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Windows Azure Media Services OR Intel & Microsoft going together in the consumer space (again)?

With Intel Media: 10-20 year leap in television this year [Feb 16, 2013] and Microsoft entertainment as an affordable premium offering to be built on the basis of the Xbox console and Xbox LIVE services [Feb 13, 2013] this is a highly probable assumption.

There is other evidence as well. In fact plenty of them. Especially from Microsoft side:

image

The Entertainment and Devices Division (EDD) of Microsof is currently the place where all of Microsoft consumer-only activities are concentrated. EDD revenue, however, was 11% down for the latest quarter vs. that of a year ago. Moreover, it was just 17.6% of the overall Microsoft revenue vs. 20.3% in the quarter a year ago.

In addition:
– in Microsoft Reports Record Revenue of $21.5 Billion in Second Quarter [Microsoft press  release, Jan 24, 2013] great progress was reported in the non-consumer segments of Microsoft:

“Our big, bold ambition to reimagine Windows as well as launch Surface and Windows Phone 8 has sparked growing enthusiasm with our customers and unprecedented opportunity and creativity with our partners and developers,” said Steve Ballmer, chief executive officer at Microsoft. “With new Windows devices, including Surface Pro, and the new Office on the horizon, we’ll continue to drive excitement for the Windows ecosystem and deliver our software through devices and services people love and businesses need.”
The Windows Division posted revenue of $5.88 billion, a 24% increase from the prior year period. Adjusting for the net deferral of revenue for the Windows Upgrade Offer and the recognition of the previously deferred revenue from Windows 8 Pre-sales, Windows Division non-GAAP revenue increased 11% for the second quarter. Microsoft has sold over 60 million Windows 8 licenses to date.
“We saw strong growth in our enterprise business driven by multi-year commitments to the Microsoft platform, which positions us well for long-term growth,” said Peter Klein, chief financial officer at Microsoft. “Multi-year licensing revenue grew double-digits across Windows, Server & Tools, and the Microsoft Business Division.”
The Server & Tools business reported $5.19 billion of revenue, a 9% increase from the prior year period, driven by double-digit percentage revenue growth in SQL Server and System Center.
“We see strong momentum in our enterprise business. With the launch of SQL Server 2012 and Windows Server 2012, we continue to see healthy growth in our data platform and infrastructure businesses and win share from our competitors,” said Kevin Turner, chief operating officer at Microsoft. “With the coming launch of the new Office, we will provide a cloud-enabled suite of products that will deliver unparalleled productivity and flexibility.”
The Microsoft Business Division posted $5.69 billion of revenue, a 10% decrease from the prior year period. Adjusting for the impact of the Office Upgrade Offer and Pre-sales, Microsoft Business Division non-GAAP revenue increased 3% for the second quarter. Revenue from Microsoft’s productivity server offerings – collectively including Lync, SharePoint, and Exchange – continued double-digit percentage growth.

– while Entertainment and Devices Division Performance and KPIs for Earnings Release FY13 Q2 [Microsoft Investor Relations, Jan 24, 2013] were reported as:

Continued leadership position in console market

  • 5.9M consoles sold, down 28%
  • Halo 4 best-selling title of gaming franchise
  • Xbox LIVE members >40 million
  • Windows Phone sales were over 4 times greater than last year
  • 138 billion minutes of calls on Skype in quarter, up 59%

EDD revenue decreased, primarily due to lower Xbox 360 platform revenue, offset in part by higher Windows Phone revenue. Xbox 360 platform revenue decreased $1.1 billion or 29%, due mainly to lower volumes of consoles sold and lower video game revenue, offset in part by higher Xbox LIVE revenue. We shipped 5.9 million Xbox 360 consoles during the second quarter of fiscal year 2013, compared with 8.2 million Xbox 360 consoles during the second quarter of fiscal year 2012. Video game revenue decreased, primarily due to $380 million of revenue deferred associated with the Video Game Deferral. Windows Phone revenue increased $546 million, including patent licensing revenue and increased sales of Windows Phone licenses.

EDD operating income increased, due mainly to lower cost of revenue and sales and marketing expenses, offset in part by decreased revenue and increased research and development expenses. Cost of revenue decreased $544 million or 19%, mainly due to decreased sales of Xbox 360 consoles, offset in part by payments made to Nokia related to joint strategic initiatives and increased royalties on Xbox LIVE content and video games. Sales and marketing expenses decreased $92 million or 21%, primarily reflecting decreased Xbox 360 platform marketing. Research and development expenses increased $98 million or 25%, primarily reflecting higher headcount-related expenses.

– and here we should consider the following Segment Information for the Entertainment & Devices Division excerpted on Feb 17, 2013:

Entertainment and Devices Division (“EDD”) develops and markets products and services designed to entertain and connect people. EDD offerings include the Xbox 360 entertainment platform (which includes the Xbox 360 gaming and entertainment console, Kinect for Xbox 360, Xbox 360 video games, Xbox LIVE, and Xbox 360 accessories), Mediaroom (our Internet protocol television software), Skype, and Windows Phone, including related patent licensing revenue. We acquired Skype on October 13, 2011, and its results of operations from that date are reflected in our results.

Note here the inclusion of Mediaroom (MS IPTV platform) into the portfolio which was not in the FY12 portfolio as per Microsoft 2012 Annual Report [Microsoft Investor Relations, Oct 9, 2012]. Mediaroom is described by the Microsoft Mediaroom Newsroom [excerpt as of Feb 17, 2013] as:

Microsoft Mediaroom powers multi-screen entertainment services for consumers in partnership with operators. Visit: Mediaroom Website
Microsoft Mediaroom is the world’s most deployed IPTV platform. Mediaroom-powered TV services are being offered by more than 40 of the world’s leading operators, delivering services to more than eleven million consumer households equaling more than 22 million set top boxes deployed throughout the Americas, EMEA and APAC. Operator partners including AT&T, Deutsche Telekom and TELUS are already giving their subscribers the freedom to watch TV how they want, while gaining the most innovative ways to reach them wherever they are.

As another notable change according to Announcing the Windows 8 Editions [Building Windows 8 blog, April 16, 2012]

Windows Media Center will be available as an economical “media pack” add-on to Windows 8 Pro. If you are an enthusiast or you want to use your PC in a business environment, you will want Windows 8 Pro.

With further details provided in Making Windows Media Center available in Windows 8 [Building Windows 8 blog, May 4, 2012]

On the PC, … online sources [such as YouTube, Hulu, Netflix] are growing much faster than DVD & broadcast TV consumption, which are in sharp decline (no matter how you measure—unique users, minutes, percentage of sources, etc.). Globally, DVD sales have declined significantly year over year and Blu-ray on PCs is losing momentum as well. Watching broadcast TV on PCs, while incredibly important for some of you, has also declined steadily. These traditional media playback scenarios, optical media and broadcast TV, require a specialized set of decoders (and hardware) that cost a significant amount in royalties. With these decoders built into most Windows 7 editions, the industry has faced those costs broadly, regardless of whether or not a given device includes an optical drive or TV tuner.
Our partners have shared clear concerns over the costs associated with codec licensing for traditional media playback, especially as Windows 8 enables an unprecedented variety of form factors. Windows has addressed these concerns in the past by limiting availability of these experiences to specialized “media” or “premium” editions. At the same time, we also heard clear feedback from customers and partners that led to our much simplified Windows 8 editions lineup.
Given the changing landscape, the cost of decoder licensing, and the importance of a straight forward edition plan, we’ve decided to make Windows Media Center available to Windows 8 customers via the Add Features to Windows 8 control panel (formerly known as Windows Anytime Upgrade). This ensures that customers who are interested in Media Center have a convenient way to get it. Windows Media Player will continue to be available in all editions, but without DVD playback support. For optical discs playback on new Windows 8 devices, we are going to rely on the many quality solutions on the market, which provide great experiences for both DVD and Blu-ray.

image

Windows 8 Pro is designed to help tech enthusiasts obtain a broader set of Windows 8 technologies. Acquiring either the Windows 8 Media Center Pack or the Windows 8 Pro Pack gives you Media Center, including DVD playback (in Media Center, not in Media Player), broadcast TV recording and playback (DBV-T/S, ISDB-S/T, DMBH, and ATSC), and VOB file playback.

According to Should I Upgrade to Windows 8 Media Center? [About.com Guide, Nov 23, 2012]

The short answer? No. As of this writing, Media Center 8 is an exact duplicate of Media Center 7. No new features, no improvements, nothing.

So with Windows 8 Microsoft was clearly placing the bet on the on-line video!

Then we should consider also that Microsoft was just Announcing Release of Windows Azure Media Services [Scott Guthrie’s blog, Jan 22, 2013] supporting Xbox and IPTV (?i.e. when instead of Mediaroom –I would assume [to be verified!]– the content comes to the IPTV set-top boxes from Windows Azure Media Services?) as well:

image
with the following conceptual functionality (“architecture”) inside: image

What was announced is the V1 of the cloud-based variety of the overall Microsoft Media Platform (built on foundations of Windows Azure, Internet Information Services, Smooth Streaming and PlayReady) as defined in Microsoft Media Platform: Encoding and Serving Choices and Migration Considerations [Microsoft whitepaper, Jan 2, 2013] (corrections, emphases and additions are mine):

Two Microsoft Media Platform Technologies are on-premises (that is, they run on servers placed directly in an enterprise), while the latest, Windows Azure Media Services, is cloud-based as part of Microsoft’s Windows Azure cloud computing platform ( http://www.windowsazure.com/).

On-premises media technologies:

Cloud-based media technologies:

The initial components of Windows Azure Media Services, including Ingest [Upload media], Encoding [encode assets using a range of standard codecs, including popular adaptive bitrate formats], Content Protection [store and deliver your content securely using Microsoft PlayReady DRM or Apple AES Encryption], and On-Demand [Streaming] [deliver a fast, smooth, and adaptive experience to users while leveraging format conversion on the fly], are available or shipping soon with this release. Advertising (Ad Insertion) is currently available through Client SDKs. Additional components, including Live Streaming and Analytics, will be rolled out as they become available. When all of the components are in place, Windows Azure Media Services will offer a complete end-to-end media services solution, including video ingest, encoding and conversion, content protection, on-demand streaming, live streaming, and analytics.

The current environment for video streaming is experiencing new challenges. The video portion of Internet traffic today is significant and growing rapidly, as is the number of internet connected TVs and mobile devices. In this environment, video providers and broadcasters are switching to IP as the medium of choice to reach this wide diversity of endpoints.

To address these challenges, Windows Azure Media Services is designed to become a one-stop platform for securely encoding, packaging, and delivering video content from Windows Azure or CDNs, thus offering the scalability and reach of the cloud.

Some of advantages of migrating to Windows Azure Media Services are:

  • Windows Azure Media Services has the scalability and reliability of a cloud platform and can handle large bursts in demand for video applications.
  • It is widely available for a global audience and can use third-party CDNs like Akamai, Level3, or Limelight.
  • Windows Azure Media Services has cloud-based versions of familiar Microsoft Media Platform and media partner technologies.
  • As a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), Windows Azure Media Services is faster, cheaper, and lowers risk:
    • PaaS is faster because there is less work for developers. End-to-end solutions benefit from a single platform that solves integration issues. As a result, applications can go from idea to availability more quickly.
    • PaaS is cheaper because it offers less administration and management overhead, and greater economies of scale: you pay only for what you use, and large capital outlays for media servers and network infrastructure can be replaced by the more efficient operating expenses of cloud computing.
    • PaaS lowers risk. Because the platform does more for you, there are fewer opportunities for error.
  • Security Standards and Certifications: Windows Azure Media Services Security is working towards SOC2 (Service Organization Control 2) compliance and plans to complete a CDSA (Content Delivery and Security Association) certification process and an MPAA audit in 2013.

Windows Azure Media Services have the flexibility and power to enable you to create whatever media services solution that you envision. Some key usage scenarios are:

  • Creating an end-to-end workflow in the cloud. For example, a content management service can use Windows Azure Media Services to process on-demand Smooth Streaming video and distribute it to a variety of mobile and desktop clients.
  • Developing hybrid workflows that incorporate pre-existing on-premises resources. For example, a video production house might upload its finished videos to Windows Azure Media Services for encoding into multiple formats, and then use the Windows Azure Media Services Origin Service and a third-party CDN to deliver video on demand.
  • Choosing to utilize built-in Media Services components, or mixing and matching your own custom components or components from third parties. Individual Windows Azure Media Services components can be called via standard REST APIs for easy integration with external applications and services.

[see more detailed information in the whitepaper itself and in the announcement blog referred earlier]

I should only highlight one particular additional feature with the V1 release from Announcing Release of Windows Azure Media Services [Scott Guthrie’s blog, Jan 22, 2013]

… our on-demand streaming support also now gives you a cool new feature we call dynamic packaging.

Traditionally, once content has been encoded, it needs to be packaged and stored for multiple targeted clients (iOS, XBox, PC, etc.).  This traditional packaging process converts multi-bitrate MP4 files into multi-bitrate HLS file-sets or multi-bitrate Smooth Streaming files.  This triples the storage requirements and adds significant processing cost and delay.
With dynamic packaging, we now allow users to store a single file format and stream to many adaptive protocol formats automatically.  The packaging and conversion happens in real-time on the origin server which results in significant storage cost and time savings:

image

Today the source formats can be multi-bitrate MP4 or Smooth based, and these can be converted dynamically to either HLS or Smooth.  The pluggable nature of this architecture will allow us, over the next few months, to also add DASH Live Profile streaming of fragmented MP-4 segments using time-based indexing as well.  The support of HLS and the addition of DASH enables an ecosystem-friendly model based on common and standards-based streaming protocols, and ensures that you can target any type of device.

ADDITIONAL MPEG DASH / MICROSOFT RELATED INFORMATION:
Microsoft Announces Support for MPEG-DASH in Microsoft Media Platform [Microsoft Media Platform team blog, April 16, 2012]
Alex Zambelli of Microsoft at Streaming Media West – held on Oct 30-31, 2012 [streamingmediavideo YouTube channel, published on Jan 2, 2013]

Microsoft Sr. Tech Evangelist, Microsoft Media Platform discusses the ascendancy of MPEG DASH.

as well as the quite universal aspect of multitargeting even in this V1:

Consume

Windows Azure Media Services provides a large set of client player SDKs for all major devices and platforms, and they let you not only reach any device with a format that’s best suited for that device – but also build a custom player experience that uniquely integrates into your product or service.

Your users can consume media assets by building rich media applications rapidly on many platforms, such as Windows, iOS, XBox, etc.  At this time, we ship SDKs and player frameworks for:

  • Windows 8
  • iOS
  • Xbox
  • Flash Player (built using Adobe OSMF)
  • Silverlight
  • Windows Phone
  • Android
  • Embedded devices (Connected TV, IPTV)

To complement all that here is a brief introduction into the whole Microsoft Media Platform (the on-premises varieties as well) followed in details with how HTML5 is fitting into that, from streamingmediavideo YouTube channel [May 9, 2012]:

This session explores the role of HTML5 in the Microsoft Media Platform.

In Streaming Servers 2012: New Features, New Opportunities [StreamingMedia.com, Oct 24, 2012] the latest features of the streaming server/platform solutions from Adobe, Anevia, CodeShop, Microsoft, and RealNetworks are overviewed, together with some upcoming features. This shows quite well how much the Microsoft Media Platform is advanced and hence could be the best platform for such an effort as that of Intel Media.

There is a wortwhile comment as well from the same Microsoft specialist as already shown in the videos above:

Alex Zambelli · Seattle, Washington

Hi Tim,
Just a few corrections: The latest version of IIS Media Services, known as IIS Media Services 5.0 Premium, targeting OTT linear TV scenarios is available exclusively to Mediaroom customers as part of Mediaroom Component Technologies.

See also: How to Use Continuous Network DVR Feature in PlayReady Premium and IIS Media Services Premium? [PlayReady blog, Dec 29, 2012] “PlayReady 2.x Premium and IIS Media Services 5.0 Premium have enabled the following four key features which are needed for scalable live TV service:”

This is showing that Mediaroom is using the latest technologies available in the Microsoft Media Platform along with Windows Azure Media Services.

Finally Intel Media is heavily betting on the new H.265/HEVC standard. This is how the same Alex Zambelli (since January working for a premium video workflow services and products partner of Microsoft) is viewing this issue in his H.265/HEVC Ratification and 4K Video Streaming [Alex Zambelli’s Streaming Media Blog, Jan 28, 2013] post:

The media world today is abuzz with news of H.265/HEVC approval by the ITU. In case you’ve been hiding from NAB/IBC/SM events for the past two years – or if you’re a WebM hermit – I will have you know that H.265 is the successor standard to H.264, aka MPEG-4 AVC. As was the case with its predecessor it is the product of years of collaboration between the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) and the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) Video Coding Experts Group (VCEG). The new video coding standard is important because it promises bandwidth savings of about 40-45% for the same quality as H.264. In a world where video is increasingly being delivered over-the-top and bandwidth is not free – that kind of savings is a big deal.
What most media reports seem to have focused on is the potential effect that H.265 will have on bringing us closer to 4K video resolution in OTT delivery. Most reports speculate that H.265 will allow 4K video to be delivered over the Internet at bit rates between 20 and 30 Mbps. In comparison, my friend Bob Cowherd recently theorized on his blog that 4K delivery using the current H.264 video standard would require about 45 Mbps to deliver 4K video OTT.
While I think the relative difference between those two estimates is in the ballpark of the 40% bandwidth savings that H.265 promises, I actually think that both estimates are somewhat pessimistic. Given the current state of video streaming technology, I think we’ll actually be able to deliver 4K video at lower bit rates when the time comes for 4K streaming.
A common mistake that most people dealing with lossy video compression seem to make is to assume that the ratio between bit rate (bps) and picture size (pixels/sec) remains proportional and fixed as the values of both axis change. I don’t think that’s the case. I believe that the relationship between bit rate and picture size is not linear, but closer to a power function that looks like this:

image

In other words, I believe that as the pixel count gets higher a DCT-based video codec requires fewer bits to maintain the same level of visual quality. Here’s why:
  1. The size of a 16×16 macroblock, which is the smallest unit of DCT-based compression used in contemporary codecs such as H.264 and VC-1, grows smaller relative to the total size of the video image as the image resolution grows higher. For example,  in a 320×180 video the 16×16 macroblock represents 0.444% of the total image size, whereas in a 1920×1080 video the 16×16 macroblock represents only 0.0123% of the total image. A badly compressed macroblock in a 320×180 frame would therefore be more objectionable than a badly compressed macroblock in a 1920×1080 frame.
  2. As many studies have shown, the law of diminishing returns applies to video/image resolution too. If you sit at a fixed distance from your video display device eventually you will no longer be able to distinguish the difference between 720p, 1080p and 4K resolutions due to your eye’s inability to resolve tiny pixels from a certain distance. Ipso facto, as the video resolution goes up your eyes become less likely to distinguish compression artifacts too – which means the video compression can afford to get sloppier.
  3. Historically the bit rates used for OTT video delivery and streaming have been much lower than those used in broadcasting, consumer electronics and physical media. For example, digital broadcast HDTV typically averages ~19 Mbps for video (in CBR mode), while most Blu-ray 1080p videos average ~15-20 Mbps (in 2-pass VBR mode). Those kinds of bit rates are possible because those delivery channels have the luxury of either dedicated bandwidth or high-capacity physical media. However, in the OTT and streaming world video bit rate has always been shortchanged in comparison. Most 720p30 video streaming today, whether live or on-demand, is encoded at average 2.5-3.5 Mbps (depending on complexity and frame rate). 1080p30 video, when available, is usually streamed at 5-6 Mbps. Whereas Blu-ray tries to give us movies at a quality level approaching visual transparency, streaming/OTT is completely driven by the economics of bandwidth and consequently only gives us video at the minimum bit rate required to make the video look generally acceptable (and worthy of its HD moniker). To put it bluntly, streaming video is not yet a videophile’s medium.
So taking those factors into consideration, what kind of bandwidth should we expect for 4K video OTT delivery? If 1080p video is currently being widely streamed online using H.264 compression at 6 Mbps, then 4K (4096×2304) video could probably be delivered at bit rates around 18-20 Mbps using the same codec at similar quality levels. Again, remember, we’re not comparing Blu-ray quality levels here – we’re comparing 2013 OTT quality levels which are “good enough” but not ideal. If we switch from H.264 to H.265 compression we could probably expect OTT delivery of 4K video at bit rates closer to 12-15 Mbps(assuming H.265′s 40% efficiency improvements do indeed come true). I should note that those estimates are only applicable to 24-30 fps video. If the dream of 4K OTT video also carries an implication of high frame rates – e.g. 48 to 120 fps – then the bandwidth requirements would certainly go up accordingly too. But if the goal is simply to stream a 4K version of “Lawrence of Arabia” into your home at 24 fps, that dream might be closer to reality than you think.
One last thing: In his report about H.265 Ryan Lawler writes that “nearly every video publisher has standardized [H.264] after the release of the iPad and several other connected devices. It seems crazy now, but once upon a time, Apple’s adoption of H.264 and insistence on HTML5-based video players was controversial – especially since most video before the iPad was encoded in VP6 to play through Adobe’s proprietary Flash player.” Not so fast, Ryan. While Apple does deserve credit for backing H.264 against alternatives, they were hardly the pioneers of H.264 web streaming. H.264 was already a mandatory part of the HD-DVD and Blu-ray specifications when those formats launched in 2006 as symbols of the new HD video movement. Adobe added H.264 support to Flash 9 (“Moviestar”) in December 2007. Microsoft added H.264 support to Silverlight 3 and Windows 7 in July 2009. The Apple iPad did not launch until April 2010, which was also the same month Steve Jobs posted his infamous “Thoughts on Flash” blog post. So while Apple certainly did contribute to H.264′s success, they were hardly the controversial H.264 advocate Ryan makes them out to be. H.264 was already widely accepted at that point and its success was simply a matter of time.

More information:
What Is HEVC (H.265)? [StreamingMedia.com, Feb 14, 2013]
Episode 99 – Windows Azure Media Services General Availibility [Microsoft Channel 9 video, Jan 25, 2013]

In this episode Nick Harris and Nate Totten are joined by Mingfei Yan Program Manager II on Windows Azure Media Services.  With Windows Azure Media Services reaching General Availability Mingfei joined us to demonstrate how you can use it to build great, extremely scalable, end-to-end media solutions for streaming on-demand video to consumers on any device and in this particular demo shows off the portal, encoding and both a Windows Store app  and iOS device consuming encoded content.

For more information visit the Windows Azure Media Services page to learn more about the capabilities, and visit the Windows Azure Media Service Dev Center for tutorials, how-to articles, blogs, and more information and get started building applications with it today!

How to build customized Media Workflows using the Media Services .NET SDK – Part I [Microsoft Channel 9 video, Feb 5, 2013]

In this two part video, Mingfei Yan will teach you how to use the Windows Azure Media Services .NET SDK to create your own media workflow including how to upload, encode, package and deliver your video assets.  In this part you will learn how to create media asset and upload a video file from local drive.

After completing this part you can watch part II here. You can get started with Windows Azure Media Services today for free!

How to build customized Media Workflows using the Media Services .NET SDK – Part II [Microsoft Channel 9 video, Feb 5, 2013]

– IMPORTANT: Client Ecosystem for Windows Azure Media Services [Mingfei Yan blog, Jan 14, 2013]

This blog gives an overview of what kind of client support Microsoft offers as part of Windows Azure media Services. On one side, you could create, manage, package and deliver media asset through Windows Azure media services. Many popular streaming formats are supported, such as Smooth Streaming, Http Llive Streaming and MPEG-dash. On the other hand, we provide various SDKs and frameworks for you to consume media asset by building rich media applications rapidly on many platforms, such as PC, XBox, mobile and etc.

