing this from the GIC-TCI-T angle for quite some time. Owned a lot of Sony but sold out some time ago.

Yogi

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To: Yogi - Paul who wrote (5104)12/22/1998 4:47:00 AM
From: Z Analyzer   of 9256
 
Thanks for the interesting if difficult reading. Hope work alon gthese lines continues.

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