What is Windows Azure Media Services [Mingfei Yan blog, Aug 21, 2012]

Introducing Microsoft Media Platform [Media & Entertainment Insights blog, April 12, 2011]
Microsoft Media Platform – David Sayed interview [Quantel blog April 20, 2011]
H2 2012 Media Platform Product Update Roundup [Alex Zambelli’s Streaming Media Blog, Nov 16, 2012]: “It’s been a busy summer with most of the team focused on Windows Azure Media Services, but I’d like to take a moment to highlight a few other Media Platform releases of the past few months:”
Mediaroom 2.0 Unites Software and Cloud Services to Power New TV Experiences Across Three Screens [Media & Entertainment Insights blog, April 6, 2010]

Intel Media: 10-20 year leap in television this year

Updates: Coming Soon: Intel’s Must-See TV [Barrons.com, June 22, 2013]

The chip giant readies a TV subscription service powered by a set-top box unlike any other.
Full disclosure, dear readers—I’m not a TV viewer. I chucked the set years ago and mainly watch things on computers.
But then, television hasn’t changed much in decades, so I feel I’m still qualified to opine on the boob tube’s future. And two weeks ago, I was fortunate enough to glimpse a possible part of that future at the Santa Clara, Calif., headquarters of Intel (ticker: INTC), where I saw a TV service that is novel, elegant, and highly desirable, even to a television Luddite like me. The service faces a number of hurdles, including potential obstruction by the cable and telephone industries, but what I witnessed could take Intel in a thrilling new direction.

Sometime this year, the chip giant will offer a set-top box at retail, with a subscription service that brings you live television over your broadband Internet connection.

It is, in industry argot, an “over the top” video connection, requiring no actual TV package from the four major “multiple system operators,” or MSOs, as they’re called—Comcast (CMCSA), Cablevision (CVC), Time Warner Cable (TWC), and Charter Communications (CHTR)—or from Verizon Communications (VZ) and AT&T(T).

WITHOUT GIVING TOO MUCH AWAY, the user interface seemed to hover beautifully above the currently playing show. An elegant simple menu made it easy to switch between channels or to pick and rent a recent film. It was light years from the cumbersome garbage that takes up most of the screen when using a standard cable-channel picker.

There was a wide array of popular channels to choose from that would be familiar to any couch potato, though the final lineup is still being formulated. Equally important, when you hit the button on the remote, the TV seemed to jump to the next channel faster than is typical on cable. There also is a time-shifting aspect that goes beyond DVR, allowing you to go back through recent episodes.

One wonders: Why hasn’t TV always been this way?

Others who’ve viewed the project are enthusiastic, too. “The No. 1 thing I noticed was speed,” says Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights & Strategy. Intel’s horsepower in the set-top is partially responsible for this, but multiple data centers that Intel is building to serve video also were a factor. “A lot of the value comes from what they’ve done on the back end,” says Moorhead. “They have the highest-performance Intel servers and video-encoding technology.” And he notes, “This is live television,” unlike other over-the-top offerings, like those from the TV network consortium Hulu, Apple‘s (AAPL) AppleTV,Netflix (NFLX), or closely held Roku, which merely provide on-demand content from a back catalog. “It’s something I’ve never experienced before” in an Internet offering, Moorhead adds.

No less thrilling is the fact that Intel, which makes $53 billion in yearly revenue from selling chips, and spends billions to make them, is becoming both a hardware and software vendor.

The project is the effort of Erik Huggers and his staff of 350 people. Huggers, 40, won praise for developing the iPlayer for the BBC, a piece of video software that allows one to follow the channel’s TV and radio broadcasts. He came to Intel two years ago to advance efforts to sell chips to set-top makers. He made a bold move in telling his boss that the $4.5 billion TV-chip market wasn’t desirable. “The market was split up between 20 or more silicon providers, and it was a race to the bottom on prices,” says Huggers. “I said, ‘I don’t know how we ever turn that into a profitable market.’ ” Instead, he pleaded, “Release me to go after the $500 billion television market in a very different way.” He got his wish.

Erik Huggers over het televisieproject van Intel (Erik Huggers ons the television project of Intel) [MT Management Team, May 13, 2013] the essence of which is summarized below (the quotes were translated from Dutch):

imageHired in April 2011 and spending with 12 others 3 months on the plan Erik Huggers suggested that instead of manufacturing and selling chips for smart TVs and similar products Intel should take a different course of developing a complete TV solution. He got an approval for that in December 2011 and since he managed to grow the project to a 300+ people organisation working in tight separation from the rest of the Intel and in stealth mode typical of Silicon Valley. He used the so called acquihire approach (a novel thing although used by Facebook very much) to speed up the process when “you at once take a whole team of a company over, but not the company itself”. Intel Media bought in this way a number of “very targeted small businesses”. So it was only twelve months needed to arrive at “a device, the software, the user interface, design, packaging, branding, all services, the back-end and various deals.”

Such urgency was essential “because I think the time for over-the-top live television has arrived.” The product will initially be launched in the U.S. only as it is the largest media market in the world which also happens to be the most difficult one as it is so saturated and “ if you come up with something new, you have to have something very good.” They are going to offer “live TV, catch-up TV, Video On Demand as a transaction model, an iTunes-like service so that you pay per viewing time. And in addition, we will offer what they call in the United States electronic selltrue. You can buy a digital copy of a film in the cloud, which is playable on various devices.” That is there will be various payment models behind the television service of the Intel Media.

It was initially difficult to convince content providers to come on the board. He said that “there are a total of nine parties in America depositing content to consumers, plus another 5 or 6 providers like Comcast. It is a very concentrated market, where we now stand as a newcomer. The balance in this market is very, um, let me just say very interesting. The established parties are very close to each other and have a lot to do with each other. The idea to deliver video over the Internet television is as revolutionary. We will use the infrastructure of the cable company, which is the same infrastructure they sell to consumers. It was so difficult to explain that, now it’s purely for the execution.”

With 300+ people Intel Media will compete in such an environment. It is even more unusual as “we compete with companies like Comcast, which has 80,000 employees, and it’s just one of the many parties that are active in this market” he said. They are going to launch before the end of the year and see the iPod as an example to follow. He said: “Look at the rise of the iPod. Around 2004, in 2005 there were hundreds of MP3 players, but none worked really well. Then came the iPod and was at one time game over for all other players. The current state of affairs of smart television and streaming boxes is similar to the mp3 world for the introduction of the iPod. It is interesting that a lot like Apple, to date at least, very disappointing in television. Apple TV works fine, but it is not revolutionary. ” 

Regarding his first public announcements two months ago (which is detailed in this original post below) he said: “The reason I sit at All Things Digital on stage was because we had to show. Just 4 or 5 weeks before, during CES, senior officials from the media industry had seen our product. Sometimes more than 10 people per company. So between 100 to 200 people have seen the device, and all like to talk. … In addition, we were just starting to roll out the product to Intel employees. First it was tested by fifty families, but we wanted to test it on scale. So currently it is used by 1,000 families in Arizona, California and Oregon. Soon we will go to 5,000 families. They are all Intel household, so with people who are with us on the payroll. Now as it is seen slowly but surely seen by more people, it is better to put a story myself. You don’t have control, but so you can do a twist of your own. You don’t want it through the back door on some blog. But we still have very many details omitted. That we keep it that way, until we are ready.”

End of updates

Excerpts from Video – Dive Into Media: Intel’s Erik Huggers on What’s Next for Web TV [Feb 12, 2013] – the full transcript will follow in a separate section later on:

[00:38] “We have been working for about a year now to set up a new group called Intel Media, … a new group focused on developing an Internet TV platform.”

[~2:00] “For the first time … we will deliver a new consumer electronics product that consumers will buy directly from us or through retail under a new brand. This is obviously associated with Intel brand. It is an Intel powered device, it is a consumer electronics product with beautiful industrial design powered by, obviously, an Intel chip. That’s not where it ends, it’s not just the device. Where it really gets interesting is, we are working with the entire industry to figure out how do we get proper TV delivered via the Internet to consumers.”

ADDITIONAL INSERT BBC iPlayer (Global) – Available for iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch! [BBCiplayerglobal YouTube channel, Sept 28, 2011]

BBC iPlayer has launched on iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch! -http://bit.ly/SRjYWB – here’s the exclusive video guide to the BBC iPlayer app. Download the free app today with taster clips and episodes! Subscribe for unlimited access – even when you’re offline, and watch a selection of the best classic and contemporary British shows on demand. The BBC iPlayer app is currently available in the following countries: Austria, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. Please note, not all programming is available in all countries.

[03:08] “At the BBC we launched the product in 2007 called BBC iPlayer. The iPlayer is the promise to consumers, to audiences that we would make the unmissible truly unmissible. And so what does that mean: basically all the BBC output, everything on radio and television networks, is available from transmission points plus seven days on over 650 different devices. And so this is not a cherry pick of a variety of products for output, this is literally everything. So if you missed something you don’t have to record it because it’s already there. It’s a cloud based service that offers you catch up. [03:50]

ADDITIONAL INSERT BBC WiE: Daniel Danker on evolving the BBC iPlayer [TheBBCAcademy YouTube channel, Aug 9, 2012]

Daniel Danker, general manger, BBC iPlayer, explains how the nation’s favourite catch-up service has evolved. http://www.bbc.co.uk/academy/news/view/wie_iplayer

Android: An update [Dave Price, Head of BBC iPlayer on BBC Internet blog, Dec 12, 2012]: “Android as a platform is becoming increasingly complex and fragmented with a huge difference between video playback capabilities across the 1500+ Android devices.”
BBC has new competitors, warns iPlayer boss Daniel Danker [BBC Ariel, Feb 8, 2013]

Daniel Danker, the general manager for on-demand and iPlayer, said that the BBC’s fiercest and most nimble competitors are no longer likely to be Sky, Channel 4 and ITV.
‘I think we are measuring ourselves against the wrong competitors, because actually the companies that are most likely to be disruptive in what we do are Google through YouTube, Amazon through LoveFilm and Netflix,’ he told Ariel in an exclusive interview on Thursday.

… Today, iPlayer reaches about 25% of the UK every month, he said, but YouTube reaches about 40%. …

… American giant Netflix is leading the way by releasing its drama House of Cards online to its subscribers. It took a gamble by releasing the entire series, a remake of a BBC political drama from 1990, immediately.

Danker, an Israeli-born American who spent 11 years at Microsoft, said the series is ‘pretty good’ and has attracted big names, including Kevin Spacey. He called Netflix ‘innovative and nimble’. …

… The iPlayer manager said that in YouTube’s Soho offices, artists and content creators are being asked to ‘professionalise their content’ at specially built studios. He predicted that it won’t be ‘skateboarding chimpanzees’ for much longer, but high-quality content. …

[~12:00] “I don’t believe that the industry’s ready for pure a’la cart [where you only pay for the channels you want]”, he stated and suggested that this would be a great opportunity to create offers that provide users with greater flexibility. “I believe there’s value in bundles, I believe that is a form of curation” he concluded.

[~ 13:30] “This thing looks like a leap in time of 10-20 years compared to what you have today. That is much more personal, that learns about you, that actually cares about who you are.”

[~14:00] “We think there’s real value in the ability to actually identify the various users. Today, television doesn’t really know anything about you. It’s the same television service for everyone in the household. In order to actually recognise who is there and to offer you your personal experience, rather than having to log in or put your fingerprint or do a retina scan whatever, to make it completely seamless you need a camera. If you don’t like the idea of a camera, you think it’s creepy there is a nice little shutter and you just close the camera” Huggers said.

[~19:00-20:00] “Intel is very interested in getting into consumer businesses, having a direct relationship with those consumers. Intel as a company is making a big shift towards, what Intel calls, becoming an experience driven company.”

[~22:00] “We have gone out of our way to bring a completely new class, new type of skill sets into this crew. And we’ve set the group up in such a way that it is run in its own building, complete own building, with our own security, we have our own culture. We are still proud to be part of Intel, don’t make any mistakes, but this is a new effort.”

[~25:00] “It’s not a value play, it’s a quality play where we’ll create a superior experience for the end user.”

[~35:00] “The model that we are envisioning is a model where live TV and catch up TV all live in the same paradigm. These are not different applications, and so if you’re a programmer why would you want your catch up programs to live in an app somewhere else? Why doesn’t that live under your brand?”


Video – Dive Into Media:
Intel’s Erik Huggers on What’s Next for Web TV – WSJ.com
[Feb 12, 2013]

image

Intel’s Erik Huggers took the stage with Walt Mossberg at D: Dive Into Media on Tuesday [Feb 12, 2013] to talk about the company’s forthcoming TV device that he describes as revolutionary.

My transcript (lead reporter is Walt Mossberg, his second in command is Peter Kafka):

[00:38] We have been working for about a year now to set up a new group called Intel Media. It’s a completely new division with new people, sort of a mix of existing Intel people with a lot of people from outside the company. To give you an example we hired people from Apple, from Jawbone, from Microsoft, from the BBC, and the list goes on, even Netflix and Google. So it’s a new group focused on developing an Internet TV platform.
There’s no other Internet TV platfom? 
There’s quite a few out there but my opinion is that not many have yet actually cracked it, not many have truly delivered.
Have any cracked it in your opinion?
No, actually. That’s my opinion.
Just to be clear. You are talking about becoming a pay TV service to deliver video over the web like instead of paying cable company for video I will pay you.
That’s right. And so for the first time what we will do we will actually deliver a couple things to consumers. We will deliver a new consumer electronics product that consumers will buy directly from us or through retail under a new brand. This is obviously associated with Intel brand. [01:56]
[02:12] It is an Intel powered device,  it is a consumer electronics product with beautiful industrial design powered by, obviously, an Intel chip. That’s not where it ends, it’s not just the device. Where it really gets interesting is, we are working with the entire industry to figure out how do we get proper TV delivered via the Internet to consumers.
This is an over the top service where we will deliver both live television, broadcasts, cable nets and other output, but also have catch up TV and introduce that properly to this market Because I personally think catch up TV still really doesn’t exist here, not as it exists in Europe today. And will have on demand and a host of applications. [02:57]
[03:08] At the BBC we launched the product in 2007 called BBC iPlayer. The iPlayer is the promise to consumers, to audiences that we would make the unmissible truly unmissible. And so what does that mean: basically all the BBC output, everything on radio and television networks, is available from transmission points plus seven days on over 650 different devices. And so this is not a cherry pick of a variety of products for output, this is literally everything. So if you missed something you don’t have to record it because it’s already there. It’s a cloud based service that offers you catch up. [03:50]
In the UK with the BBC what happened was that iPlayer became sort of synonymous with on demand. Just like Xerox is copying and Kleenex is tissues. So I think that in this market we have yet to see a proper catch up TV service, like the one that I just described. [04:09]
[04:45] When you say proper TV, I was struck by the term of that, I like that, proper TV, because you are talking about what I get through my cable box. And this is the key, because I have a Roku, I have an Apple TV on my big television at home. They give me a lot of interesting things but they don’t get me cable. … the cable box right up to pay a lot of money to the cable company and the effect of three things. You tell me you’re going to be one thing that would do almost three things? 
Our ultimate vision is you need one …
Ultimate vision? That means … 
Ultimately we think there is an all in one solution. … Rome wasn’t built in a day. It takes time sometimes but where we will start, to be clear, is: we will have live TV, catch up TV, consistent. We will have on demand and we’ll have a set of applications. But the proper TV piece is something that I want to just pause for a second. Why do I say that?
[05:57] I think that what we’ve seen so far in the industry are sort of … it’s like the interface is that you have to date on all these variety of television connected devices [the so called smart TVs] they all look like Web pages from the 1990s blown up to ten foot.  … They’re pretty  clumsy to use, they are hard to use and … When I say proper TV the other thing I think about is I think about when my five year old came to me over the weekend literally, and he is — like probably every other five year old — a wizard with iPads and Android devices, he is completely self sufficient. Yet he comes to me on Saturday morning and gives me two remote controls and says ‘Daddy can you please put up …’ some PBS stuff, I forgot what it was, because he literally doesn’t know how to use it. It is impossible. [06:56]
[07:53] So are you doing something different or are you going to do what I am already getting?
We are going to do a lot of things different.
First of all, in the pay TV space today what you get from experience perspective is, let’s talk about the EPG (electronic program guide) for just a second. EPG today is equivalent to a spreadsheet, it’s basically columns and columns and rows and rows, and you have to go through and through and through it, until you’re blue in the face. It is not very friendly, it is not very easy to use, and it is sort of feels like, it reminds me of my days of my first computer, the Commodore 64. There’s a lot of room for improvement there. If you look at what people are used to today on iPads, on iPhones, on Apple TVs and other devices out there, there is a massive gap. So I think that’s one, the incredible user experience that is completely easy to use. [We have] the people that we brought over from the UK, the people that did the iPlayer UI. So we’ve got a team that really know how to do this sort of stuff.
[8:00] The second thing is that we’ll have a scenario where you don’t need a lot of different inputs anymore. You do not need to have all these different HDMI inputs. Today in my home I had to buy an HDMI switch because I have too many devices. [09:22]
[10:15] The bundle thing that Peter [Kafka] mentioned is really really important. It’s a piece of the puzzle. There’s loads of people who deeply resent their cable and satellite company, for a number of reasons, but one of them is this bundle. I have to buy all these channels, I don’t watch all these channels, I don’t want all these channels. … You are going to revolutionize TV, you are going to bring us this box, but a minute ago I heard you say you’re still going to have these bundles. Is that right? 
[11:17] I agree with you that what consumers want is choice, control and convenience. I do believe that there is value in bundles actually. The whole world talks about curation because there’s such a mass of information out there. In a way if bundles are done right, bundles are bundled right, for the lack of a better way to explain it, then there’s real value in that. … I think there are opportunities out there to create a much more flexible environment where the end user has more control than what they have today. I don’t believe that the industry’s ready for pure a’la cart. [11:56]
[12:19] All I’m talking about … is the fact that I believe there’s value in bundles. I believe that is a form of curation. [12:27] … it’s somewhere in the middle [between current bundles and pure a’la cart] [12:34]
So it’s still bundles, but more intelligent bundles, or smaller bundles … 
That’s a great way to explain things.
… things that are more logical to me as a consumer?
As a consumer.
I may be so glad to not see the bundle Comcast makes me buy that I’ll say these guys at least giving me a better set of choices
That’s the hope.
It’s not a pure a’la cart but at least a better set of choices 
It’s way towards more control, more choice for audience. [13:00]
Are we going to save money?
What this is not about for sure, it’s not about a value play. … What I believe is that if you get a vastly superior experience where the delta literally, when you get to see it ready to show you, this thing looks like a leap in time of 10-20 years compared to what you have today. That is much more personal, that learns about you, that actually cares about who you are versus being just … [13:40]
The boxes would be a caring box? 
We hope so. …
… There is a less positive way to spin that caring box, this is the box that watches what you are watching, and targets you with advertising … 
We think there is real value in the ability to actually identify the various users. Today TV doesn’t really know anything about you. It’s the same TV service for everyone in the household.
… little creepiness here?
I don’t think so because one of the features we put on there is, in order to actually recognize who is there and to offer you your personal experience, rather than having to log in or put on your fingerprint or do a retina scan whatever, to make it completely seamless, you need a camera, but if you don’t like the idea of a camera, you think it’s creepy there is a nice little shutter and you just close the camera and off your uncle. [15:00]
… But cameras in iPads [etc.] are for those people to turn them on if they want to have a chatter, to take pictures something with it. It’s not looking at them for the purpose of serving up ads based on them. …  
[15:58] But there is value. Let me talk about the value of a camera if we have to explain that. Imagine a scenario where you are watching your favorite TV show whenever that may be. … The idea of television back when I grow at least was that it was truly a social experience, a family experience. You’re together in the living room. What if you could actually watch that episode completely synchronized across the country and have a real social experience.
… but we are talking about the camera watching you for the purpose of targeting, and that’s not the same as voluntarily Peter and I turning on the camera
[17:02] I didn’t talk about that we will use the camera for targeting. What I’ve talked about  … it’s gonna watch you because: imagine the following scenario … I’ll give you another example. I have a Netflix account, and my five and nine year old will use that Netflix account all the time. When its my time to use that Netflix account with my wife the recommendations that I get are usually cartoons. They are not relevant to me because it’s a household account versus a personal account. That sort of the enviropnment is the living room. But if I can just … Want your kids a separate account. I’m cheap I am Dutch. … If you have the ability to actually distinguish that it’s you or Peter, or me or the kids, or me and the kids, then you can create an environment where you can recommend me ads actually relevant for you.
[18:14] Why is Intel getting into the consumer business? 
Over the weekend I visited the Intel museum for the first time. … Tjere was a quote on the wall that actually stuck with me. One of our founders, Robert Noyce, he said, apparently, don’t be encumbered by past history. You go off and do something wonderful. So that’s what we’re trying to do. We’re trying to get closer to the end user. We understand that the end user audiences have a much bigger control these days over the direction of travel.
[18:56] When you use the term end user then you’re not all the way there yet? 
Audiences, audiences … We talk about one thing. Back of our card, of the Intel Media card, it says: the audience is at the heart of everything we do. So we really care about audiences.
[19:32] Is it just because Robert Noyce said … or is it because Intel’s principal business making chips for PCs has been flat or down in recent years? 
Intel is very interested in getting into consumer businesses, having a direct relationship with those consumers. Intel as a company is making a big shift towards, what Intel calls, becoming an experience driven company. So if you think about it what better way to learn what experience driven is all about than through digital media, through a service that directly relates to audiences, that directly delivers experiences to audiences. [20:16]
…. [Will the coming CEO sign off for that as well?] …
[20:40] Intel Media is governed by a small board, some of the most senior people at Intel. While our CEO is certainly a very important proponent of what we’re doing here with Intel Media there is a very broad support for …
[20:58] Why are you going to be better at having that kind of resonance with the consumer than big companies that happened to have a lot of consumer wealth already? Apple, Microsoft … Google. These are not companies that have to come from someplace different. They are right there in the consumer space. Look at this room and look at the logos of the devices, and they don’t say Intel. Intel somewhere in the device but … The point is what makes you thinking to compete with these guys? 
In the end of the day all comes down to people … people, people, people. I spent the last twelve months putting together an incredible leadership team. We have a lady from Apple who’s been there for literally twelve years. She launched most of their iProducts. She’s our head of marketing. We have a gentleman from Jawbone who put Jawbone, the Bluetooth company, in twenty thousand retail outlets around the world. We have a gentleman from Microsoft who built the Mediaroom platform that AT&T U-verse runs on. The list goes on and on. We have gone out of our way to bring a completely new class, new type of skill sets into this crew. And we’ve set the group up in such a way that it is run in its own building, complete own building, with our own security, we have our own culture. We are still proud to be part of Intel, don’t make any mistakes, but this is a new effort. [22:43]
In many ways I sort of compare it with … when I’m [going] back in the day when I was at Microsoft, many years ago, there was this moment when Microsoft indeed got into the gaming console business, and a lot of people said what are they doing, you make enterprise software you don’t know anything about this space. Yet ten years later or maybe more it’s the enormous success … [23:10]
[23:26] Why do you think no one else [from those already consumer companies] has stepped forward [in the TV space] so far? 
I don’t know frankly. It’s hard to tell. I mean those companies [already in the consumer space and trying] should speak for themselves.
[24:16] We’ve taken the leap of faith that time is here. I mean broadband capability is here, it works. Compression of video is completely changing landscapes again. I mean we are moving to a new codec HEVC [H.265] which again compresses fifty percent better than H.264. So the ability to deliver super high quality video via the Internet live and on demand is here today. We have the silicon and the software, and the knowledge and the know how to create an incredible product with an incredible UI, with a new user paradigm. Rather than wait for others to jump into that market and see it take off we’re jumping in, and we’re going to try and make … [24:57]
[25:22] But it’s not a value play, this is not a kind of cutting our cable bill
It is not a value play, it is a quality play. It is a play where we will create a superior experience for the end user.

[30:57] You’ve got all these connected devices already. Why just not build apps for them?
When we started the discussion we talked about the fact that I built this thing called iPlayer in the UK. We made that service available to over 650 different devices. Everything from phones to tablets, to game consoles, to smart TVs, to Blueray … literally anything that plays back audio and video as I play on it. … It’s fair to say that with the experience that we’ve had over there in the UK, this is definitely a direction that we’re going to follow with this as well.
Why build the device it’s an excellent question. I happen to believe that if we want to deliver the experience that we have in mind for the living room there is no platform out there today where we can do that. In order to deliver on our vision of that new experience you need to control everything, you need to control the chip, you need to control the operating system, you need to control the app players, you need to control the sensors etc. That sort of the reason why we were there. If there were platforms out there where we could deliver exactly what we have in mind there wouldn’t be a need to do it but there isn’t. [32:15]
[32:30] At the end of the day I believe in the world where you have a good, better, [and] best experience. The best experience that we have in mind. We will deliver on that device that we will ship and sell to audiences.
[32:55] The programmers are taking billions and billions of dollars from the cable companies. What incentive do they have to unbundle and work in different ways? No matter how beautiful your devices are going to be, what incentive do they have to break their established business models and give you some of their content, no matter how much are they getting paid for?
[33:12] First of all I didn’t say that we will unbundle. What I said we will create new bundles. … But your question is a very valid question.
Let’s take a look at history. We went from over the air television to cable TV, to satellite TV, to telco driven television. Constantly there were new forms of distribution out there. For programmers to get new distribution is a good thing in the end of the day. So I believe that this is just another step in the evolution of distribution. The internet has finally got to a point where you can deliver a true television experience where channel zapping becomes the same experience that we lost twenty years ago when we went digital. In the analog days when you zap to channel it was instant. In today’s digital world if you zap a channel you have 2-3 seconds of nothing in your waiting. We can bring an incredible TV experience via the Internet to consumers, and that is a real opportunity for programmers.
The final thing I would say is that the model that we are envisioning is a model where live TV and catch up TV all live in the same paradigm. These are not different applications, and so if you’re a programmer why would you want your catch up programs to live in an app somewhere else? Why doesn’t that live under your brand? If you were an NBC or something like that, why do I need to go to the service provider catch up service to find the NBC programs when actually I wanted to find it through … [34:58]
[35:14] The ability to wirelessly beam things from these devices to your TV, which Apple brands AirPlay and other companies have something like it, but I think Apple’s is the only one that’s really taken off and a lot people use so far, is that can be a feature of what you do? Wireless beaming from my other devices?
This is certainly something that we’re looking for sure. It is an important use case where consumers have obviously a multitude of media capable devices, whether it’s photos, audio or video. The ability to display that on another screen a certain something I’m of intense interest.


Historical evidence

Insight: Intel’s plans for virtual TV come into focus [Reuters, June 8, 2012]

Intel is counting on facial-recognition technology for targeted ads and a team of veteran entertainment dealmakers to win over reluctant media partners for its new virtual television service

But so far it’s proving a challenge to get the service off the ground, thanks to an unwillingness on the part of major media content providers to let Intel unbundle and license specific networks and shows at a discount to what cable and satellite partners pay.
Intel, the world’s largest chipmaker, has kept its strategy to launch a slimmed down cable TV service under wraps as the tech giant risks getting into a completely new line of business.
According to five sources who have been negotiating with Intel for months, the company is emphasizing a set-top box employing Intel technology that can distinguish who is watching, potentially allowing Intel to target advertising.
The set-top box pitched by Intel doesn’t identify specific people, but it could provide general data about viewers’ gender or whether they’re adults or children to help target advertising, two sources said.
Intel’s plans put it in the middle of Silicon Valley’s battle for the living room. Heavyweights such as Apple, Amazon and Google believe the $100 billion U.S. cable television ecosystem – dominated by major distributors such as Comcast and DirecTV Group and program makers like Walt Disney Co and Time Warner Inc. – is ripe for disruption for reasons ranging from shifting viewer habits to ever-increasing programming costs.
While none of these companies have so far been able to make major inroads, Intel thinks it can build a better set-top box and over-the-top subscription service to deliver TV content to consumers, even though the initiative catapults it into virgin market territory. A successful TV service showcasing Intel technology could be a big step toward making its chips prevalent in more living room devices.
“If they can create a virtual network and it incorporates proprietary Intel technology, they could certainly bring something different to the subscription TV model.” said JMP analyst Alex Gauna.
Intel’s offering aims to exploit one of the TV industry’s major issues: the reliability, or lack thereof, of Nielsen ratings data on audiences. Nielsen has long been the dominant provider of TV ratings, but the accuracy of its data has come under attack by some network programmers, who argue that its polling system of 50,000 homes is antiquated for the digital age.
For its part, Intel claims that the new interactive features in its set-top box would add greater value to TV advertising and help offset reduced revenue from licensing fees for network owners.
“They’ve told us the technology is going to be so much more interactive with ads that you can make more money. But it’s just a little unproven,” said one executive who has been involved in the talks.
An Intel representative declined to comment for this story.
Chip features making it easier for Hollywood studios to protect content streamed to computers, as well as tools for detecting faces and analyzing audiences, are examples of current proprietary technology that Intel would like to see widely adopted.
BEYOND PCs
While Intel’s processors power 80 percent of the world’s PCs, its chips have not achieved a significant presence in smartphones, tablets and other interconnected devices. Intel executives say they are eager to make sure its semiconductors play major roles in new markets with big growth potential.
According to a company source, ensuring that its chips become prevalent in home entertainment devices would be the driving reason behind any Internet TV service it launches.
Comcast, for instance, recently announced the gradual rollout of an Intel-based set-top box that customers can control with their smarpthones. Called “X1,” the platform will rely on data centers packed with high-end servers — which typically also use Intel chips.
Intel last year wound down a push to make chips specifically for “smart” TVs after Google TV, which it had backed, failed to make a major splash with consumers.
At the same time, it formed the Intel Media business group with a mandate of promoting digital content on Intel-based platforms.
According to sources, Intel is proposing to media companies a service could include both a bundle of TV channels similar to a normal cable package and an on-demand component.
ENLISTING HEAVYWEIGHTS
Intel is intent on launching its video service before the end of the year, sources said. Original plans called for it to be launched by November, said one of the sources, but that deadline likely will not be met.
The biggest problem Intel faces is its inability to reach deals with major content providers, which are reluctant to license their networks and TV shows at rates that could undercut their larger established cable and satellite partners.
Intel wants to keep its costs down by licensing smaller packages of TV networks instead of replicating the basic cable TV bundle of more than 100 channels. But network owners won’t agree to smaller bundles without being paid a premium for the channels they choose to license.
“Why would I want you to take subscribers away from another distributor at a lower price?,” asked the same media executive who spoke with Reuters on condition of anonymity.
To change that mindset, Intel has assembled a team of television industry veterans well-schooled in negotiating distribution deals. Leading the group as head of Intel Media is Erik Huggers, who worked on media at Microsoft before going to the BBC. Huggers enlisted as an adviser Garth Ancier, who most recently served as president for BBC Worldwide America and before that worked at NBC, FOX, and Disney.
In addition to Huggers and Ancier, sources said, two other names prominent in TV circles have emerged as consultants for Intel: entertainment lawyer Ken Ziffren and former MTV executive Nicole Browning.
Browning, who previously negotiated on the other side of the table for MTV, has been handling some of the talks with partners, sources said.
Ziffren built his reputation representing Hollywood talent – he was instrumental in negotiating the deal that returned the “Tonight Show” to Jay Leno. Lesser known is his firm’s work negotiating deals for DirecTV’s video-on-demand service and carriage agreements for pay-TV network Starz.
But even that quartet of executives may not be enough to resolve an intractable problem, which is that content companies have little incentive to offer their channels to Intel at a discount and Intel is loathe to pay a premium.
“They’d love a better deal but they won’t get one,” said Needham & Co analyst Laura Martin of Intel. “The industry has always worked on volume discounts.”
Underscoring the difficulty insurgent tech companies face in securing content, Microsoft in January indefinitely postponed plans for its own online TV subscription service after deciding that licensing costs were too high, according to people familiar with those discussions.
And therein lies that dilemma that Intel and other insurgent over-the-top providers must tackle before their big plans can be realized.

Intel eyes Internet-based TV service: WSJ [Reuters, March 12, 2012]

Chipmaker Intel Corp is developing an Internet-based TV service for consumers and has been promoting it with media companies, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the effort.

The world’s top chipmaker plans to create a “virtual cable operator” that would offer media companies’ TV channels in a bundle over the Internet, the WSJ said.

An Intel spokeswoman declined to comment on the story.

The product could use an Intel set-top box and Intel’s name, and the chipmaker has told its potential partners it wants to start the service before the end of the year, the WSJ said.

In October, Intel wound down its efforts to make chips for digital “smart” TVs, although it continues to make chips for set-top boxes.

At the same time, it formed the Intel Media business group, headed by former BBC executive Erik Huggers, aimed at promoting digital content on Intel-based platforms.

Intel winds down smart TV business [Digital TV Europe, Oct 13, 2011]

Intel has ditched its move into internet connected TVs after closing its Digital Home Group.

The company will continue to supply chips to gateway devices and set-top boxes but will wind down its Digital Home business. Digital Home Group staff will be relocated to focus on netbooks, smartphones and tablet devices.

Erik Huggers, a high profile appointment from BBC Future Media in January, will remain at Intel where he will lead a new group called Intel Media.

Intel’s decision is reportedly due to a lack of demand for its chipsets for internet-enabled flatscreen TVs. Intel’s Atom CE4100 chips currently are used to power to a variety of devices including  Sony’s Google TVs and the Logitech Revue Google TV-enabled set-top, but also the D-Link Boxee box as well as French ISP Free’s Freebox Révolution and Liberty Global’s Samsung-built Horizon set-tops.

Intel Looks Beyond Smartphones, Tablets & TVs [Information Express blog, Oct 19, 2011]

– Appoints Huggers to Found & Run New Intel Media Group
– Digital Home Group Merged into Netbook & Tablet Group  

Intel, under the hands-on direction and guidance of CEO Paul Otellini, wants to look beyond smartphones, tablets, TVs and consumer PCs, way beyond, so it can plot a course for its future, not just for the near term. To that end, Intel has taken two giant steps.  

It has created a new group called Intel Media that Erik Huggers will head. Huggers’ Digital Home Group, except for smart TVs, will be merged into the existing Netbooks and Tablets Group that Doug Davis will continue to operate. The smart TV operation is being closed down except for existing customers.

Intel sees the TV market as currently being a “footage per dollar” one. Consumers set a budget for what they can spend and then try to buy as big of a screen as possible for less than their budget. Evidence of that is 60-inch TVs that are going for $1,200 and a 42-inch LED smart TV from LG, this year’s model, being sold by Amazon for $650 including delivery to the home and the chip making giant Broadcom exiting the market a few weeks ago. 
The economic downturn and increased competition has put brand name makers of TV sets under tremendous pricing pressure. Sony, once the king of high-end TV sets, has lost billions of dollars in the TV market and says it expects to lose millions more. Sony, Toshiba and Hitachi are working together with a government-backed fund to spin off and merge their LCD businesses. (Why not? The US did almost the same for US car makers with loans and advances for “green” cars.) 

No one has cracked the smart TV platform yet and that’s why so many have popped up. In some respects Intel is doing what the smart TV industry will have to do at some point: stop and ask where we are going. It’s like the early days of MP3 players, Huggers said, when there were lots of MP3 players but no one was buying. Suddenly Apple entered the market with the iPod and the iTunes store and player, perfectly synched, and consumers started buying millions of its players and songs from iTunes.  

Perhaps the straw that will break the camel’s back in TV pricing is that two major new factories are being built in China to make displays, according to Intel. The golden age for buying TV sets will continue but goodness help you if you’re trying to make them for a profit. 
As long as the pricing pressure on TVs continues, TV set makers don’t want to add any feature they don’t have to — although it’s widely acknowledged that the tipping point for smart TVs has been passed. All TV sets will be smart, just like they all now have color. 
There’s another reason for Intel to meld IPTVs and tablets. As Apple has clearly shown, successful CE makers will have one silicon and one ecosystem. Apple, for example, is not going to use a different silicon family or ecosystem for apps and online store than the ones it uses for iPhones and iPads if it were to launch a line of TV sets. 

Let Us Praise the Dead Digital Home Group

The Digital Home Group had some notable successes handling the CE versions of the Atom processor:
– The Boxee Box
– The failed (through no fault of Intel) Google TV that Sony andLogitech made
– The IPTV STB Comcast ordered from Pace
– The snazzy Samsung STB that Liberty Global’s UPC ordered 

The follow up on those and others like them will be handled in Intel’s Netbook and Tablet Group. 
Intel sees a major opportunity in IPTV boxes — media processors and the gateway/home network businesses. It sees the synergy that’s emerging between tablets and smart TVs plus other smart consumer devices. 
The move to all-IP infrastructures by the cablecos and the links between TV sets and tablets were loudly obvious at The Cable Show in Chicago.

The world’s telcos started with IP for their TV technology and the cablecos are rushing to catch up. The race to integrate tablets and TVs takes two forms:  

– The use of the tablet as a second viewing device — a mobile TV within the home. 
– The tablet and smartphone becomes a companion screen to what’s on the TV, one where viewers can chat with friends and the show’s stars about what they’re watching. It goes beyond allowing viewers to “click” on advertising links to learn more about a product. Ask any parent of teenagers about it.  

Intel spokesman Claudine Mangano said, “We believe the future of TV is in IP delivery and multi-screen usages and are aligning our focus to these areas, and with other top corporate imperatives that include ultrabooks, smartphones and tablets.” She made it clear that Intel is not abandoning its existing smart TV customers.  

Intel Media Looks Way Ahead

Intel Media is being founded to look beyond the current generation of smartphones, tablets, TVs, PCs and IPTV. It is mandated to answer, “What technology will be needed as the digital media industry progresses?”  

Intel is not clear publicly on what Intel Media’s mandate is but in Erik Huggers it has put one of the industry’s leading digital media executives in charge. Huggers is not talking about it very much except to say Intel is very, very serious and ambitious in digital media and that he is super-excited by Otellini’s challenge. 
Huggers was previously at the BBC as director of the its future media and technology division until Intel hired him earlier this year. Before that he worked for Microsoft in various digital media projects. 
With impossible hurdles in front of him, Huggers led the technology dinosaur BBC into the digital media era. He oversaw the launch of the BBC’s iPlayer for catch up TV. Launched in 2007, it was years ahead of its time and still ahead of anything in the States. 
He nearly led the BBC to the forefront in smart TV platforms with Project Canvass, now called YouView. It is an attempt to develop a standard smart TV platform that lets developers easily add apps and CE makers to easily add to their gear. Unfortunately the BBC Trust, which runs the BBC, decided to play politics instead of getting out of the way.
It forced the BBC to bring in seven other companies such as BT, each with a different opinion as to what should be done, to help develop and deploy YouView. Know the story about the committee and the camel? Well, that’s what happened. YouView is still not on the market and the rival HbbTV standard is becoming dominant on continental Europe. 
A common smart TV platform would have benefitted consumers and CE makers just as Windows did for PC makers and consumers. Instead the world is awash in smart TV platforms — all incompatible and inconsistent in their user interface — and with some companies changing platforms from year-to-year. 

The closest Huggers comes to revealing anything about Intel Media is to say, “For Intel to be successful in digital media, it must have the best access to digital content.” He then says that Amazon is showing the way with its Kindle Fire.  

Intel wants Intel Media to sail out into the future of digital media and see what’s there. It has selected the best man for that task. Perhaps Huggers will again be called “director of future media and technology” as he was at the BBC.

Innovation in Media [Erik Huggers on Intel Capital, Global Summit 2011, Nov 15, 2011]

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Huggers joins CMI supervisory board [CMI press release, Oct 27, 2011]

Consolidated Media Industries, the innovative European digital media group, is delighted to announce that Erik Huggers is joining its Supervisory Board. The Intel Executive and former BBC Future Media & Technology director, has an extensive international track record at the forefront of digital media innovation.
“Erik Huggers really understands how innovative technology is changing the behaviour of media consumers worldwide,” said CMI President and CEO Bart-Jan van Genderen. “He will play a key role in the realization of CMI’s international ambitions. Erik’s experience and vision on global media, innovative consumer services and digital content creation are of tremendous value to us. We’re delighted such a talented person is joining our Board to share his insights and expertise.”
“CMI is one of the most digitally savvy media enterprises in Europe” said Erik Huggers, Corporate Vice President of Intel Media. “I feel privileged to join this team and look forward to working closely with the other Board members during this important phase of CMI’s growth.”
Erik Huggers Career
Erik Huggers is currently Corporate Vice President and General Manager of Intel Media and a member of Intel’s Management Committee. Erik’s mission is to establish Intel as a global leader in consumer software and digital media services.
Prior to his position at Intel, Huggers has worked with Endemol Entertainment as Director of Business Development for its interactive division. He then joined Microsoft, where he led the global business development for Windows Media Technologies.
He joined the BBC in 2007 and became a member of the BBC’s Executive Board. He was appointed Director of BBC Future Media & Technology and during his tenure was responsible for the successful roll-out of BBC Online, BBC iPlayer, Mobile and Red Button services. All these technologies were designed to help audiences enjoy easy access to BBC content, on demand and on any device. Huggers also held responsibility for managing the Broadcast and Enterprise Technology group, BBC Archives, as well as leading the Research & Development department.

Intel Names BBC Executive to Lead Digital Home Effort [Intel Newsroom post, Jan 18, 2011]

Intel Corporation today announced that Erik Huggers will serve as corporate vice president and general manager of the company’s Digital Home Group and become a member of Intel’s Management Committee. Huggers is director of the BBC’s Future Media & Technology division and serves as a member of the BBC’s Executive Board. He replaces interim general manager Brad Daniels.
“Erik Huggers’ proven track record of managing a variety of digital media businesses will be an extraordinary asset to Intel’s digital home initiative,” said Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini. “Erik’s background and vision for delivering new platforms, interactive content and services to consumers are an outstanding fit for Intel, and I am thrilled to welcome such a talented person to drive this key strategic business for Intel. We look forward to him joining our team.”
Huggers joined the BBC in 2007 and is responsible for delivering BBC content over the Internet, interactive TV and mobile, helping audiences enjoy programming using a wide variety of devices from any location. He is also responsible for managing the BBC’s Broadcast and Enterprise Technology Group and BBC Archives, as well as leading the BBC’s Research and Development activities.
Huggers has long been at the forefront of digital media innovation. Prior to joining the BBC, he was with Microsoft where he led the global business development for Windows Media Technologies. Before joining Microsoft, Huggers worked with Endemol Entertainment as director of business development for its interactive division.
“I look forward to joining one of the leading technology companies in the world,” said Huggers. “This is a tremendous opportunity to build a new business for silicon, software and services to unlock the potential of high-quality connected media experiences in the living room.”

Intellect Consumer Electronics Conference 2011 – Keynote presentation by Intel’s Eric Huggers [IntellectTechnology YouTube channel, Aug 2, 2011]

Keynote presentation by Eric Huggers from Intel at the Intellect Consumer Electronics Conference 2011: Future of Digital Entertainment.

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One on One with Erik Huggers [Intel Free Press, Aug 18, 2011]

Former BBC executive heading up Intel’s consumer electronics efforts on management, smart TV and life.

When Intel went looking for a new leader to replace departing executive Eric Kim as head of the Digital Home Group, they went to someone who knew very little about silicon.
But through his work at the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) as director of the Future Media & Technology organization, and Microsoft, where he drove a wide variety of digital media initiatives, Erik Huggers is no stranger to digital media innovation.
In the following Q&A, Huggers, a native of The Netherlands, talks about why he joined Intel, how the company needs to get into the heads of digitally savvy teenagers, and why his new user experience design team is in London is a key asset.
Since joining Intel 4 months ago, have you ever asked yourself, “What have I gotten myself into here?”
On day one. I’ll tell you the honest truth. Let me first say, I do not regret joining Intel for a second. I’ve been overwhelmed by the warm reception I’ve gotten.
When I was at the BBC as an executive board member in a media and entertainment company, you get a certain set of privileges when it comes to office spaces.
I had a proper executive suite on the top of the building, lots of windows, a living room set up in my office, projectors, televisions. That’s how it’s done for those companies for the last 90 years.
When I arrived here on day one and they showed me to my cube on floor five [in the Robert Noyce Building of Intel’s Santa Clara, Calif. headquarters], I literally thought, what have I done?
I’ll adapt, don’t get me wrong. But the delta on day one between the executive suite and my new cube (laughs). I had a bit of detox to go through, I think.
So when I moved [in 2007] from Microsoft to the BBC I had people in front of BBC Television Centre dressed up in these chemical nuclear suits picketing against my appointment.
At Intel, I’ve only been warmly welcomed by colleagues and folks around the business. And so far, it’s been an amazing 4 months.
During your short tenure at Intel, have you seen areas where we can improve?
As someone who’s been here for 4 months, I don’t claim to have tons of wisdom. I was surprised by the number of steering groups and meetings that happened. Some of these meetings are like professional debating societies, where there are armies of Intel people talking about incredible minutia. I would’ve thought we would be fleeter of foot.
In these meetings, I am surprised by the number of people doing email. If you don’t want to be in a meeting, get out. Don’t do mail. Close your laptop.
One of the things that I really learned being in the media industry directly and indirectly for 15, 20 years now, is that what those industries do really well is put the audience at the heart of everything they do. I don’t think that’s what we do today.
What we talk about is valid stuff like the next process node, or putting more transistors on a die, or can we do more gigahertz or flips or flops or whatever we measure, and we get really excited — for good reasons. But what’s more important is: What does this stuff enable for the consumer?
And I’m not talking about the people who buy our technologies and build end-products. I mean the person who buys the end-product. How is what we build valuable to a 15-year-old who’s completely connected?
We need that hardcore technical super-engineering capability that we have in spades here. But we also need the audience insight.
Finally, I’m a big supporter of our investments in software development, and I think that’s absolutely critical. We need to attract the best possible engineering talent in order to take a bit more control over our own destiny as a company.
Can you talk more about user experience?
Everyone talks about user experience at Intel these days. I’ve come to the conclusion that most people don’t know what they’re talking about.
We have great talent inside Intel, don’t get me wrong. Genevieve Bell and the team [Interaction and Experience Research (IXR) group in Intel Labs] clearly get it.
We need to bring top talent that can execute on that user experience and design piece into Intel so that starts to influence our culture, our way of thinking, how we think about products, the audience. So, we just hired a user experience design crew in London.
Why London?
Here in the Silicon Valley, when it comes to those sorts of skills, it’s impossible for us to — well not impossible — but it’s very difficult for us to compete, because you’re competing with Facebook, Apple, Google. We don’t have that same sort of competitive situation in the UK right now, and traditionally the UK has been a hub for design talent.
Plus, the people that I’ve been able to attract I know very well, because they worked in my organization. These are the guys that have designed industry award-winning services across television, telephone, tablets, PCs.
I think bringing that expertise into Intel will influence the direction of travel for whatever we do in next-generation silicon, next-generation software, next-generation services, so that we start with that audience in mind, and then we work our way back.
So in 2 years, where do you see smart TVs and Intel’s play?
My hope is that our play in smart TV is going to be more than just silicon. Silicon is absolutely a critical element to get right, and I would argue that the silicon engineering team has performed miracles.
Just having that platform in your living room means nothing if there’s no content, no services, no applications, if there isn’t a vibrant ecosystem of third party ISVs and media companies who target that platform as a means of reaching the consumer and building a viable business.
So is DHG only about smart TV?
I think it’s important to realize that we have some pretty interesting early momentum. Getting Comcast to work with us is a huge milestone. Getting other service providers to take us seriously, like Free in France, a wonderful success story, and Sony on Google TV. As Intel, we’re going beyond the PC. We have early glimpses of what that world could look like in DHG. We have shipping products, we have customers.
My entire career has been dedicated to digital media. And consumers do not care whether it’s consumed on a TV, a PC, a phone or a tablet. It doesn’t matter.
Consumers today are hungry for taking control over their digital media consumption.
And so to me, DHG is not just about television. DHG can potentially help the rest of Intel with our digital media ambitions.
How would people at the BBC and Microsoft describe your management style?
In some cases, if a project is going completely off the rails, maybe the management style is slightly more autocratic and directive and hands-on and micromanaging. In other cases, you have a great leadership team in place and they’re ticking along quite well, it’s much more coaching and supporting and helping resolve blocking issues. I don’t think there’s such a thing as a single style.
Dutch people are very direct, and they call it as they see it, and I think that’s very important.
Is there some area of management that you’ve had to improve upon?
No one’s perfect. Everyone has opportunities to improve their day to day work, the way they interact with others. I think everyone always has to work on communication style and over-communicating, because just because you think something doesn’t mean that everyone automatically understands what you’re saying.
What I’ve found is that when I get bored of the message, that’s when it really starts to ring through with other people.
Who was your best manager?
Two individuals that I have in mind were both entrepreneurial, self-starters, not afraid of managing up or managing down.
They also were able to create teamwork, group spirit, and didn’t necessarily pit their best people against each other. A bit of creative tension is good, but animosity and negativity, that’s simply not good.
What made you decide to come to Intel?
[President and CEO] Paul Otellini convinced me that he was absolutely, completely, and utterly dead serious about moving Intel beyond the PC.
The PC was going to remain critically important as were servers, but he was dead-set on making sure that we as an organization were going to be successful in phones, in tablets, in television, and whatever other form or factors comes along. We’re going to move from a PC company to be a compute company.
How do you balance work with life?
I’m passionate about what I do. This is not for me about a paycheck. I want to be part of an organization and contribute to an organization and lead an organization that has the ambition to change the world, change the industry.
When you’re mission-driven like that, putting in the long hours doesn’t matter. You’re passionate about it, you love what you do, you enjoy it, that’s what gets you out of bed every day. And so, work/life balance is tough, but I’m fortunate that I’ve got a brilliant wife who’s very understanding and forgiving.
How do you relieve stress?
What I do is I talk all day with customers, with partners, with employees, with colleagues. To relieve some stress, I like to be quiet. Maybe simple stuff like watch a movie or go for a walk.
What are your hobbies, besides traveling?
I’m passionate about technology, keeping up-to-speed with the latest and greatest of what’s happening on the web, what’s happening with consumer electronics. I get the latest widgets and gizmos and try them out.
My wife is a Formula 1 fan, and because of her, I get kind of forced into it.

Media City Forum : Erik Huggers Presentation [SalfordUniversity YouTube channel, March 5, 2010]

Erik Huggers delivers his presentation to Media City Forum and talks about opportunities for Higher Education (Part 5 of 5)

Microsoft entertainment as an affordable premium offering to be built on the basis of the Xbox console and Xbox LIVE services

OR create interactive content as a premium offering together with partners using Kinect technology as a starter OR moving Microsoft Xbox 360 to ‘entertainment console’ OR leaving the good quality commodities to others and going for a premium brand with Xbox as well OR Xbox 360 and Microsoft’s Gaming Future – D: Dive Into Media [WSJDigitalNetwork YouTube channel, Feb 12, 2013]

[04:26] “Our focus is to really transition [Microsoft’s Xbox] to an entertainment device,” Nancy Tellem said Monday at All Things D’s D: Dive Into Media in Laguna Niguel, Calif. “We have thousands of movies, sports events, live events.” [04:34]
[05:14] “We’re looking at a whole variety of types of content. What I call it premium, which is aligned with HBO and Showtime quality, networking cable quality” she said. “Then, of course we’re looking at alternative, reality, live events. All of the premium. It’s a premium service. Also we are looking at each content as what it would be best. Whether in format, whether in time. So we are not constrained in the same way traditional media distribution companies are, having to produce something at certain length. We have 46 million global users all connected. With all the premium service we offer may be behind, being part of the the membership.” [06:05]
In addition to producing content internally, Tellem said she was also looking at partnering with “traditional media partners, studios and creatives.”
“[The] Xbox brand stands for the best, most interactive, most amazing entertainment you can get,” Yusuf Mehdi said, comparing it to low-cost media streamers like the Roku. [08:35] “Our current and future investment is about doing the things that are big and premium. Let really do things that are amazing for customers.” [08:43]
Would you become a pay-TV provider? [09:18] “For questions like this it always goes back to what do we feel we can really be best in the world we are doing, what’s our value add” he said. “Our value add is not being another distributor of content that comes from many good sources today, it’s about adding that level of interactivity, creativity, fidelity that makes it come alive.” [09:36]
[12:46] Nancy Tellem: “I think one of the perfect example of more live events as you’re looking at, this is more hypothetical as obviously we’re not there yet,  but certainly if you do a comedy show, and you can actually from a transactional standpoint know where the comedians going to be performing, buy tickets, that’s an example.  You can also, not just from a Twitter standpoint, but actually share with your friends, actually experience it together.  He or she may be on the other side of the United States or in anthor country, Ireland or wherever, that’s kind of the real time experience that really is quite unique. We’ve already done a joint venture with Sesame Street where from children’s programming the kids can actually interact with the video itself and have a real interactive experience with …” [13:50]
She saw episodes ranging from as short as 10 minutes to an hour and a half, multiple episodes being produced, and using Xbox’s interactive capabilities, be it the voice-and-gesture-enabled Kinect or the second-screen SmartGlass app.

Xbox Execs Talk Momentum and the Future of TV [Microsoft feature story, Feb 11, 2013]

Living room entertainment is in its largest evolutionary period since the transitions of black-and-white to color, and from standard definition to high definition. The Xbox 360, alongside Microsoft’s entertainment industry partners, is at the forefront of that evolution as one of the only devices that brings all forms of entertainment together in one device, while making access to content easy and providing new ways to interact with existing programming. In 2012, the amount of TV and other entertainment offerings on Xbox almost tripled, now surpassing 100 custom, voice-controlled TV and entertainment apps on Xbox LIVE.
“Yes, we started with video games, but we have been on a journey to make Xbox the center of every household’s entertainment,” says Yusuf Mehdi, corporate vice president of Microsoft’s Interactive Entertainment Business.
Today Mehdi, along with Nancy Tellem, president of entertainment and digital media at Microsoft, participated in a D: Dive into Media session, facilitated by Peter Kafka, to discuss that journey and the opportunities that lie ahead. Mehdi revealed some new data that illustrates how entertainment usage on the Xbox has exploded during its living room transformation, and Tellem shared more about her newly created Los Angeles-based Xbox Entertainment Studios.
Today, there are more than 76 million Xbox 360 consoles around the world. That’s three times the number of original Xbox consoles sold. And a Kinect sensor now sits next to roughly one third of those Xbox 360 consoles; the company has sold 24 million Kinect sensors since launch.
Social has been an important part of Xbox from the beginning, and that’s true today more than ever. The Xbox LIVE community has grown to 46 million members, a 15 percent growth since last year.
2012 also marked the Xbox’s biggest year for entertainment and games usage. Users enjoyed more than 18 billion hours of entertainment in 2012, with entertainment app usage growing 57 percent year over year globally. Last year in the United States, Xbox LIVE Gold members averaged 87 hours per month on Xbox, an increase of 10 percent year over year.
Those numbers strongly indicate that consumers enjoy all kinds of entertainment via Xbox, and Mehdi believes the future of entertainment is even brighter, as Microsoft plans to keep the momentum rolling.
“We believe that Xbox is being used by more people in the household, during more hours in the day and for more forms of entertainment,” he says. “People are using Xbox in the morning to work out with the Kinect Nike+ Fitness program, kids are watching cartoons, families are enjoying movies, and of course people are playing blockbuster games like ‘Halo 4.’”
The Future of TV Is Interactive and More Engaging
According to Mehdi, Xbox has something in the living room no one else has – a large installed base of devices already in the home, connected to TVs, and over half of those are already linked together, delivering amazing personalized and social entertainment experiences via the Xbox LIVE network.
Microsoft believes that the future of TV and entertainment is one where the TV becomes interactive and more engaging, Mehdi and Tellem explain. Microsoft sees that viewers want to do more with their TV shows, movies, sports and other forms of entertainment.
“We believe that we are at the start of the next wave of truly interactive entertainment,” Tellem says.
Tellem is spearheading a new L.A.-based studio called Xbox Entertainment Studios, where the mission is to create true interactive content for Xbox and other devices that will change the way entertainment content is experienced and delivered. Tellem also now oversees live event programming for Xbox LIVE. Xbox has had success with live events such as the Elections 2012 Hub on Xbox LIVE, which aired the presidential debates with an added interactive polling capability. Viewers submitted 3 million answers to on-screen questions during the live telecast of one of the debates. More recently, Xbox aired an interactive red carpet experience for this year’s Grammy Awards and will be doing the same for the 85th Academy Awards.
“When I worked in traditional TV, we would find ourselves saying things like ‘Wouldn’t it be cool if we could add an interactive aspect directly into the show and engage directly with the viewers?’” says Tellem. “With Xbox, that is possible today.”
Xbox already offers content such Kinect Sesame Street TV, which blurs the lines between traditional linear TV show and interactive experience, where a kid can jump into their beloved Sesame Street and throw coconuts at Grover.
But it’s not just about new types of entertainment; it’s also about new business models and new engagement opportunities for advertisers. Mehdi called the launch of NUads a new ad format that harnesses Kinect and natural user interface an important moment for TV advertising. NUads deliver what is most scarce to advertisers today: consumer engagement. NUads enable natural interactivity using the simplicity of a spoken word or the wave of a hand. The first wave of NUads, which launched last fall with interactive polling, saw a record level of consumer engagement with 37 percent of people responding. With this model, passive TV advertising is transformed into engaging and actionable experiences.
Pioneering the Future of TV
In addition to Xbox Entertainment Studios creating content that will highlight what’s possible and demonstrate the capability of the Xbox platform, Microsoft will continue to partner with content creators, networks, aggregators and advertisers to “pioneer the future of TV,” says Tellem.
During 2013, Microsoft is planning to launch more than 40 new voice-controlled, customized TV and entertainment apps on Xbox.
“We want to partner with the industry to bring entertainment into a new era,” she says. “It’s an era when interactive entertainment becomes the greatest form of all entertainment – and we couldn’t be more excited to play a part in it.”

Will Next Gen Xbox Win With Premium Media Combo? [Breaking Analysis] [siliconangle YouTube, Feb 12, 2013]

Microsoft’s Xbox 360 has been morphing from a gaming console to an entertainment console, and Microsoft intends to capitalize on that in its future Xbox consoles. Although Microsoft has not confirmed that a next gen Xbox is in the works, details have still been leaked about a new console. SiliconANGLE Contributing Editor John Casaretto shared his knowledge regarding the source of the leaks, a person by the name of SuperDaE. SuperDaE made headlines last year when he tried to sell a Durango development kit on eBay. Durango is allegedly the code name for the next gen Xbox project. Casaretto concluded, “He’s got a lot of information, a lot of it seems really poignant, and he’s a very credible source.” Casaretto named some of the new features of the new console, noting there are some interesting twists to them, such as the ability to run multiple games simultaneously, required game installations, and the compatiblity with a new, improved (and mandatory) Kinect sensor. He explained that some of the features that were previously optional are now unified into one grand Xbox. Microsoft’s senior VP of interactive entertainment, Yusuf Mehdi, claimed that the Xbox 360 is transitioning from a gaming console to an entertainment before their eyes. Casaretto believes this is a natural evolution and expects to see more gaming, more video content, and even more shopping coming through the Xbox, turning it into a genuine family entertainment center. He predicted, “I think we’ll see this symbiosis of entertainment and gaming, and this will apply to Nintendo and Sony as well. They’ll certainly follow suit.” There is also some speculation that Microsoft will expand its popular monthly subscription service, Xbox Live, to include original shows, just as Amazon and Netflix have done. Casaretto stated that their success in this area will depend on the type of content they put out. He said if they’re trying to make completely original shows, such as sitcoms, it could easily turn into a money pit very quickly in trying to keep up with other popular shows out there. However, if it’s in alignment with game releases and other events, he said it’s possible Microsoft could be right on the money with this expansion idea, but it will take some time to establish their presence in this space. Likewise, in other new media TV developments, Intel Media has confirmed they are currently working to launch internet television this year. The Verge reported that Intel Media plans to provide “live television, catch-up television, on-demand [and] a set of applications.” Their hardware package will include a set-top box and a camera, which could be used for synchronized viewing with other viewers across the country. Casaretto observed that Microsoft has been very quiet about their new branding strategy with Xbox. He reminded viewers that Sony is expected to say something about their new Playstation soon, and he believes Microsoft is waiting to key off of Sony’s announcement. See the entire segment with Kristin Feledy and John Casaretto on the Morning NewsDesk Show.

See also:
Xbox LIVE Turns 10: A Decade of Entertainment [Microsoft feature story, Nov 15, 2012]
The New Entertainment Experience From Xbox [xbox YouTube channel, Oct 25, 2012]

The biggest blockbuster games, movies and music that go where you go, your favorite sports in one place, and your Nike personal trainer at home

Xbox Music [xbox YouTube channel, Oct 14, 2012]

All the music you love, every way you want it — Xbox Music. http://www.xbox.com/music

To understand the outstanding leadership in that Microsoft entertainment effort see this earlier Microsoft’s Yusuf Mehdi at MIXX 2009 [IABtv YouTube channel, Oct 8, 2009] presentation:

Yusuf Mehdi provides a rarely-seen demonstration of a truly interactive home office powered by Microsoft Touch—complete with voice detection, touch screens and surface computing capabilities.

Xbox Beyond the Box [The Official Microsoft Blog, May 29, 2012]

Next week, the Xbox team heads to Los Angeles for E3. Having recently joined the team, I have the benefit of fresh perspective, and one of the things that has struck me is the amount of opportunities we have ahead.
Before joining Xbox, I had the fortune of being a part of some incredible periods of innovation and incubation such as in the early days of Windows and Internet Explorer, and, more recently, with the creation of Bing. I have also had a great passion for gaming and entertainment, and watched the growth of MSN into one of the world’s largest media sites on the Internet.
Similar to many of those experiences, the Xbox has arrived at an important inflection point in its growth and development. In particular, in the last year, the Xbox has transcended from a gaming console to a broad entertainment device inclusive of movies, TV, music and sports. I will give you an example of what that means.
A few weeks back, my family and I decided to escape a rainy Sunday afternoon by watching a movie. The need for indoor entertainment in Seattle in May is (sadly) no surprise, but what really struck me was the way my son went about finding a movie. After my children finished a heated rock-paper-scissors battle to determine who got to choose what we would watch, my son sprinted to the Xbox 360. He didn’t first turn on the TV or go to our relatively hefty collection of DVDs. For him, the Xbox is now the gateway to what he wants to watch.
Now, my household may be a little biased, but my son isn’t alone. Xbox will always mean games, but for tens of millions of people around the globe, it also means music, TV, movies and more. Xbox LIVE subscribers now spend an average of 84 hours per month on the console. For comparison, the average American watches a little more than 150 hours of TV in the same period. The more entertainment options we add, the more time people spend on Xbox. In the last six months, we’ve grown our entertainment library on Xbox to include more than 60 voice controlled applications and more than 200,000 premium movies and TV shows.
As a result of people engaging with Xbox more frequently for more entertainment activities, we have been able to defy gravity compared to where consoles traditionally are at this point in their lifecycle. Sales for Xbox 360 in year five were greater than in year four, sales in year six were greater than in year five, and sales in year seven were greater than in year six.
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Since 2005—when we launched Xbox 360—we have sold 67 million consoles and have generated more than $56 billion at retail, and we’re still going strong in our seventh year. With 47 percent share of the current-generation console market in the U.S., we are hitting our stride largely as a result of the success of Kinect for Xbox 360 (19 million sold worldwide) and the flood of new entertainment options through Xbox LIVE (40 million members worldwide).
To date, our success with Xbox has been led by a box in the living room. Moving forward, Xbox will go beyond the box to reach all new families of devices. Just as Xbox has grown to mean more than just games, it also is more than just a console. This year, Xbox becomes the premium entertainment service for Microsoft. Whether on your PC, tablet, TV or phone, Xbox will be a gateway to the best in music and video, your favorite games and instant access to your friends. With the launch of Windows 8, we’ll bring Xbox entertainment to everyone. With Xbox on Windows 8 devices, we rapidly accelerate the reach of Xbox entertainment from more than 60 million people to hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
We understand that entertainment has become a multi-screen experience where you and your friends are watching TV, listening to music, and playing games while interacting with your tablets and phones in new ways. We’ve got ideas for making all the entertainment you love more personal, interactive and social across the devices you love—and on the phenomenal Windows 8 devices that are to come.
You’ll see the first of that next week at E3 where we will showcase the very best of Xbox. We’ll unveil new games, show new ways to enjoy the entertainment you love and, as always, we’ll have a few surprises to share!
We can’t wait. We kick things off on Monday, June 4 at 9:30 a.m. PT. You can watch us on live TV though our partnership with Spike TV, on the Web (Xbox.com), and for the first time ever – on Xbox LIVE.
Posted by Yusuf Mehdi
Chief Marketing Officer, Interactive Entertainment Division, Microsoft

Introducing the New Entertainment Experience from Xbox [The Official Microsoft Blog, Oct 22, 2012]

Below is a post from Yusuf Mehdi, Chief Marketing Officer for Microsoft’s Interactive Entertainment Division, announcing details about a major new update to the Xbox dashboard and the launch of Xbox SmartGlass, which brings games, music, TV and movie experiences off the console and onto your phone, tablet and PC.

Steve Ballmer recently stated that 2012 will be “the most epic year in Microsoft’s history.”

Not only do we have major releases coming to the PC, tablet and phone, but we have worked extremely hard to ensure those screens work together with the other major screen in peoples’ lives, the television. People often call out the role Microsoft design style is playing in this new wave of experiences from the company. Whether you are using a phone, PC, tablet or console that is running our software you have an experience that is distinctively Microsoft, elegant, intuitive and integrated.
Now, there is another common thread that ties all of these experiences together – Xbox entertainment.
Today marks the beginning of two major launches for Xbox entertainment.
First, on top of what is the greatest year for games in Xbox history, beginning today a brand new update will roll out broadly for every Xbox 360 owner in the world that brings entirely new TV entertainment experiences. We are bringing the Web to the TV like never before with Internet Explorer, launching a brand new music service, and making it even easier to find the entertainment you love using Kinect and Bing voice search. This release is the next step in our journey to transform Xbox 360 from a games console to an all-in-one entertainment system.
Second, we are bringing Xbox Entertainment off the console to your phone, tablet and PC to deliver great games, music, TV and movie experiences. And as a part of this effort with Xbox SmartGlass we are going to introduce amazing multi-screen entertainment experiences.
Back in June, we talked about how this is the year Xbox becomes the premium entertainment service for Microsoft. While our success with Xbox to date has been led by a box in the living room, we’re now reaching individuals in new and exciting ways across PCs, tablets and phones. Xbox will be a gateway to the best in movies, TV shows, music, sports, your favorite games and instant access to your friends, wherever you are.
This week, with the launch of Windows 8, followed shortly thereafter by Windows Phone 8 devices, we’ll flip the switch on that transformation with the launches of four new experiences that make entertainment better on every screen in your life:
At that moment, we will rapidly accelerate the reach of Xbox entertainment from more than 67 million consoles to literally hundreds of millions of devices worldwide. Also this week, we will take our biggest step ever to increase our global reach, extending Xbox entertainment experiences to 222 countries from 35.

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We realize some may ask, “Why are all these apps called Xbox, isn’t Xbox just a game console?” For us the decision to have Xbox stand for our broad entertainment efforts was a simple one. It is a natural evolution of our consumer offering. Even as Xbox has become the number one game console in the world, and continued to deliver arguably the best line up of games in our history, we have seen the use of Xbox broaden to watching TV/movies and listening to music.
During the last couple of years, we have grown our global entertainment portfolio to more than 62 TV and entertainment partners. Our Xbox LIVE subscribers now spend more time enjoying entertainment apps than multiplayer games. And this is occurring even when multiplayer gaming is also growing on our console.
Also, we live in a multi-device world. The millions of people enjoying entertainment on their Xbox are doing so within arm’s reach of another device. We believe your entertainment should travel seamlessly across devices, that devices should work together to make your entertainment more accessible and create entirely new experiences. We knew we needed a single name for all entertainment experiences from our company and nothing means entertainment at Microsoft more than Xbox.
Xbox SmartGlass is a great example of our approach to multi-screen entertainment. With SmartGlass we are focusing on two key objectives:
  1. Make discovering and controlling your entertainment simple, no matter the device you’re using; and
  2. Ensure you get more from your entertainment experience.
Xbox SmartGlass is a free downloadable app that takes your Windows 8 and RT tablets and PCs, Windows Phone 8, iOS and Android devices, and converts them into smart second screens for the entertainment you are enjoying through your Xbox.
Today, we are unveiling our first wave of experiences and partners for Xbox SmartGlass. They are the first of many to become available over the coming months.
Navigate your Entertainment – Your phone and tablet will become the best remote controls in your house. Use the touch screen on your smartphone or tablet to control your Xbox 360, and use your devices to pause, rewind or advance entertainment.
TV & Movies – With Xbox Video, start a TV show or movie on your Windows 8 tablet and finish it on the big screen through Xbox 360; see the names of cast and crew for the film you are watching and discover related films. To give you one example of what you can expect, coming next season, HBO GO’s “Game of Thrones” will offer groundbreaking Xbox SmartGlass experiences.
Sports – While watching the game, use a second screen to follow real-time stats, player bios, news and highlights you may have missed. All of this and more will be available for NBA Game Time, ESPN and UFC in the coming months.
Music – Control your Xbox Music experience on the TV using your smartphone or tablet, discover related artists and songs, cue up additional music, read artist bios and more.
Internet Explorer for Xbox – The Web comes to TV like never before with Xbox 360 and Xbox SmartGlass. With your smartphone or tablet, pan or pinch and zoom to explore the Web on the largest and best screen in the house, enjoy easy text entry with the keyboard on your tablet or phone, and then move your browser back to your device to take it on the go.
Games – Get more from your game when you can use a second screen. Turn you phone or tablet into a virtual GPS in Forza: Horizon. Don’t stop the dance party in Dance Central 3 by going back to the menu to choose your next song. Instead, queue it up on your tablet or smartphone. In HomeRun Stars, use SmartGlass on your favorite device to throw a surprise pitch to your friend up at bat in front of Kinect. See detailed stats on how you are progressing in Halo 4, or check up on friends. All of these features and much more will be available when your favorite game extends to multiple screens.
And we’ve only begun to scratch the surface of what’s possible. In the future, new games will be created, TV shows and movies will be re-imagined, and sports will be broadcast from the ground up with Xbox SmartGlass in mind.
Moreover, we are making it easier than ever to buy an Xbox 360 console. Starting this fall, we are rolling out the “Entertainment for All” pricing plan that enables you to buy an Xbox 360 for $99 when you sign up for 2 years of Xbox LIVE. Entertainment For All Plan will include U.S. retailers: Best Buy, GameStop, Walmart, Toys R Us and the Microsoft Store.
With these new technologies, services and pricing, Xbox entertainment has never been:
  • More simple and engaging
  • Available on so many new devices; and
  • More affordable.
So, yes, this is certainly an epic year for Microsoft. But more importantly, it’s an epic time for all of you that love amazing entertainment.

Then there is certainly Nancy Tellem:
Microsoft Names Longtime Entertainment Executive Nancy Tellem Entertainment & Digital Media President [Microsoft press release, Sept 18, 2012]

Microsoft Corp. today announced that Nancy Tellem, former president of CBS Network Television Entertainment Group, has joined Microsoft as Entertainment & Digital Media president.
In her role reporting to Phil Spencer, corporate vice president, Microsoft Studios, Tellem will oversee the launch of a newly created production studio in Los Angeles that will develop interactive and linear content for Xbox and other devices. In addition to running the production studio, she will help spearhead the company’s efforts to turn Xbox into a destination where consumers can enjoy all their entertainment in one place.
Tellem and her group will collaborate with the creative community to develop unique, compelling storytelling experiences for the Xbox brand. More than just a gaming console, Xbox has evolved into a consumer destination for the world’s most popular TV, movies, music and sports content. With a roster of more than 65 entertainment apps, including Netflix, Hulu Plus, HBO GO, MLB.TV, ESPN, YouTube and VEVO,global video consumption on Xbox LIVE has increased 140 percent during the past year. In addition, this September, Microsoft will introduce 2-way TV experiences from renowned entertainment partners Sesame Workshop and National Geographic that will further expand the Xbox platform beyond games, offering entertainment options for everyone in the family.
“I am excited to be a part of the continued evolution of Xbox from a gaming console to the hub of every household’s entertainment experience,” Tellem said. “The Xbox is already a consumer favorite, and we now have a tremendous opportunity to transform it into the center of all things entertainment — from games, music and fitness to news, sports, live events, television series and movies — so consumers have one destination for all their entertainment needs. I look forward to building a studio team that embraces the challenges of creating true interactive content that the Xbox platform supports and to work with talent to create content that will change the way entertainment content is experienced and delivered.”
“Whether you are voting for your favorite contestant on a TV show or playing a game, entertainment is becoming more personalized and social, driven by the Internet and new tools to interact with content,” Spencer said. “We are embarking on a new chapter with the creation of a studio dedicated to making original interactive and linear content, and I’m excited to have Nancy leading this effort.”
“With her impressive background in entertainment innovation, I am thrilled to have Nancy join our team,” said Don Mattrick, president of the Interactive Entertainment Business Group at Microsoft. “Under her direction, we look forward to building and extending our creative offerings from the living room to all your devices.”
Tellem has been a CBS executive since 1997, most recently as senior adviser to CEO Leslie Moonves, where she explored business and strategic opportunities — domestic and international — involving content partnerships, new production models, emerging media and technologies. As president of the CBS Network Television Entertainment Group, Tellem supervised programming, development, production, business affairs and operations. She oversaw the network’s prime-time, daytime, late-night and Saturday morning lineups (with shows like “CSI,” “Survivor,” “Everybody Loves Raymond” and “The King of Queens”). Before joining CBS, Tellem was executive vice president of Business and Financial Affairs for Warner Bros. Television and was part of the team that launched the landmark programs “Friends” and “ER.”
In 2006, Tellem was inducted into the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame for her contributions to the electronic arts. In 2008, Forbes ranked her 32nd on its list of “The World’s 100 Most Powerful Women” and Entertainment Weekly named her the third-smartest person in TV for quickly restoring CBS’s entire primetime lineup after the 100-day writers’ strike. That same year, the National Association of Television Program Executives awarded Tellem a Brandon Tartikoff Legacy Award in recognition of her “extraordinary passion, leadership, independence and vision in the process of creating TV programming.”
About Xbox
Xbox is Microsoft’s premier entertainment service for the TV, phone, PC and tablet. It’s home to the best and broadest games, as well as one of the world’s largest libraries of music, movies, TV and sports. With Kinect, Xbox 360 transformed gaming and entertainment in the living room with a whole new way to play games and find entertainment — no controller required. More information about Xbox can be found online at http://www.xbox.com.

Nancy Tellem: Why Microsoft’s Looking for TV Hits on XBox Live (Q&A) [Hollywood Reporter, Jan 4, 2013]

The entertainment and digital media president on why she left CBS, how she’d handle Angus T. Jones and why she’s not into violent entertainment: “I don’t like blood.”
Nancy Tellem, who had been a consultant to CBS chief executive Leslie Moonves for nearly three years after stepping down as president of the CBS Network Television Entertainment Group in 2009, became entertainment and digital media president at Microsoft on Sept. 18. One of her primary mandates: to create a TV studio in Los Angeles during the next year, where she and her staff will make original content for the 40 million customers worldwide who subscribe to Xbox Live, which already features fare from Netflix, ESPN, HBO Go, Amazon Prime and other providers. Tellem, 58, a mother of three sons who is married to sports agent Arn Tellem — and who spends what little free time she has bicycling, reading and doing yoga — spoke with THR at her temporary office at Wasserman Media Group in Los Angeles.
Nancy Tellem, who had been a consultant to CBS chief executive Leslie Moonves for nearly three years after stepping down as president of the CBS Network Television Entertainment Group in 2009, became entertainment and digital media president at Microsoft on Sept. 18. One of her primary mandates: to create a TV studio in Los Angeles during the next year, where she and her staff will make original content for the 40 million customers worldwide who subscribe to Xbox Live, which already features fare from Netflix, ESPN, HBO Go, Amazon Prime and other providers. Tellem, 58, a mother of three sons who is married to sports agent Arn Tellem — and who spends what little free time she has bicycling, reading and doing yoga — spoke with THR at her temporary office at Wasserman Media Group in Los Angeles.
The Hollywood Reporter: Is it scary to move from traditional TV to a tech company?
Tellem: For me, it was a natural next step. I was always interested in where the next distribution platform was happening and was very engaged with talking to tech companies.
THR: Xbox Live already gives users access to tons of video. Why do you need original content?
Tellem: Incredible content really raises the brand — look at Mad Men with AMC. So original programming gives us an opportunity to kind of brand the Xbox. And looking at the technology the Xbox console provides, we are really a bit ahead of the more traditional media companies in having the ability to develop and produce interactive content.
THR: What types of shows do you plan to make?
Tellem: We’re looking at all forms of content for every member of the family. So that certainly covers live events, reality, game shows, documentaries and scripted comedy or drama. We’ll cover it all. We’re figuring this out as we go. But we certainly intend to produce things with high production value, with the same breadth of storytelling that you see on traditional TV.
THR: Interactive TV hasn’t taken off yet. What are you going to do differently to make it popular?
Tellem: We’ve all tried to produce multiplatform programming, but the difficulty has been that you don’t have the technology to support it. This is where Microsoft and Xbox are in a unique position. The technology is there, not only for the audience that just wants to watch passively, but also for those who want to engage the content more, whether by mobile, tablet or on TV.
THR: Will you be able to attract major TV talent to make shows for a tech company?
Tellem: I certainly hope so. I know that before my arrival, they were able to attract a certain level of great talent. I invite everyone to come and listen to what we want to do. There’s a great playground we have here.
THR: What agents and talent have you spoken with so far?
Tellem: I’m somewhat overwhelmed by the interest, but I can’t say.  It’s a little too early.
THR: Have you made any major hires yet?
Tellem: Not yet. We’re obviously taking advantage of all the existing people we have in Seattle, but at the same time we want to build a top-notch staff in L.A. for what will certainly be a full-fledged production studio.
THR: Why did you leave CBS?
Tellem: It’s probably the toughest decision I’ve made in my career. I’m very, very close to Leslie and close to all the executives there. We’re like a wonderful family. I just felt that I had done the job, and hopefully I did it well, and there were new challenges I wanted to take on. I wanted to be a little less comfortable, and I was always so intrigued with where television was going.
THR: What exactly did you do as an adviser to Moonves?
Tellem: I’ve always been interested in looking at the next generation of television. In the early days, I ran CBS.com before CBS acquired CNet, and I initiated the mobile strategy. So I’d try to embrace what’s on the horizon. I was also interested in the global production model, so I did a lot of that, going to places like India and exploring.
THR: Can you give me an example of a crisis at CBS when you were there and how you handled it?
Tellem: I don’t want to be specific, but there are situations where talent has personal issues and it’s like an athlete: Do you throw them out in the field if it hurts them but helps the team? Ultimately you have to think about the well-being of the talent. I guess I’m referring to the Charlie Sheen, Angus T. Jones type of situations. But among the executives, it should be a collaboration, and we should listen to different points of views to come to a conclusion we can live with while also protecting the show.
THR: How would you handle the controversy over Two and a Half Men star Jones’ plea for people to stop watching the show because it’s “filth”?
Tellem: I was just thinking this morning that it’s a good thing I’m not at CBS. Nina [Tassler, CBS Entertainment president] and Leslie and the Warner Bros. people are handling it appropriately. Who knows what motivates these things, but I think his apology was correct. We’re all blessed to be in this business.
THR: Is any part of traditional TV in jeopardy because of advancing technologies?
Tellem: It’s certainly disruptive. We always compared ourselves with the music industry and said we had to be much more nimble and accepting of change. The TV industry has done just that.
THR: How does the industry combat DVRs and ad-skipping?
Tellem: With VOD and embracing the whole concept of giving consumers their content where and when they want it. And there have been studies — and I do this also — where I watch the commercials because I forget I’m watching a recorded show. Ratings aren’t reflecting what’s really happening. It’s interesting, though, that when you download something, you end up watching the commercials, because you’ve made the decision to watch it free with ads instead of paying for it without ads. Because of that proposition and the intimate relationship people have with their computers and tablets and such, people are accepting commercials and watching them more.
THR: What was your favorite CBS show with which you were involved?
Tellem: Oh my God. You know, it’s like, as Leslie would always say, “They’re all our children.” But obviously, the things that made a huge difference in turning around that network were shows like CSIand Survivor and, my gosh, Everybody Loves Raymond.
THR: What do you like to watch now on TV?
Tellem: I’m quite enthralled with Game of Thrones. I’ve been watching Newsroom a lot on HBO. I love Homeland, of course, because everyone does,  and Modern Family. I hate to admit it, but I agreed with most of the Emmy Awards this year. I love television. I spent the last 25 years in it, you know?
THR: Now that you’re at Microsoft, is there pressure to become a gamer?
Tellem: I love FIFA and I play Madden and golf games, and I think it’s due to the influence of my kids. I was aware of Halo, Call of Duty and the shooter games, but I didn’t play Halo until four days ago. It’s really amazing, but shooter games aren’t my cup of tea.
THR: Do you have a political problem with them?
Tellem: It’s funny. Like in television, we’re all fine with violence but not sex. The shooter games are much like procedural series, which I’ve never embraced. I don’t like blood.

And that’s not all as Microsoft Names Longtime Technology Entrepreneur Blake Krikorian Corporate Vice President in Its Interactive Entertainment Business [Microsoft press release, Jan 10, 2013]

Proven innovator and leader in media and technology brings strong entertainment background to Xbox team.

Microsoft Corp. today announced the appointment of Blake Krikorian as corporate vice president for its Interactive Entertainment Business (IEB). Krikorian will report to Marc Whitten, chief product officer for IEB. This announcement follows the acquisition of Krikorian’s company, id8 Group R2 Studios (R2 Studios).
“We are thrilled to have Blake join the Xbox team,” Whitten said. “He’s a proven innovator and well-respected leader in both the media and technology industries, having created simple, elegant products that have transformed the way people engage with and consume content. We look forward to his contribution to our team as Xbox continues to evolve and transform the games and entertainment landscape.”
“I am excited to join Microsoft and be a part of the Xbox team. As a 10-year Xbox LIVE subscriber, I have seen firsthand how Xbox has delighted us by reinventing how consumers experience games and entertainment,” Krikorian said. “I look forward to helping the team define the future of entertainment and contribute to the next decade of continued innovation.”
Krikorian most recently founded R2 Studios. Before that he served as the co-founder, chairman and CEO of Sling Media Inc., inventors of the Emmy® award-winning Slingbox®, which is now owned by EchoStar Corp. Krikorian served on the board of Amazon.com Inc. and also co-founded the Philips Mobile Computing Group where he co-led the team that created the award-winning Velo 1 handheld PC running Windows CE. He has received numerous lifetime achievement awards including the Lifetime Technology Leadership Award from Broadcasting & Cable, as well as the TechFellow Award for Disruptive Innovation from TechCrunch, Founders Fund and NEA.

Microsoft has acquired id8 Group R2 Studios [Neowin.net, Jan 10, 2013]

… Microsoft apparently was the winner in the race to acquire R2 Studios with Google and Apple both reportedly also interested in buying the company. R2 Studios’ only product was a $99 Android app, R2 Control For Creston, which allows users to remotely control devices such as security systems, lighting and more on an Android smartphone or tablet.

This move could be a signal that Microsoft’s next version of the Xbox console will have some kind of expanded remote control features. The company has already launched Xbox SmartGlass apps for Windows 8, iOS and Android device owners for use as a “second screen” experience for some Xbox 360 games and media.

R2 Android App Controls Crestron Systems [CrestronElectronics YouTube channel, Sept 23, 2010]

Blake Krikorian of id8 Group shows off his new Android app, R2. Designed to work with the existing Crestron Mobile framework on the backend, R2 integrates and programs just like an iPod touch, iPhone or iPad. This new Android app can be seen at Crestron’s booth running on the new Samsung GALAXY tab so stop by if you’re at CEDIA!

Slingbox® Inventor And Crestron Collaborate To Bring Android™ OS Support To The Crestron Platform [Crestron press release, May 17, 2011]

R2 Control App For Android™ is Now Available

Slingbox® inventor, Blake Krikorian and Crestron today announced the release of the R2™ Control™ for Crestron, a software app that turns virtually any Android™ smartphone or tablet into a fully-functional Crestron touch panel for residential and commercial applications. Utilizing the R2 app and Crestron processors, customers can now control AV, lighting, thermostats, security systems, and thousands of other products via their Android device from anywhere in the world.
imageR2 was initially unveiled at the Crestron booth at CEDIA Expo last September. Since then, R2 conducted a seven month private beta test program consisting of hundreds of residential, commercial and government Crestron-authorized integrators from around the world. The input from this beta team helped R2 achieve a sophisticated solution compatible with a multitude of Android devices.
R2 was developed by id8 Group Productions, a product development and technology lab. Co-founder and inventor of Emmy award-winning Slingbox, Blake Krikorian founded id8 Group Holdings (parent company of id8 Group Productions) in 1999. R2 is the first product developed by id8 Group since Slingbox expanded in 2004 to form Sling Media®, Inc. Sling Media was subsequently acquired by Echostar Corporation in 2007.
“We are thrilled to have the opportunity to collaborate with an innovator like Blake and officially support Android,” says Fred Bargetzi, Crestron VP of Technology. “The R2 control app for Android is the latest development in our ongoing open-standards platform which also includes integration with iOS, MAC OSX and Windows.”
Krikorian initially conceived of R2 for his own use. “In addition to being able to control aspects of my home via Crestron remote controls and iOS devices, I really wanted to be able to use my new Android-based phone,” says Krikorian. “I desired a software platform that allowed me to further optimize the home control experience for general purpose smartphones and tablets, beyond the industry’s current state of the art. R2 and Android provides the flexibility to do just that.”

R2 Key Features

  • Communicates with Crestron 2-Series and 3-Series™ control systems via WiFi and cellular network
  • Controls multiple systems/homes from one Android device
  • Uses the same Crestron development tools to create projects for R2. R2 touch panel projects are created using the existing and familiar development tools such as SIMPL Windows, VTPro-e®, D3 Pro® and System Builder.
  • Compatible with Crestron Mobile Pro®/Mobile Pro G™ apps: runs projects created for iOS devices
  • Quick access: ability to disable screen unlock requirement; Device’s built-in proximity sensor can automatically wake device
  • Automatic project UI scaling: resizes Mobile Pro and Mobile Pro G projects to the native resolution of any Android device
  • Visual, haptic and audible feedback: provides clear confirmation of key presses
  • Optimized performance for Android: takes advantage of Android’s multitasking and flexibility to deliver an experience optimized for home and building control
  • Support for multiple and custom resolutions: in addition to R2’s built-in UI display scalar, an upcoming VTPro-e add-on (coming soon) enables developers to optionally create pixel-perfect projects for any screen size.
If you have any questions, please contact: r2control@crestron.com.
To get all the latest news, information and product updates subscribe to our RSS feed, “Like” us onFacebook and follow us on Twitter.
About Crestron
For 40 years Crestron has been the world’s leading manufacturer of advanced control and automation systems, innovating technology and reinventing the way people live and work. Providing integrated solutions to control audio, video, lighting, computer, IP and environmental systems, Crestron streamlines technology, improving the quality of life for people in corporate conference rooms, hotels, classrooms, auditoriums, and in their homes.

Qualcomm moving to Applications DSP (ADSP)

Qualcomm’s Hexagon™ DSP [QUALCOMMVlog YouTube channel, Feb 1, 2013]

Steve Brightfield, QTI, discusses the evolution of Qualcomm’s Digital Signal Processor (DSP) from the original Qualcomm DSP #1 to our current sixth generation DSP, branded as Hexagon™ DSP. Find out about the differentiating features that make this ultimate low-power companion core a key component within Qualcomm’s Snapdragon, and get a glimpse into what the roadmap has in store for the future. To learn more about Qualcomm visit http://www.qualcomm.com or connect with us at: http://www.facebook.com/qualcomm, http://www.youtube.com/qualcomm and Twitter@Qualcomm.

[see also: Qualcomm Advocates Parallel Computing By Joining HSA [OnQ blog from Qualcomm, Oct 3, 2012]]

imageimage
Source and more information: QDSP6 V4: Qualcomm Gives Customers and Developers Programming Access to its DSP Core [BDTi, June 22, 2012] [Applications of Digital Signal Processing in Mobile Computing Devices]

At the January IEEE International Conference on Emerging Signal Processing Applications (IEEE-ESPA), Dr. Raj Talluri, Qualcomm’s Vice President of Product Management, used portions of his plenary talk [Applications of Digital Signal Processing in Mobile Computing Devices] to showcase key target applications for the QDSP6 architecture. Some of them were predictable case studies of already-established DSP opportunities: audio processing (encoding, decoding, transcoding, noise cancellation, bass boost, virtual surround and other enhancement functions), along with various types of still image and video processing tasks. The increasingly ubiquitous H.264 video codec received particular showcase …

Other highlighted applications in the IEEE-ESPA presentation were more trendsetting. Talluri mentioned, for example, the conversion between 2-D and 3-D versions of a polygon- or pixel-based image or video, for appropriate-format output to an integrated or tethered display. He also noted the execution time and power consumption improvements that could be garnered by migrating an augmented reality application from a 100% CPU-based approach to one that fully leverages the integrated QDSP6 V3 DSP core (Figure 6).

image
Source for the Figure 6: the same as above

HexagonDSP Augmented Reality Demonstration on a Snapdragon S4 (MSM8960) from Qualcomm Applications DSP (ADSP) [QUALCOMMVlog YouTube channel, Feb 5, 2013]

Watch as Ramesh Chandrasekhar, Director, QTI, demonstrates the benefits of offloading computation from the CPU to the Hexagon™ DSP in this augmented reality demonstration being run on a Snapdragon S4 (MSM8960). To learn more about Qualcomm visit http://www.qualcomm.com or connect with us at: http://www.facebook.com/qualcomm, http://www.youtube.com/qualcomm and Twitter@Qualcomm.

From ‘Applications of Digital Signal Processing in Mobile Computing Devices by Raj Talluri [as reported by Susie Wee, Cisco VP & CTEO, Jan 13, 2012]

Closing thoughts:

  1. Mobile computing apps are dominated by digital signal processing tasks
  2. There are compute modules that can be used in app processors on smartphones
  3. Apps processors need to continue to improve in performance and low power

Notable observations given before that by Raj Talluri:

  • 300M smartphones sold per year in 2010. Qualcomm predicts 1B per year in 2015
  • The highest volume of camera sales is in your mobile phones. Lots of opp for image processing & computer vision.
  • Most mobile phones have multiple microphones. Can be used for lots of signal processing apps.
  • There is a big opportunity for sensor fusion as there is large number of sensors in every mobile phone. Sensor fusion opportunity: Shake detection – detect shakes, then remove blurring.
  • Lots of signal processing is done to provide smooth gesture interactions on phone.
  • When breaking down the amount of signal processing needed for games multi-core CPU and GPU processing is key.

Raj Talluri, “Programmes of Innovative Development” [“Wireless &Mobile” session of rASiA.com Business Forum in Moscow, May 16, 2012, published on Aug 10, 2012]

[15:00] Enhancing User Experience

[15:04] Video Telephony + 3D Gaming

[15:45] “A little video clip which shows you other things we do in gaming

  • It’s blidingly fast
  • It’s insanely crisp
  • Augmented reality
  • It’s effortlessly connected
  • It’s innately social
  • Peer-to-peer
  • It’s abundantly armed
  • Snapdragon Game command
  • It’s unusually versatile
  • It’s absurdly efficient

[17:00] 3D Positional Audio Using Open SL

  • Advanced reverb and virtual surround
  • 3D positional audio, bass boost, DSP acceleration
  • Collaboration with SRS
[see also:
SRS Completes Integration of TruMedia onto Hexagon DSP based Snapdragon Platforms [SRS Labs press release via BusinessWire, June 29, 2012] which relates to the
earlier agreement to Integrate SRS Audio Technology on Qualcomm’s Reference Design Development Platform [SRS Labs press release via BusinessWire, Dec 8, 2011] as well as to
SRS Labs and Qualcomm Sign Licensing Agreement to Bring HD-Quality Audio to Mobile Devices [SRS Labs press release via BusinessWire, March 22, 2011]
]

[17:47] Dolby Multi-channel Audio

  • Dolby Digital Plus delivers a richer, cinematic audio experience to mobile
  • Scalable and extensible for optimization to available bandwidth
  • Supports many existing and emerging home theater, broadcast, online, and mobile applications
  • Provide up to 7.1 channels of cinematic surround sound
  • Enables compatibility with millions of existing home theater systems via simple conversion to Dolby Digital
[see also:
– “The Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors also introduce the very latest mobile experiences. … HD multichannel audio with DTS-HD and Dolby Digital Plus for enhanced audio” in
Qualcomm Announces Next Generation Snapdragon Premium Mobile Processors [Qualcomm press release, Jan 7, 2013]
“Qualcomm recently announced it would support Dolby Digital Plus in its new Snapdragon chipset, allowing OEMs to choose to deliver Dolby 7.1 Surround sound at the chipset level.” in
Dolby Labs’ CEO Discusses F1Q12 Results – Earnings Call Transcript [Seeking Alpha, Jan 31, 2012]]

[18:23] Multi-burst Photo Continuous photo capture

  • High-speed full resolution burst capture
  • Zero shutter lag
  • Continuous Auto-Focus

[19:24] Natural Human Interfaces in Next Generation Devices

  • Ultrasonics processing
  • IR-scanning
  • Coded/structured light depth mapping
  • Stylus based gestures
  • Stereo sparse depth mapping
  • Time-of-flight depth mapping

[20:21]

Custom DSP Architecture [#14 slide from At the Heart of Mobile Devices presentation by Qualcomm, Oct 25, 2012]

Enabling Rich User Experiences Without Sacrificing Battery Lifeimage

Qualcomm Leads in Global DSP Silicon Shipments [Wireless/DSP Market Bulletin, Forward Concepts, Nov 12, 2012]

When people speak of “DSP chips“, they are usually referring to discrete devices that are catalog or “off-the-shelf” units; although at the high end they tend to be customized for high-volume customers. And, they correctly associate Texas Instruments as the DSP chip market leader.  However, those DSP chips from TI, Freescale, ADI, NEC and others constitute only about 10% of the “DSP silicon” market in revenue terms, as I have detailed in a much earlier newsletter [May 4, 2009].

The largest market for “DSP silicon” is as embedded solutions, generally thought of as System on Chip (SoC) products.  Of that SoC DSP market, cellphones constitute the largest segment, with baseband modem chips being the most significant.  All baseband chips consist of one or more DSP cores. Qualcomm, the clear baseband market leader, has long employed two DSP cores in each of its MSM modem chips, and of late is shipping three or more of its latest Hexagon DSP cores in its Snapdragon S4 chips.  In calendar year 2011, Qualcomm shipped a reported 521 million MSM chip shipments and we estimate that an average of 2.3 of its DSP cores in each unit resulted in 1.2 billion DSPs shipped in silicon.  This (calendar) year, we estimate that the company will ship an average of 2.4 DSP cores with each (more complex) MSM chip.  We estimate that Qualcomm will ship about 610 million MSM chips in 2012, for a total of 1.5 billion DSPs shipped in silicon for the full year.  Clearly, Qualcomm leads the global unit market for DSP silicon shipments.

Qualcomm Intros Multimode LTE Snapdragon Chips in 28nm [Wireless/DSP Market Bulletin, Forward Concepts, Nov 1, 2011]

Although the company claims to have employed them in earlier Snapdragons, this is the first public announcement we have seen of Qualcomm’s Hexagon™ DSP cores which have been under development for several years. Hexagon cores are employed in both the modem and the multimedia subsystems of the S4.  According to the company, Hexagon “merges the numeric support, parallelism and wide computation engine of a DSP with the advanced system architecture of a modern microprocessor.” Qualcomm plans to release more Hexagon details and benchmarks later this quarter.

CEVA Says 927 million Basebands Shipped with its DSP Cores in 2011 [Wireless/DSP Market Bulletin, Forward Concepts, Feb 2, 2012]
CEVA, Inc. is clearly the leading licensor of DSP baseband cores and 2011 was a good year for them. All-time high quarterly and annual revenues were up 22% and 34% year-over-year, respectively.  Although cellphones constitute the bulk of its licensing business, the company is aggressively pursuing the consumer business with recent design wins in Smart TV and connectivity for smartphones and solid state drives. CEVA’s IP portfolio includes not only comprehensive technologies for cellular baseband, but also multimedia (HD video, Image Signal Processing (ISP) and HD audio), voice over packet (VoP), Bluetooth, Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) and Serial ATA (SATA). In 2011, CEVA claims that its IP was shipped in over 1 billion devices, powering (at least some) handsets from 7 out of the top 8 handset OEMs, including Nokia, Samsung, LG, Motorola, Sony and ZTE. Today, the company claims that more than 40% of handsets shipped worldwide are powered by a CEVA DSP core.


Voice Evolution – Higher Capacity, Better Quality, A Richer Experience [Qualcomm, May 3, 2012]

Qualcomm Enables the True HD-Voice Experience

Qualcomm offers market leading technologies that dramatically improve the quality of voice, and the overall voice experience. These enhancements range from new wideband codecs, Fluence™ noise suppression, active noise cancellation, VoIP optimizations, unique HDOn™ feature to support wideband codecs on narrowband channels, and many more.

Qualcomm’s HD Voice offers clearer, higher quality voice conversations. Now you can hear, and be heard, no matter where you happen to be.

image
From: The Voice Evolution [Qualcomm presentation, April 2012]

Qualcomm is working on further enhancements even in this traditional voice/audio space as evidenced by this job placement: Audio DSP Systems Engineer [Jan 23, 2013]

Job Description

… Development and deployment of various audio signal processing algorithms for Qualcomm’s chipset solutions:

  • Audio and Voice compression technologies
  • Audio Pre/Post Processing such as echo cancellation, noise reduction, array signal processing, audio effects, blind bandwidth extension, companding, etc.
  • Ultrasound
  • Voice recognition
    ADC and DAC

Desired skills

  • Knowledge of echo cancellation, noise reduction, array signal processing.
  • Knowledge of voice recognition, speaker identification.
  • Knowledge of fixed-point programming or assembly language.
  • Knowledge of audio effects, virtualization, HRTF, 3D audio.
  • Knowledge of ultrasound signal processing
  • Knowledge of Psycho-acoustic modeling
  • Audio codecs such as AAC/AAC+/MP3/Dolby/DTS, etc.
  • Voice codecs such as AMR/AMR-WB/EVRC/EVRC-WB/EFR/TTY/CTM, etc.
  •  


    In addition there is a growing partner program in the overall user experience enhancements Qualcomm Announces the Expansion of the Hexagon DSP Access Program at Uplinq 2012 [Qualcomm press release, June 27, 2012]

    Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) announced today at Uplinq 2012 the expansion of the Hexagon™ DSP Access Program on select Snapdragon™ S4 processors. The new expansion provides original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and independent software vendors (ISVs) with added resources, including software development tools and support, which allow them to provide increased differentiation on multimedia features via the integrated Hexagon DSP in Snapdragon S4 processors. The program offers the ability to integrate proprietary algorithms while enabling best-in-class power dissipation and multi-threaded hardware for concurrency. A comprehensive set of multimedia baseline features is provided standard with the Snapdragon platform, and the Hexagon Access Program enables the customization and augmentation of the baseline feature sets and usage models included on Snapdragon processors.
    “Qualcomm is committed to providing unparalleled usability for our customers,” said Raj Talluri, senior vice president of product management at Qualcomm. “The expansion of the Hexagon Access Program gives added support and resources to the Snapdragon ecosystem. Qualcomm is enabling power-competitive designs with differentiated multimedia features and customization of multimedia end-use cases via our highly efficient Hexagon DSP technology.”
    Previously offered solely on the Snapdragon S3 MSM8660 platform, the Hexagon Access Program now includes select Snapdragon S4 processors, including the APQ8064, MPQ8064, MSM8960, APQ8060A, MSM8260A, MSM8660A, MSM8930, APQ8030, MSM8630, MSM8230, MSM8227 and MSM8627. Both OEMs and ISVs can optimize the features and performance of their multimedia software for execution on the fully integrated audio-video acceleration hardware in Snapdragon processors. Program participants will have access to software development tools that the OEM or ISV can utilize to compile or hand-code their proprietary algorithms. These tools are provided to assist OEMs and ISVs with their audio and video programming on supported processors.
    Current ISV participants in Qualcomm’s Hexagon Access Program include: Berkeley Design Technology Inc. (BDTI), Bsquare, Mentor Graphics, Nextreaming, NXP Software, Qsound, SRS Labs, TATA ELXSI and Waves Audio.
    The Qualcomm Snapdragon processors that are supported via a Hexagon DSP Tools Suite and via software and documentation as part of the Hexagon DSP Access Program are available to OEMs and ISVs now. For more information on access to Hexagon programming tools and optional hardware development boards and documentation for the customization of multimedia on these processors, please visit developer.qualcomm.com.

    Forums – Qualcomm’s DSP Access Program [Qualcomm Developer Network, June 27, 2011]

    Get ready for programming on a Qualcomm digital signal processor (DSP), enabling your multimedia features for a large mobile handset market. For the first time Qualcomm is opening up a new programmable processor that software developers can use to accelerate their algorithms and offload the main applications processor. In this session targeted towards mobile software developers, we will introduce the program, go over the tools available, the chipsets supported and the timeline for availability. We will show how developers can add their own customizations to Qualcomm’s audio and video processing engines and enable device makers to better differentiate their smartphone and tablet devices by augmenting the Snapdragon platform’s multimedia suite.

    Learn more by checking out the video from our Uplinq 2011 QDSP technical lecture [by Kuntal Sampat, the engineering lead for Qualcomm’s DSP Access Program – see also his slides in PDF].

    Get ready for programming on a Qualcomm digital signal processor (DSP), enabling your multimedia features for a large mobile handset market. For the first time Qualcomm is opening up a new programmable processor that software developers can use to accelerate their algorithms and offload the main applications processor. In this session, we will introduce the program, go over the tools available, the chipsets supported and the timeline for availability. We will show how developers can add their own customizations to Qualcomm’s audio and video processing engines and enable device makers to better differentiate their smartphone and tablet devices by augmenting the Snapdragon platform’s multimedia suite.

    image

    [19:08] This section talks about how you can use the deliverables we will provide in the Open DSP program. Now just to give you an idea of what we imagedo with the DSP, when we supply our MSMs and our SW to the OEM. The DSP is not blank. It is doing something and this is what it is doing. The DSP is actually running the voice codecs part of the voice call. [19:41] … [19:54] Same thing for the audio.
    …. [21:04] As Qualcomm moves to its next-generation of chipsets we will probably see more functionality coming to the DSP, more than just audio. [21:17]

    Qualcomm’s DSP Access Program Debuts [Qualcomm Developer Network press release, March 21, 2011]

    Program Enables Manufacturers (OEMs) and Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) to Optimize Multimedia Solutions Utilizing Qualcomm Audio and Video Acceleration Hardware

    SAN DIEGO — March 22, 2011 Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) today announced that OEMs and ISVs will now be able to program their own audio and video codecs using optimized processors and hardware on select versions of Qualcomm’s Mobile Station Modem™ (MSM™) chipsets through the new Qualcomm Developer Network DSP Access Program. This allows OEMs to better differentiate their smartphone and tablet devices by augmenting or modifying the Snapdragon™ platform’s multimedia suite with their own features or procure differentiated features directly from ISVs. 
    Both OEMs and ISVs can optimize the features and performance of their multimedia software for execution on Qualcomm chipset audio-video acceleration hardware. Qualcomm will offer software development tools that the OEM or ISV can utilize to compile (C/C++) or hand-code (assembly) their proprietary algorithms on Qualcomm’s optimized audio-video processor architectures. These tools are provided with training and support documentation to assist OEMs and ISVs with their audio/video programming on supported chipsets. Additional details on the Qualcomm Developer Network DSP Access Program are available on the Qualcomm Developer Network (http://developer.qualcomm.com/multimedia).
    “Our customers and developers can increase the differentiation of their products on select Qualcomm chipsets by offering new and unique multimedia features and/or customization of the priority and concurrency of their multimedia features,” said Steven Brightfield, director of product management at Qualcomm CDMA Technologies. “Access to our audio and video acceleration hardware enables OEMs and ISVs to give end users access to a wider range of multimedia content and a richer multimedia experience on their mobile devices.”
    The Qualcomm chipsets that will be supported via tools and documentation as part of the Qualcomm Developer Network DSP Access Program are the MSM8x60™, MSM8960™, MSM8270™, MSM8x55™, MSM7x27™ and MSM7x30™. For additional information and inquiries on access to programming tools and hardware documentation for the multimedia acceleration subsystems on these chipsets please inquire on the Qualcomm Developer Network (http://developer.qualcomm.com/multimedia).

    Why mobile developers should care about the hardware [Qualcomm Developer Network, Aug 4, 2010]

    In today’s crowded apps marketplace, it can sometimes be difficult for your apps to stand out. So as a developer, how can you make your apps stand out from the crowd? Certainly well-known IPs such as Tetris or PAC-MAN don’t really need help. But for most games and apps out there, there’s a good chance that a better understanding of the underlying hardware can help you optimize and differentiate your premium apps for an even greater payoff.
    Qualcomm’s Snapdragon platform offers an unprecedented combination of processing performance and optimized power consumption for the next generation of smart mobile devices. Because Snapdragon chipsets combine the CPU, GPU, connectivity, memory, GPS, and high performance multimedia capabilities into a powerfully integrated platform, building your applications for Qualcomm-based devices can help you take advantage of these optimized chipset features to create innovative, premium applications and content.
    For example, you can use our hardware accelerated codecs to improve app performance and power consumption, or use the dedicated 2D hardware using OpenVG, allowing higher graphics quality. These are just a few examples of how you can take advantage of the hardware to differentiate your app. To learn more, download the whitepaper “Why Should Mobile Developers Care About the Hardware.”
    For developers who want early access to Qualcomm-powered devices, you’ll be glad to hear that you can now pre-order the Snapdragon Mobile Development Platform online. With this development platform, you can begin developing your apps before commercial devices become available thus maximizing your revenue potential. Some of the key technical specs of the MSM8655-based Snapdragon MDP are:
    • 1 GHz CPU
    • 3.8” WVGA
    • HDMI port
    • Multi-touch capacitive touch screen
    • Adreno 205 GPU
    • 12 –megapixel camera
    • 720-pixel HD video decode and encode
    • Stereo 16mm loudspeakers
    • 512 MB of RAM (2x 32b ports)
    • 4GB on-board Flash
    So get started. If you have an application worth showcasing, tell us about it.

    Why Should Mobile Developers Care About the Hardware? [Qualcomm whitepaper, April 2, 2010, modified Sep 28, 2012 with new agreement included]:

    hardware-based 3D audio effects solutions by taking advantage of embedded digital signal processors (DSPs) which provide greater user experiences

    Qualcomm’s integrated chipset solutions (i.e. Snapdragon platform) address audio performance challenges head-on, by enabling developers to take advantage of embedded digital signal processors (DSPs), which provide greater user experiences. For example, many applications like mobile games play multiple sounds simultaneously such as, the playing of background music tracks while sound effects are trigged in the foreground (i.e. referred to as audio layering). Since the decoding of MP3 streams is already accomplished in the DSP, it’s a natural fit to mix multiple audio streams in the hardware.
    This enhanced audio functionality enables developers to implement their entire audio path at higher sampling rates than a software mixer could process, thereby yielding higher quality audio outputs. Moreover, by leveraging DSP decoder functionality, source audio streams can be encoded as AAC instead of MP3, resulting in smaller file sizes. These smaller AAC files further benefit developers by providing a reduction of bandwidth in applications where the files are transferred over the air, thereby enabling a better user experience.
    Presently, developers utilize graphic hardware solutions to give games and UIs the third dimension of depth. Dimension of depth functionality is achievable with audio through Qualcomm’s QAudioFX™ 3D positional engine.
    Developers designing applications around 3D positional audio solutions from the start (i.e. such as first-person games etc), will benefit greatly from the added dimensional depth QAudioFX will provide. For example, audio gaming cues placed around the user will signal a car passing from behind, or an enemy approaching from the side, long before they appear on the device screen. These types of enhanced audio functionalities enable developers to vastly increase the user’s 3D environment. Moreover, since the QAudioFX engine will be implemented in the DSP, developers incur little penalty in incorporating 3D positional audio functionality. Currently, QAudioFX and related features are not available to the developers. It is planned to be supported on devices in the later part of 2010.
    Developers can also look forward to taking advantage of QAudioFX’s reverberation engine capabilities. One challenge developer’s face in working with quality reverb algorithms is that they require a significant amount of memory for delay buffers. Qualcomm’s DSP-based audio solution allocates delay buffers in the hardware, thereby freeing up memory for the application. For example, in a racing game, rather than switching sound files when the vehicle enters a tunnel, developers can make a single API call to enable reverb. Another API call allows the developer to disable the reverb when the vehicle exits the tunnel.
    Developers desiring music functionality in their applications can leverage CMX™, Qualcomm’s DSP-based MIDI synthesizer. Genuinely, realistic sounding instruments require a synthesizer with many articulators and a wavetable with large samples. While equivalent software synthesizers may be realized on today’s mobile processors, they come with a price namely, greater cycle and power consumption requirements. Qualcomm’s CMX solution output quality rivals PC sound cards, to the extent that developers may want to revisit MIDI in situations where they need to minimize audio file sizes. The hardware accelerated CMX capabilities are currently available on BREW platforms. Other high-level operating systems have similar MIDI capabilities but are enabled though software solutions.
    Hardware-based 3D audio effects solutions by Qualcomm will provide powerful differentiating performance advantages for developers seeking a competitive edge in creating applications that contain a greater immersive user experience.


    DSP History [by Will Strauss of Forward Concepts, May 2009]

    This history of digital signal processing was originally written by Will Strauss of Forward Concepts and published in May, 2009 as part of a market study, “DSP SILICON STRATEGIES ’09.” ©2009 Forward Concepts Co. Permission to use excerpts of this history is granted as long as proper attribution is included.

    1. DSP History

    A. EARLY HISTORY

    The earliest record of digital filtering techniques (albeit on paper) was in solving problems of astronomy and the compilation of mathematical tables in the early 1600s.  The great mathematician Laplace (c.1779) understood the “z-transform,” the mathematical basis of modern digital signal processing.

    During the Great Depression of the ’30s, the U.S. Bureau of Standards retained its surplus employees and set them to developing a variety of mathematical tools.  Perhaps the most useful of these was a technique to evaluate the Fourier transform from a number of discrete data points, and using only multiplications and additions.  

    This Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) technique lay dormant for a number of years before sampled-data control systems came into common usage.  It was then realized that the Bureau’s technique could be directly applied to analyzing the frequency makeup (or spectral content) in these systems, and further, that this technique was ideal for use with computers, and later, digital signal processors.  The successor to the DFT, the Fast Fourier Transform, or FFT, is a basic DSP algorithm employed in all forms of spectral analysis from seismic data processing and radar image processing to MP3 audio compression and Wi-Fi, DSL and WiMAX communication, and soon 4th-generation cellular (LTE).

    In the early ’70s, scientists were beginning to use off-the-shelf TTL (transistor-transistor-logic) discrete logic chips to implement specialized DSP “engines.”  The first systems were relatively slow and consumed lots of space, but the second generation of IC implementations (c.1974) began to use bit-slice logic, like Advanced Micro Devices’  Am2901 TTL 4-bit arithmetic logic unit (ALU).  In 1973, TRW bid a military project with the first practical parallel multiplier designs for use with bit-slice ALUs and shipped the first working parts in 1975.  But, at several hundred dollars just for the multiplier chip, only the military and government laboratories could afford the approach.

    Originally used for implementing “super” minicomputers, the Am2901 found application as the heart of Digital Equipment Corporation’s DECsystem 2020, Data General’s Nova 4 and other mid-sized computer systems of the day.  The 2901 and associated chips (consisting of address generators, carry look-ahead logic, program sequencers and fast multipliers—along with memory and I/O circuitry) constituted a basic “building-block” approach to implementing a fast digital signal processor.

    In the late ’70s, some of the first commercial applications of DSP used the Am2901 chip family to implement array processors for medical diagnostic equipment like CT (computer tomography) scanners and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR, now called magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI) systems.  The high sales price of such systems justified the high cost of the building-block DSP technology.

    For military applications, like radar image processing, the building-block approach proved to be ideal.  Because little else was available, the 2901 family chips (and its successors) were also applied to other military DSP programs, such as sonar.  Although other IC houses made their own bit-slice chips (and sequencers, etc.), the 290x family architecture has become obsolete (though later implemented as CMOS data-path elements in several ASIC libraries).

    1. Speak & Spell

    Probably the first single-chip implementation of a DSP algorithm was the TMS280 (later renamed the 281A) chip in Texas Instrument’s Speak & Spell™ learning aid introduced in 1978.  Implementing Linear Predictive Coding (LPC) for speech synthesis, the device was not programmable, but was controlled by a separate microprocessor (TMS370) and a large ROM containing the library of digitized words.  All three chips were implemented in PMOS dynamic logic.  The Speak & Spell design team was headed by Gene Frantz (now a TI Principal Fellow).  The idea for the product came from Frantz’ boss at the time, Paul Breedlove, who came up with the idea through a series of brainstorming sessions on how to use a hot technology of the day…bubble memories.

    This was clearly a consumer product, a chip that retailed for $49.95 (instead of TI’s design goal of $29.95), rather than the thousands of dollars inherent in earlier military implementations.  Speak & Spell was such a wild success that TI couldn’t meet demand, so it kept raising the price.  However, it proved the commercial viability of DSP technology in a consumer product.

    2. GENERATION 0.5

    In 1978, American Microsystems Inc. (AMI) announced the first programmable integrated circuit designed specifically for digital signal processing, the 12-bit S2811, designed by Dick Blasco and his group under the direction of Bill Nicholson.  Although of truly innovative circuit design, the chip was implemented in a radical “V-groove” MOS technology and never yielded volume commercial products.

    Although AMI was the first to announce a single-chip DSP, Intel Corporation was the first company to actually begin shipping a product.  In 1979, Intel introduced the Intel 2920 DSP chip, designed by Marcian (Ted) Hoff (famous for invention of what some count as the first single-chip MPU, the Intel 4004).  Designed as a “drop-in” analog circuit replacement, complete with on-board A/D and D/A converters, the chip was called an “analog signal processor” by Intel; after all, it (digitally) processed analog signals.  The 2920 did not have a parallel multiplier and was too slow (with a 600 ns cycle time) to perform useful work in the audio spectrum—where the initial high-volume DSP chip market was to eventually materialize.  After lack of success elsewhere, the second wafer lot was sold out to U.S. Robotics for use in then-current 300 bps modems as adaptive equalizers.  Although the 2920 was unsuccessful, Intel did not capitalize on the fact that (with the on-board A/D & D/A converters) this was the first single-chip codec—for which, Intel was awarded the patent.

    3. GENERATION 1

    It was in 1980 that NEC announced the first practical programmable single-chip DSP for the merchant market, the 16-bitµPD7720.  Although hampered by primitive development tools, the 122-ns NMOS chip had a (two-cycle) on-chip parallel multiplier which was fast enough to perform useful “work” in the audio spectrum.

    This began the first generation of “true” DSP chips, most based on the “Harvard” architecture which employs separate data and memory buses for better real-time operation.  In the same year, AT&T’s Bell Laboratories introduced the DSP-1, which also had an on-chip parallel multiplier.  But the chip was intended for captive use by AT&T’s manufacturing arm, Western Electric Company.  Consequently, NEC was the first merchant market vendor of a practical DSP chip.

    In 1979, Ed Caudell of Texas Instruments designed the initial architecture of what was later to become TI’s first DSP chip.  Caudell was earlier involved in designing TI’s very popular TMS1000 8-bit MCU.  The effort was under TI’s Microprocessor Microcomputer Products (MMP) group headed by Wally Rhines (now CEO of Mentor Graphics) and Jerry Rogers (MMP Design Manager).  Known as the Signal Processing Computer (SPC) Program, John Hughes was the Program Manager and Tony Leigh was the Design Manager. Dr. Surendar Magar was hired in 1980 to optimize the SPC architecture around DSP algorithms. Dr. Magar’s Ph.D. was in Signal Processing and had been working for Plessey in the U.K. Soon after joining TI, Dr. Magar recommended the inclusion of a hardware multiplier, which was not in the original SPC specification. Wanda Gass (nee English) joined Magar as a key Design Engineer along with others and the full logic was complete by the end of 1980.

    The resulting design was implemented in 3.0 um NMOS and introduced to the world in February, 1982 through Dr. Magar’s classic ISSCC (International Solid State Circuits Conference) paper. The final product, the TMS32010, was announced by Caudell in April, 1982 at the Paris, France ICASSP (International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing).  The TMS32010 went into production in 1983 and the DSP Group at that time was headed by Dave French (later VP at Analog Devices Inc. and then CEO of Cirrus Logic Inc.).

    TI’s early recognition of the potential of DSP carried it through seven years of “missionary” work before a profit was turned, and by then others realized that it was a market ripe for growth.  Three other major semiconductor companies then joined TI and NEC in the programmable DSP chip market: AT&T Microelectronics (later Agere Systems, then merged with LSI Logic to become part of LSI Corp.), Motorola Semiconductor Products Sector (now Freescale Semiconductor) and Analog Devices Inc. Today, there are many other semiconductor houses that employ DSP technology in their products, but for the most part, those chips are not programmable by the user.

    First-generation chips generally lacked parallelism, since at least two processor cycles were required to perform a complete multiply-accumulate (MAC) function, and limited on-chip memory required expensive (in terms of real estate and added memory) additions for most applications.  The more primitive “engines” of the day (like conventional MCUs) required as many as 60 clock cycles to perform a multiply-accumulate operation.

    Other chips offered to the market in this first-generation era were the ITT UDPI-01 (the first announced CMOS single-chip DSP, which never reached the sampling stage) and the Hitachi HD61810, another CMOS chip which saw mostly internal company use.

    4. GENERATION 2

    The most striking improvement in second-generation DSP chips was in the implementation of a single-cycle multiplier-accumulator (MAC), effectively doubling the bandwidth capability of the chips.  Direct memory access (DMA) emerged as a way to quickly load new algorithms into the DSP chip.  Enhancements to first-generation chips added serial communication ports and timers, and interrupt capability began to emerge for control applications.  DSP instruction sets became richer, with event control capability, which further broadened chip utility—allowing true stand-alone capability for many more implementations.

    The Fujitsu MB8764 (announced in 1983) was the first of this genre, followed by the TI TMS32020 (in 1985).  The TMS32020 was the result of collaborative design efforts between Texas Instruments and their customer, ITT Corp. (then International Telephone and Telegraph Corp.).  Dr. Surendar Magar of TI and Dr. Kristine Kneib of ITT were the principal architects of the -020.

    Other single-chip DSPs were announced in this second-generation era by Toshiba (T6386/7), STC (DSP-128) and Matsushita (MN1901/9), but they were never successful in the merchant market. (The DSP-128 never sampled, according to our information.)  During this time, AT&T continued internal DSP development with the DSP-2 chip.   Thomson (now STMicroelectronics) introduced the ST68930/31 in 1986, but confined most marketing efforts to Europe.

    Texas Instruments licensed the NMOS 32020 architecture to General Instrument Microelectronics (now Microchip Technology).  GI moved the NMOS design into CMOS and in turn provided it back to TI which resulted in TI’s first CMOS DSP chip, the TMS320C25.  The new chip was designed in Japan and principal designer of the -C25 was Takashi Takamizawa, later to become TI’s DSP Business Manager in Japan.

    The first floating-point DSP chip from a major vendor reluctantly made it to market in this era.  AT&T introduced itsDSP32 for internal use at 8 MFLOPS in 1984 and began to sell its DSP32 to the merchant market in July, 1986.  Thrust into the merchant world by the divestiture of the Bell operating companies, AT&T did not have cohesive DSP-chip marketing direction until late 1987, when the company realized that their first integer DSP chip, the (third-generation-design) 18.2 MIPS DSP-16, could make the company a credible force in the merchant market.

    5. GENERATION 3

    The period of the third generation became the “glory years” for DSP volume shipments by TI, which had captured over 60% of the world single-chip DSP market by 1986.  Third-generation changes centered mainly on reconfigurable memory, with flexibility of on- and off-chip memory that could be variously configured for program, data, or coefficients.  The degree of parallelism increased even further, with as many as three operations performed in a single clock cycle.  Further-expanded instruction sets became evident.  In late 1986, Zoran Corp. introduced the first single-chip DSP with CISC-like vector instructions to efficiently perform FFT functions for military applications.

    Analog Devices introduced the ADSP-2100 chip, which was unique in that it had a 24-bit instruction word, 16-bit data paths, and had no on-board memory. But, it was designed to access two words of external data on every cycle and had an instruction set optimized to perform FFTs and zero-overhead loops.  The ADSP-2100 and its faster successor, the ADSP-2100A, found heavy use in military and imaging applications, while newer members of the family, the ADSP-2101 and ADSP-2105 (both with on-board memory) saw a wider variety of applications.

    The Motorola 56000 family of 24-bit chips (for both instructions and data paths) was the first integer DSP optimized for high-fidelity audio applications, and found early acceptance in professional audio processing and music synthesis.  Other third-generation integer DSP chips included those from AT&T (the DSP-16A at 40 MIPS by 1988), Hitachi (the DSP-I, sold only in Japan) and TI (TMS320C50).

    Coincident with the era of the third-generation of integer DSP chips, additional first-generation floating-point DSP chips were announced, including improved units from AT&T (the 25 MFLOP CMOS DSP32C was announced in 1987), Texas Instruments (TMS320C30), Zoran (ZR34325), Fujitsu (MB86232), STMicroelectronics (ST18940/41), NEC (µPD77230) and Oki (MSM699210).

    6. GENERATION 4

    The emergence of a fourth generation of DSP chips was heralded by announcements made in the early ’90s.  Several fourth-generation integer DSP chips were characterized by on-chip codec circuitry, like Motorola’s DSP56156.               

    As the fourth generation evolved, geometries progressed to submicron (0.8 µm) levels and multiply-accumulate times continued to fall.  Additional CISC instructions to accommodate key algorithms became evident for some chip designs.

    Second-generation floating-point chips emerged coincident with the introduction of fourth-generation integer chips: AT&T’s DSP3210, Motorola’s DSP-96002, NEC’s µPD77240, TI’s TMS320C40, and somewhat later, Analog Devices’ ADSP-21020.

    7. GENERATION 5

    The fifth generation of DSP chips began in 1994 with the Texas Instruments’ TMS320C54xx family.  Introduced with a 20ns (50 MIPS) speed, it was TI’s first chip with a Viterbi accelerator, and the successor to its popular C25 and C50 families.  With the accelerator, the chip was clearly intended for communication applications (like modems).

    But, from a public relations standpoint, the C54 family was overshadowed by the 1985 sampling of TI’s TMS320C80(earlier termed a Multimedia Video Processor—MVP).  The C80 consisted of four 64-bit DSP cores along with a 32-bit RISC core.  A less-capable, but cheaper version, the C82, was introduced with two DSP cores and the RISC core.  Although an extremely powerful chip family, the C80’s programming complexity confined the bulk of its applications to sophisticated image processing, and the chip never achieved general industry acceptance.

    Motorola Semiconductor’s Data Communications Operation melded its DSP56002 DSP core with a 68302 microprocessor (MPU) core on the same die, the M68356 “Signal Processing Communications Engine.” In a similar pairing, TI joined its C54 core with an ARM RISC core on a single die and found success in tens of millions digital cellphones.

    Although multiple-MAC designs were earlier available on specialized 8-bit video filter chips like the Inmos (acquired by STMicroelectronics) A121 and Zoran ZR33881, 16-bit programmable DSPs also began taking on multiple MACs late in this generation.  Half-micron geometries led to sub-20 ns multiply-accumulate times—across several MACs or several DSP cores, leading to substantially higher bandwidth capability.

    Continued improvements of second-generation floating-point DSP chips were introduced coincident with the fifth generation of fixed-point chips.  Texas Instruments introduced the TMS320C32 and TMS320C44 chips, while Analog Devices introduced the ADSP-21060 SHARC™ (Super Harvard Architecture Computer).

    8. GENERATION 6

    The late-‘90s era of 0.35 um CMOS geometries saw the first introductions of VLIW and superscalar architectures for DSP.

    Texas Instruments’ TMS320C6201 was the first user-programmable VLIW DSP chip available.  Employing eight ALUs, two of which had MACs, the ‘C62 was initially capable of executing 1,600 raw MIPS and 400 DSP MIPS (MMACS) at 200 MHz.  The VLIW approach requires an optimizing C-language compiler, and TI invested heavily in developing an efficient compiler.  Until the family later moved to 0.18 um geometries, power consumption was a problem.  The ‘C62x family was announced in February 1997 and began to ship in moderate volumes in Q1/98.

    Lucent Technologies (later Agere Systems) introduced the DSP16000 family of 16-bit DSPs which featured dual ALUs and dual MACs.  The 16000 was optimized for low power consumption and for bank speech coding applications such as required in cellular base stations or Internet Protocol (IP) telephony gateways.  Initially rated at 400 MIPS (@200 MHz), the 16000 could go head-to-head with TI’s C62x family in applications where there was no need for the extra (non-DSP) MIPS provided by the TI chip.  The DSP16000 began sampling in November 1997 and in 1998, Lucent began shipping the DSP16410, a chip consisting of two 16000 cores on a die.  The DSP16410 has been a favorite in GSM cellular base station implementations.

    In 1998, a startup company, ZSP Corporation, began sampling its ZSP16400 family of DSPs, which like the Lucent product, had dual ALUs and dual MACs.  However, the ZSP family was based on a 4-issue superscalar architecture and employed a different (proprietary) approach to feeding data to multiple MACs.  Initially rated at 400 MIPS (@200 MHz),the ZSP design was acquired by LSI Logic Corp. in mid-1999, and volume shipments of the renamed ZSP400 family began in Q3/99.  LSI Logic sold both ZSP chips and licensed ZSP cores to a number of companies.  The ZSP chip operations were sold in mid-2006 by LSI Logic to Verisilicon Corp., which has since expanded the product offerings.

    Third-generation floating-point chipsemerged in this time frame, beginning with TI’s C67x family based on the VLIW architecture of the fixed-point C62x family.  The family is source-code compatible with the C62x and started with a 1-GOPS version.  Analog Devices announced its own dual-ALU/dual-MAC product, the floating-point ADSP21100(“Hammerhead”) family, which was code-compatible with its ADSP21000 (SHARC) family of products.  Sampling began in Q4/99.  Because of its code compatibility, the Hammerhead presented an instant upgrade for existing sockets.

    In 2001, TI introduced a formal pairing of its C55-family DSP core and ARM900-family RISC cores on a single die, formalized as its OMAP™ product family (said to have evolved from Open Multimedia Applications Processor). For reasons explained later in this report, the pairing of DSP and RISC, rather than a single processor architecture for both, has considerable merit in many applications.

    By 2003, 0.15 um DSP chips became commonplace and 0.13 um chips were in volume production.  And DSP cores become an ever smaller percentage of the die area as peripherals and (mostly) on-board memory begin to dominate the silicon die.

    9. THE CURRENT DSP CROP [c.2009]

    By early 2007, 65-nm versions of Texas Instruments’ C55 family were shipping in volume as part of the OMAP™ family, which became the market leader due to its deployment in hundreds of millions of cellphones, annually.  But, the company’s 1-GHz C64 VLIW became TI’s flagship “catalog” product. One member of the C64 family includes both Viterbi and turbocoding accelerators, clearly targeting the cellular base station market.  The C64 family has since been expanded to three or more cores on a single die, again addressing the base station market.  Other C64 implementations employ MPEG4 and graphics accelerators for video multimedia applications, under the DaVinci™ family name.

    Motorola has fielded its MSC8144 chip, successor to those first announced in Q4/01.  Based on four StarCore VLIW cores (each with four ALUs & MACs)  and 11.5 Mbits of on-chip memory, the earlier MSC8122 chip was originally introduced at 300 MHz, but the successor MSC8144 is now shipping at over 1GHz, and at introduction was rated by Berkeley Design Technology Inc. (BDTI) as the fastest available DSP processor, even as a single-chip implementation.

    Formally announced in Q3/01, Analog Devices’ TigerSHARC™, a floating-point VLIW design, was also targeted (unsuccessfully) for the cellular base station market.  Uniquely, in addition to traditional “symbol-rate” baseband processing, the chip can also perform high-speed “chip-rate” signal processing functions (required for CDMA cellular operation) that competitors generally assign to ASIC or FPGA implementations. The chip provided a significant jump in performance over the earlier Hammerhead, but it is not code compatible with the ADSP21000 product family, so new tools were required to develop products based on the higher performance product.

    In a similar vein, Analog Devices introduced the fixed-point Blackfin™ DSP family, based on the “Frio” core jointly developed with Intel Corporation. The first chip (the ADI21535) was announced in mid-2001 at a 300MHz clock rate. It was priced at $27 @10K units. The initial superscalar design employed two 16-bit MACs and two 40-bit ALUs and four 8-bit video ALUs, clearly targeting multimedia applications. By mid-2003, the chip family began sampling at 600 MHz (1.2 GMACS), and is currently available at 750 MHz.  The architecture is said to scale to at least 1GHz, a speed that ADI’s older 219x devices would be unlikely to achieve.  As with the TigerSHARC, it is not code compatible with the earlier 2100 family devices, so the company has developed new tools to support the new architecture.  However, with the 300 MHz version later priced at $4.95 @10K units, the chip achieved strong early market attention.

    Intel chose to employ the Frio core in SoC (System on Chip) products under its PCA (Personal Internet Communications Architecture) banner.  Rather than use the DSP nomenclature (a term which they equate to TI), Intel chose to call the Frio technology “Micro Signal Architecture.” The Frio architecture became part of Intel’s cellular baseband chip, code-named “Hermon” (after Mount Hermon, the highest mountain in Israel), which (along with Intel’s XScale RISC product line) was sold to Marvell Semiconductor in late 2006. Marvell has since expanded on the initial architecture, now offering a cellular baseband chip code-named “Tavor” (after the second highest mountain in Israel).  Tavor found a home in RIM’s Blackberry “Bold” 3G cellphone introduced in late 2008.

    Agere Systems introduced (Q2/03) the DSP16411, a 0.13 um successor to the earlier (Lucent) DSP16410 that has been popular in GSM base stations.  Clearly, the faster, and code-compatible, 16411 is a natural for retrofitting GSM base stations to GPRS capability.  The operation became a division of LSI Corp. shipping its Trident HP chip based on its workhorse DSP16000 and ARM7TDMI cores for the GSM/GPRS/EDGE cellphone market.  The cellphone chip operation was later sold to Infineon, but LSI Corp. continues serving the cellular base station market with its Starpro line of multicore chips based on the StarCore DSP core jointly developed with (then) Motorola’s Semiconductor Division.

    VeriSilicon now offers its new ZSP600 family as licensed cores. Based on a 6-issue superscalar architecture with 4 MACs running at up to 300 MHz in 0.13um CMOS, the chip occupies a unique niche.  Although earlier designs, like the ZSP400 and ZSP500 were also sold as chips by LSI Logic, VeriSilicon only licenses the IP, in addition to applying the cores in its own ASIC chip designs.

    The designs of programmable DSP chips continue to evolve, with VLIW becoming the base architecture of choice for most of the highest performance discrete chips. But all discrete DSP chip vendors are now treating their basic engines as ASIC cores, as central elements in an ASSP (application-specific standard product), like a digital still camera chip, or for a customer-specific (usually high-volume) design like a cellphone baseband chip.

    Another clear trend is that of licensable RISC cores have evolved to incorporate ever-increasing DSP functionality, either through customizable instruction set architectures or through the addition of SIMD augmentation.

    The trend toward ASSPs for vertical markets, like cellphones, cameras and personal media players continues, with off-the-shelf discrete DSPs becoming a diminishing percentage of the (still-growing) DSP-centric silicon market.

    Analysis: Michael Dell acquiring the rest 84% stake in Dell for $2.15B in cash, before becoming the next IBM, and even getting the cash back after the transaction

    OR Michael Dell’s new cash skimming strategy by privatization and targeting the high-growth and fast SME/SMB (small to medium-sized) businesses with solutions worldwide which will help the adoption of Dell solutions by larger enterprises later on as well. OR how to exploit Dell’s competitive advantage of having NO legacy (“old things”/”old”) business in the enterprise market versus the established enterprise solution players like IBM, HP, Oracle et al. OR the story of leaving its traditional PC business behind, and how the explosion of consumer IT devices and consumerization of IT is playing well with this specific kind of small to large enterprises focus by Dell. OR Michael’s way of showing a fig to all stock market actors (the diversity of “analysts” included) inspired by his thinking ‘You are utterly stupid, and will remain so’. OR the huge bonus for creating the tremendous value in the last 6 years he’d lead the company again, as described in the details sections of this post, as well as earlier in the Pre-Commerce and the Consumerization of IT [Sept 10, 2011] and Thin/Zero Client and Virtual Desktop Futures [May 30, 2012] posts on this same blog. OR, in the very worst case, getting a normal evaluation (sooner or later) of his 16% of shares.

    ANYWAY Michael will become hyper-rich. As a minimum think of attaining a $36B value instead of his current $3.8B for his 16% share of Dell when the company indeed becomes the next IBM. This is absolutely possible, and for no more time than another 6 years he will continue to lead Dell. See more about all that in the first section of this post titled:

    Michael Dell: We are not a PC company anymore

    Update: Highlights From Dell Tech Camp 2013 [DellVlog YouTube channel, Feb 12, 2013] will provide the latest and only 3 minutes long glimpse into the current state of such a “non-PC company anymore”

    The event, now in its fourth year featured: * Dell’s latest technologies and solutions that address customer issues and challenges around Cloud Computing, Data Insights, Mobility and Converged Infrastructure * Speakers from Dell including Marius Haas, President of Enterprise Solutions; Aongus Hegarty, President, Dell EMEA; and Tony Parkinson, Vice President, EMEA Enterprise Solutions alongside a number of Dell solutions experts, customers and partners * Hands-on, deep-dive sessions around Dell’s latest Cloud, Storage, Mobility and Convergence solutions * Customer and partner insight on the latest enterprise technology challenges and trends * Two live-streamed Think Tank events at the event which bring together some of the industry’s principal thought leaders to discuss Converged Infrastructure and enterprise solutions for SMBs

    Here is a slide copy which is speaking for itself in showing the difference:
    image

    Then read the second section of this post titled:

    The Indian case as a proofpoint of readiness

    Before those detailed background sections I should elaborate somewhat more about the founder’s cash skimming approach. Michael Dell’s classical business recipe was to collect the bills ahead of paying his suppliers. What was possible in the 90’s is not anymore. Nevertheless: Dell Push-Pull Supply Chain Strategy [Ian Johnson YouTube channel, June 11, 2012]

    http://www.driveyoursuccess.com this video explains how to run Dell’s Push-Pull supply chain strategy.

    Now he decided to apply the original idea to the current state of Dell’s business. This was the sole reason of his one a half year effort taking Dell private with which he succeeded 3 days ago. The official press release, certainly, has no mention of that at all, just the usual bullshit:

    Dell Enters Into Agreement to Be Acquired By Michael Dell and Silver Lake [press release, Feb 5, 2012]

    Mr. Dell said: “I believe this transaction will open an exciting new chapter for Dell, our customers and team members. We can deliver immediate value to stockholders, while we continue the execution of our long-term strategy and focus on delivering best-in-class solutions to our customers as a private enterprise. Dell has made solid progress executing this strategy over the past four years, but we recognize that it will still take more time, investment and patience, and I believe our efforts will be better supported by partnering with Silver Lake in our shared vision. I am committed to this journey and I have put a substantial amount of my own capital at risk together with Silver Lake, a world-class investor with an outstanding reputation. We are committed to delivering an unmatched customer experience and excited to pursue the path ahead.”

    An opinion a little bit closer to the real aim:
    Dell Computers In Buyout Bid By Firm’s Founder [spworldnews YouTube channel, Feb 5, 2012]

    With an attached background article: Dell Heads For Radical Restructure

    Dell Computers was built from scratch in a college dorm room, and now its founder launches a $24.4bn bid to make the firm private. Once-dominant US computer company Dell has unveiled a £15.5bn plan to take the firm private in a buyout by founder Michael Dell. The firm said it had signed “a definitive merger agreement” that gives shareholders $13.65 (£8.70) per share in cash – a premium of 25% over Dell’s January 11 closing share price.
    “I believe this transaction will open an exciting new chapter for Dell, our customers and team members,” Mr Dell said.
    The deal was unveiled with investment firm Silver Lake, and backed by a $2bn (£1.27bn) loan from Microsoft. Dell shares dropped 2.6% to $13.27 on the Nasdaq after the plan was announced. The move, which would de-list the company from stock markets, could ease some of the pressure on Dell, which is cash-rich but has been seeing profits slump.
    Michael Dell Michael Dell founded the firm in his college dorm room. The Texas-based computer maker, which Mr Dell started in his college dormitory room, once topped a market capitalisation of $100bn (£63bn) as the world’s biggest PC producer.
    The plan is subject to several conditions, including a vote of unaffiliated stockholders. It calls for a “go shop” period to allow shareholders to determine if there is a better offer.
    “We can deliver immediate value to stockholders, while we continue the execution of our long-term strategy and focus on delivering best-in-class solutions to our customers as a private enterprise,” Mr Dell said of the plan.
    Dell was a pioneer of phone-ordered, custom built PCs in Britain during the 1990s.
    The company worked from facilities in the Irish Republic, Britons were able to specify their hard and software requirements before machines were delivered to their home.

    But a realistic assesment I’ve found only in that source:
    Here’s The Secret Private-Equity Plan For Dell by Henry Blodget [Daily Ticker on Yahoo! Finance, Feb 6, 2013] CLICK TO THE LINK AS THERE IS A VERY GOOD VIDEO RECORD OF DISCUSSION BETWEEN DAILY TICKER’S HOSTS AARON TASK AND HENRY BLODGET

    Earlier, I wrote about what Dell was likely to do now that it is taking itself private.

    I suggested that Michael Dell and his private-equity backers would coin money, in part by paying themselves a huge one-time dividend with the cash sitting on Dell’s balance sheet.

    I also bemoaned the fact that Michael Dell had to take his company private to coin this money instead of executing his plan as a public company and sharing the loot with his current shareholders.

    More broadly, I complained that too few public-company management teams (like Dell’s) have the balls to tell short-term public-market investors to take a hike and implement long-term strategic plans.

    And that is indeed a bummer.

    But it’s also the reality.

    Most public-company management teams are so cowed by Wall Street’s short-term demands that they sacrifice the vision and cojones that enabled them to build big public companies in the first place. And then they just manage their companies from quarter to quarter while avoiding the tough, ballsy decisions that separate great companies from good ones.
    Anyway, Dell has decided to go private.
    So the questions are:
    • Why is Dell going private?
    • What is Dell going to do as a private company?
    Earlier, I speculated about what a generic private-equity firm might do with Dell after taking it private.
    I have since spoken with sources familiar with the specific Dell situation. So I have some better information.
    Here’s what the sources told me:

    • Dell is going private because the company is in the middle of a 5-year transformation from “PC manufacturer” to “single-source provider of corporate cloud and security solutions” (sort of a mini-HP or mini-IBM model) and the market is giving it no credit for that transformation. The company feels it has been making good progress on its transformation, but management is worried about meeting quarterly targets and other milestones that are slowing the transformation down. And the stock just keeps dropping. So Michael Dell and Silver Lake felt there was an opportunity to be bolder and more aggressive with Dell as a private company.


    • Silver Lake and Michael Dell are borrowing about $17 billion of the $24 billion Dell purchase price ($15 billion from banks and $2 billion from Microsoft), which means they are temporarily putting up about $7 billion of equity capital. Dell has $15 billion of cash sitting in the bank. So it seems highly likely–we’ll know in 45 days, when the SEC filing appears–that Silver Lake and Dell will pay themselves a big dividend to cover their cash investment. After that point, they’ll be playing with house money. (Correct–it doesn’t suck to be in the private-equity business!).

    • The secret plan for Dell is NOT to fire thousands of people and chop the company up and sell off the parts. Sure, some folks might get fired and some divisions might get sold. But the plan is to invest in the company’s product suite, R&D, pricing*, and marketing capabilities, thus accelerating Dell’s transformation into a solutions provider. This investment will temporarily reduce the company’s free cash flow and profits, which public-market investors might (stupidly) have freaked out about. This was one of the reasons Michael Dell wanted to take the company private.

    • Dell’s plan is to focus on selling its solutions to mid-market companies (~500 employees [more precisely to companies with 215-2,000 employees, see the details in the first “Michael Dell: We are not a PC company anymore” section of my analysis]), not the gigantic Fortune 500 companies that are already well-served by IBM, HP, and other huge “solutions” providers. By providing comprehensive solutions for cloud and security to companies that are not currently well-served, Dell also hopes to increase demand for PCs at these companies–PCs that Dell will obviously provide.
    The private-equity firm backing Dell, Silver Lake, has a long history of investing in troubled tech companies, and it has posted excellent returns over the years. Silver Lake’s target investment time horizon is about 5 years, which is about 100-times longer than the time horizon of the typical public-market investor. So Silver Lake is willing to depress Dell’s earnings and cash flow for a couple of the years while investing heavily to transform the company–thus, hopefully, creating a more valuable Dell over the long term.
    That said, Dell’s competitor HP is not so optimistic and had these crushing statements about Dell’s turnaround:
    That said, Dell’s competitor HP is not so optimistic and had these crushing statements about Dell’s turnaround:
    “Dell has a very tough road ahead. The company faces an extended period of uncertainty and transition that will not be good for its customers. And with a significant debt load, Dell’s ability to invest in new products and services will be extremely limited. Leveraged buyouts tend to leave existing customers and innovation at the curb. We believe Dell’s customers will now be eager to explore alternatives, and HP plans to take full advantage of that opportunity.”
    Public market investors and wimpy management teams take note: Your obsession with quarterly performance creates the opportunity for firms like Silver Lake to come along and buy your companies on the cheap, thus coining money for their private-market investors. In short, your quarterly earnings obsession is ruining companies and destroying value. So grow a pair, tell Wall Street to be patient, and focus on creating value for the long term!
    * What I mean by “investing in pricing” is cutting prices on hardware and, thus, reducing profit per unit. This will hurt profit margins but make the company’s solutions more attractive to customers. And given that the focus is now on “solutions,” they’ll be looking to sell the hardware at closer to cost and then make money on add-on software and services.

    In addition I will draw your attention to the following facts in the first “Michael Dell: We are not a PC company anymore” section of my analysis:

    • John Swainson President of Dell Software Group was senior advisor to Silver Lake before he came to Dell a year ago to form this most essential unit for Dell’s long-term business strategy. His earlier role was to advise on value creation activities for Silver Lake’s portfolio companies. Prior to that he was CEO of the big software company Computer Associates (now CA Technologies) for five years, and before that worked for IBM Corp for more than 26 years, including seven years as general manager of the Application Integration Middleware Division, a business he founded in 1997. During that period, he and his team developed the WebSphere family of middleware products and the Eclipse open source tools project. He also led the IBM worldwide software sales organization.
    • Marius Haas hired in August to lead the Enterprise Solutions Group (ESG) came from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P. (KKR). KKR was the leader of the leveraged buyout boom of the 1980s. Its biggest LBO deal is still the biggest one in the histroy of mankind, and well documented in both a book and a film Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco. Prior to KKR Haas was senior vice president and worldwide general manager of the Hewlett-Packard (HP) Networking Division, and also served as senior vice president of Strategy and Corporate Development. Before that he worked in senior operations roles at Compaq and Intel Corporation.
    • Jai Menon became CTO of Dell’s Enterprise Solutions Group in last August but before that he was CTO and VP, Technical Strategy for IBM’s Systems and Technology Group (STG). … Jai joined IBM Research in 1982. He has made many contributions to the storage industry and to IBM in the areas of disk emulation, storage controllers, disk caching, storage networking, storage virtualization, file systems and RAID. He is one of the early RAID pioneers that helped create a technology that is now a $20B industry.

    With such high level of private equity, leveraged buyout and both business and technical strategy expertise in the Executive Leadership Team, as well as top enterprise technology leadership behind that, Michael Dell is best positioned to reap both immediate and ongoing financial benefits of unprecedented scale from taking Dell private. Some more information from the business media to support my statement:

    Inside Michael Dell’s World [The Wall Street Journal, Feb 5, 2013]

    … The buyout would give Mr. Dell the largest stake in the company, ensuring that the 47-year-old is the one who gets to oversee any changes. … As part of the deal to go private, Mr. Dell would contribute his nearly 16% stake valued at about $3.7 billion, plus $700 million from an investment firm he controls, the people said. Microsoft would invest about $2 billion in the form of a subordinated debenture, a less-risky investment than common stock. … Microsoft isn’t expected to get board seats or governance rights in a closely held Dell, one of the people said. Instead, the companies would tighten their relationship regarding use of Microsoft’s Windows software, the person said.

    Microsoft Loan Said to Help Dell While Avoiding Favorites [Bloomberg, Feb 5, 2013]

    Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) is using a $2 billion loan to help finance Dell Inc. (DELL)’s $24.4 billion buyout to bolster one of the largest makers of computers using Windows software and fend off competition from Google Inc. and Apple Inc.

    Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive officer, discussed the loan with Dell founder and CEO Michael Dell, according to two people familiar with the negotiations. Microsoft opted for a loan rather than an equity investment to avoid rankling other personal-computer makers that use Windows, said one of the people, who asked not to be named because the matter isn’t public. …

    … Microsoft’s investment helps to support “the long term success of the entire PC ecosystem,” the company said in a statement. Peter Wootton, a spokesman for Microsoft, declined to comment beyond the statement.

    Microsoft won’t be involved in day-to-day operations, Dell Chief Financial Officer Brian Gladden said in an interview. …

    Michael Dell coughs up $750 million cash to buy out Dell [Reuters, Feb 6, 2013]

    Michael Dell and his investment firm are ponying up $750 million in cash toward the $24.4 billion purchase of Dell Inc to help bankroll the largest private equity-backed buyout since the financial crisis.

    The Dell founder and CEO this week struck a deal to take private the company he created out of a college dorm room in 1984, partnering with private equity house Silver Lake and Microsoft Corp.

    Michael Dell will contribute $500 million of his own cash, and MSDC Management – an affiliate of his investment vehicle, MSD Capital – will contribute another $250 million, according to a company filing on Wednesday.

    Dell Inc also said it is targeting the repatriation of $7.4 billion of cash now parked abroad to help finance the deal. That may dismay some shareholders, as a hefty tax is usually levied on cash brought back from overseas.

    The deal, which ends Dell’s rocky 24-year run on the Nasdaq just as the once-dominant PC maker struggles to revive growth, is contingent on approval by a majority of shareholders — excluding Michael Dell himself.

    Several shareholders, including prominent investor Frederick “Shad” Rowe of Greenbrier Partners, have spoken out against the deal, protesting a lack of specifics as well as a potential conflict of interest with Michael Dell being the company’s single largest shareholder with a roughly 16 percent stake.

    “Some shareholders are glad. But there are others who feel it’s a raw deal,” said Shaw Wu, an analyst with Sterne Agee, who has spoken with several Dell shareholders since the announcement but declined to provide further details.

    The company has not given many specifics on what it would do differently as a private entity, angering some shareholders who said they needed more information to determine whether the $13.65-a-share deal price – a 25 percent premium to Dell’s stock price before buyout talks leaked in January – was adequate.

    On Wednesday, an individual shareholder filed the first lawsuit, in Delaware, attempting to stop the buyout. The lawsuit – which is seeking class-action status – maintains that the $13.65 per share offered sharply underestimated the company’s long-term prospects.

    By engaging in the going private transaction nowin the midst of the company’s transition from a PC vendor to full service software and enterprise solution providerthe board is allowing defendants M. Dell and Silver Lake to obtain Dell on the cheap,” read the lawsuit filed by Catherine Christner.

    Dell, the world’s No. 3 personal computer maker, broke down details of the equity and debt financing secured for the buyout in Wednesday’s filing.

    Silver Lake is putting up $1.4 billion, while banks including Bank of America, Barclays, Credit Suisse and RBC will provide roughly $16 billion in term loans and other forms of financing.

    Wednesday’s filing also disclosed that under certain circumstances if the merger cannot be completed, Michael Dell and Silver Lake could have to pay a termination fee of up to $750 million to the company.

    What Should Dell Shareholders Do? [Seeking Alpha, Feb 6, 2013]

    … let’s have a look at some balance sheet items. If the company was highly leveraged, things would be different and this price could make some kind of sense given the risk. But, if we look at the numbers, at the end of last quarter Dell had $11.2 billion in cash and equivalents, a long term debt of $5 billion and a total equity of $10.1 billion. In other words, a very healthy balance sheet.

    Putting things together, it’s very hard to recommend accepting the current offer. Unless you have another investment where you can put your money to work at a higher rate of return than you would by sticking with Dell (and with the safety of its balance sheet) I cannot recommend selling the shares at this price.

    Of course, Michael Dell and Silver Lake know the company is worth much more, and that’s why they are offering to take the company private.

    Unplugged: Why is Michael Dell buying back his company? [USA TODAY, Feb 5, 2013]

    … Because the 47-year-old CEO is already a billionaire, who has had scrapes with the Securities and Exchange Commission, critics contend that he has become adept at financial engineering and is simply sticking it to current shareholders to enrich himself yet even more. (The chairman and the company settled fraud allegations with the SEC in October 2010.)

    No doubt, Michael Dell is a capitalist. But I doubt his sole motivation is pure greed and a perverse joy in sticking it to shareholders, which include employees.

    Yet having met and interviewed Michael Dell on a number of occasions over the past decade, I think he is far more complex than a money-grubbing tech titan without heart or soul. In fact, I think he really cares about his legacy, the company and Austin. …

    MEANWHILE BELOW YOU CAN FIND A FEW “NO-CASH-SKIMMING” VIEWS OF THE PROPOSED DEAL:

    Channel: Happy, Worried [CRN, Feb 5, 2013]

    Solution providers see two sides to Dell’s privatization move.

    The first side is the opportunity for Dell to go through the painful transformation into an enterprise solution developer. Paul Clifford (pictured), president of Davenport Group, a St. Paul-based solution provider, said Dell should be able to accelerate its enterprise transformation without the eyes of Wall Street on them. “Dell is bringing us great products and support,” Clifford said. “If they go private, I think we’ll see more good stuff.”

    The second side is how Microsoft’s new relationship with Dell will impact the rest of the industry. Michael Goldstein, CEO of LAN Infotech, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based solution provider, said such a close relationship between the two is a little scary. “Dell is Microsoft’s biggest reseller partner,” Goldstein said. “They’re hugely important. Seeing the two of them combined makes me a little nervous because we’re a smaller solution provider, and we don’t want to get lost in the mix if [the deal] does happen.”

    What Will We Learn From Dell Tomorrow? [Bloomberg YouTube channel, Feb 5, 2013]

    Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Today’s “BWest Byte” is 1, for how many more days until we find out what’s happening at Dell. Cory Johnson reports on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

    Dell Gets Hit Hard by Sluggish Worldwide PC Market [Bloomberg YouTube channel, Nov 16, 2012]

    Nov. 15 (Bloomberg) — Nicole Lapin reports on trouble at Dell. She speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

    Dell and HP down for the count? [CNNMoney YouTube channel, Aug 22, 2012]

    Slow to find success in the realm of mobile, HP and Dell are caught in a downward slide with no apparent end in sight.


    Michael Dell:

    We are not a PC company anymore

    Michael Dell addresses Dell’s future [published on FortuneMagazineVideo YouTube channel, Jan 16, 2013; recorded on July 17, 2012]

    Michael Dell, Chairman and CEO, Dell, was interviewed by Fortune’s Andy Serwer at Brainstorm Tech in Aspen. They talked about the PC market, the enterprise, China, and Apple. He also announced a new $60M venture fund and said sales have slowed in China.

    Full transcript: Michael Dell addresses Dell’s future [Fortune, July 17, 2012]
    See also: Pre-Commerce and the Consumerization of IT [this same ‘Experiencing the Cloud’ blog, Sept 10, 2011]

    A sure sign of that “not a PC company anymore” statement came recently with
    Financial Reporting Change – Product and Service-based P&L by Robert L Williams [DellShares blog, Jan 10, 2013]

    In 2009, we charted our course to become a leading provider of end-to-end solutions. We’ve been executing our strategy with discipline and consistency ever since, investing for growth in the data center, software and services.  Our Enterprise Solutions and Services business revenue was about $14 billion in FY08 and by Q3 FY13 we saw an annual run rate approaching $20 billion.  We now have critical mass in these businesses, and we need a financial reporting structure that supports their growth and success.  Today in an 8-K filing Dell announced in the first quarter of fiscal 2014, which begins on February 2, 2013, it will replace its current global customer segment reporting structure with the following product and services groups:
    •  End User Computing (EUC), led by Jeff Clarke, vice chairman of operations and president Dell EUC, will include a wide variety of mobility, desktop, desktop virtualization, third-party software, and client-related services and peripheral products.
    •  Enterprise Solutions Group (ESG), led by Marius Haas, president Dell ESG, will include servers, networking, storage, and related peripherals products.
    •  Dell Services, led by Suresh Vaswani, president Dell Services, will include a broad range of IT and business services, including support and deployment services, infrastructure, cloud, and security services, and applications and business process services.
    •  Dell Software Group, led by John Swainson, president Dell Software will include systems management, security and business intelligence software offerings.
    Steve Felice, chief commercial officer, will continue to lead Dell’s global sales and marketing organizations.

    That was already well manifested at Dell World [2012] Influencer Panel Highlights – December 11, 2012 [DellVlog YouTube channel, Dec 11, 2012]

    Highlights from the Dell World Influencer Panel and Q&A with Michael Dell and Dell’s Executive Leadership Team held December 11, 2012 live from Austin, TX. Join the conversation on Twitter via #DellWorld.

    The Dell wants to be more than your box provider post from The Register summarizes the above [Dec 12, 2012] as:

    Solutions in hand – but supply your own drinks

    … Dell is dead serious about being a “solution provider” … – and it has to be, because as we all know the margins are in software and services.

    That’s why Steve Felice, Dell co-president and chief commercial officer, bragged that Dell had spent over $10bn in the past five years to acquire Perot Systems, Quest Software, Wyse Technologies, Scalent, Boomi, AppAssure, SonicWall, KACE, SecurityWorks, and a slew of others to build out its portfolio of services and software.

    The executive roundtable was a way to introduce some of the new faces of Dell to customers and partners, with just about everybody but Dell, the man, and [Steve]Felice [Dell co-president and chief commercial officer], who joined Dell in 1999 from third-party tech support firm DecisionOne, and Jeff Clarke, vice chairman and co-president in charge of global operations and end user computing, being the old Dell hands.
    Marius Haas, president of the cross-group Enterprise Solutions (gulp!) group, just came aboard this year after a short stint at private equity firm KKR and a long career at rival HP. John Swainson, who runs Dell’s Software Group, is a long-time IBMer who turned CA Technologies around. After the surprise resignation last week of long-time EDS executive Steve Schuckenbrock, who has been at Dell since 2007 and who has run its Services and then its Large Enterprise groups, Suresh Vaswani is the new president of the Services group and was formerly in charge of Dell’s Indian services group; before that, he was the co-CEO at Indian services giant Wipro. The consensus on the street seems to be that Schuckenbrock wants to be a CEO, and it ain’t gonna happen at Dell. (There could be some openings up at HP.)
    The opening of Dell World was also a way to toss out some more statistics. Dell says that it has presence at 95 per cent of the Fortune 500, and that more than 10 million small and medium businesses rely on its solutions (gulp!) and services (okay, new rule, when Dell says services, you have to pay the person to your right $5.) Dell also has something on the order of 115,000 partners, with about 650 of them showing up at Dell World to get the inside track.
    The execs were also put on the spot to answer questions, and Dell, the man, was asked about what he thought about the future of the PC business, something on the minds of both HP and Dell these days and not something that IBM is worried about much these days. (IBM is more worried about the future of systems and services, and it will have its own issues here, fear not.)
    “We spend a lot of time talking about this and working and working on it together,” Dell said, referring to his collaboration with Clarke. “We’re quite optimistic about Windows 8. You’re going to hear over the next few days about a broad set of products. Think about a product like Latitude 10, which is a thin, light tablet that also docks to become a full workstation – totally secure, works with all of the other Windows things that a customer have, runs Microsoft Office, and has a USB port, and so on.
    “That’s the kind of product that really excites out customers and helps address some of the challenges that exist. We think the touch experience is incredible. We have this stunning 27-inch, quad HD display with our XPS27 all-in-one. We think we are seeing a real revolution in the PC.”
    Clarke was more adamant: “We still believe that the PC is still the preferred device to do work, to drive productivity, to create. I look at the long-term prospects of the PC business and I am very optimistic; 85 per cent of the world’s population has a PC penetration rate of less than 20 per cent. I look at the middle class as it grows over the next 20 years from 1.8 billion people to 4.9 billion people, and I see the opportunity there. I look at the number of small businesses that we sell to today, and the creation of small businesses continues at an unprecedented rate and serving that with PCs is still a huge opportunity for the company.”

    One of the big events at Dell World on Wednesday, which Felice hinted at, would be a partnership with the Clinton Foundation, the organ of former president Bill Clinton, to help spur the growth of small businesses. (I doubt they talk about solutions much.)

    The real issue, explained Dell, was moving from selling individual point products to standing up combinations of servers, storage, networking, PCs, software, and services to solve a particular problem. This is precisely what every major systems player is trying to do, and the big independent OS suppliers (Microsoft and Red Hat) as well, who treat x86 iron the same way they treat electricity: as a given and not worth much consideration or profits.

    The company  issued the following press releases to clarify everything:
    Dell Investment in Enterprise Solutions and Services Gives Customers Worldwide the Power to Do More [Dell press release, Dec 11, 2012], an important excerpt to add to the above

    Strategy, Execution and Progress
    Dell’s long-term strategy is grounded upon helping IT organizations more rapidly respond to business demands, improve efficiency and capitalize on new, standard-based technologies. Dell is successfully executing on its long-term strategy, including key acquisitions of Wyse, SonicWall and Quest Software in 2012, while growth in its Enterprise Solutions and Services businesses continues to outpace its competitors.

    • Dell’s server and networking business grew 11 percent in the 3rd quarter, representing the 12th consecutive quarter of growth.
    • Dell’s server business grew revenue 4 percent in the 3rd quarter, and was the only provider among the top three to achieve positive unit growth, while other providers lost share.
    • Dell’s storage business (Dell-branded storage) grew at twice the rate of a major competitor and continues to outpace other providers, many of which reported declining revenue.

    Dell Enterprise Solutions and Services now represent one-third of the company’s revenue and half of its gross margin. These businesses, which were about $14 billion in FY08 are on an annual run-rate approaching $20 billion through the 3rd fiscal quarter, are up 4 percent from the previous year. Dell is making solid progress in executing its strategy and continues to add to capabilities valued by customers.

    Dell Backs Growing Businesses With Scalable Technology Solutions, Resources and Capital to Fuel Job Creation, Economic Growth Worldwide [Dell press release, Dec 11, 2012], an important excerpt to add to the above

    Dell today announced a renewed commitment to accelerate growth of small and midsize companies with scalable technology solutions, resources for entrepreneurs, and a new partnership with Clinton Global Initiative designed for next generation business founders.

    Fast-growing entrepreneurial companies are an important catalyst for global economic recovery and job creation,” said Michael Dell, Chairman and CEO of Dell. “At Dell, we’re delivering agile, efficient and powerful solutions to help entrepreneurs succeed today, scale quickly and have their ventures grow as big as their dreams and ambitions.”

    Dell started to communicate heavily this change about one and a half year ago as evidenced by My Take on Dell’s Solutions Strategy post by Lionel Menchaca, Chief Blogger [Direct2Dell blog, June 13, 2011]. More communication since then were given in the following posts:
    My Thoughts on Dell’s Analyst Meeting by Lionel Menchaca, Chief Blogger [Direct2Dell blog, July 5, 2011]
    I see a mixed data center environment in your future by Praveen Asthana [Direct2Dell blog, Dec 15, 2011]
    Enterprise Solutions and Services Strength Highlight Dell’s FY2012 Results by Lionel Menchaca, Chief Blogger [Direct2Dell blog, Feb 21, 2012]
    Business Intelligence for the Mid-Market by Vickie Farrell [Direct2Dell blog, Feb 27, 2012]
    New Dell Appliance Makes Data Warehouses Simple and Affordable by Vickie Farrell[Direct2Dell blog, July 11, 2012]
    How Dell Helped Grow Financial Grow by Scott Schram [Direct2Dell blog, May 21, 2012]

    In my prior role with Dell I was part of the SMB business transformation team charged with integrating M&A acquisition solutions including KACE, Boomi, Compellent, SecureWorks and Force10 Networks into the core business. So when I moved into my new role with our Commercial Verticals organization focused on the Financial Services industry, I was anxious to observe firsthand how this newly acquired Dell IP was meeting customer needs. It didn’t take long.

    Dell announces the completion of its acquisition of Make Technologies by Suresh Vaswani, Chairman–Dell India [Direct2Dell blog, May 24, 2012]
    The NHS Information Strategy and Information-Driven Healthcare by Andrew Jackson [Direct2Dell blog, May 29, 2012]
    Dell AppAssure takes you beyond backup by Zorian Rotenberg [Direct2Dell blog, June 12, 2012]

    It’s been a little over four months since Dell acquired AppAssure, and we’ve settled right into the Dell family. Today at the Dell Storage Forum in Boston, Darren Thomas announced the first new Dell AppAssure release – Dell AppAssure 5 – designed to allow customers to achieve higher levels of scale, speed and efficiency for backups of big data sets.

    Mid-size organizations can gain first-mover advantages with desktop virtualization by Brent Doncaster [Direct2Dell blog, June 13, 2012]

    Watch how DVS Simplified offers a simple, easy-to-deploy and operate VDI appliance that delivers traditional desktop virtualization benefits in an all-in-one package. Learn more at:http://lt.dell.com/lt/lt.aspx?CID=823…

    Start virtualizing desktops with DVS Simplified DaaS – a cloud-based solution for desktop virtualization by Janet Diaz Solutions Communications Manager, Desktop Virtualization Solutions – End User Computing at Dell [Inside Enterprise IT blog from Dell, June 22, 2012]

    DVS Simplified DaaS delivers full-featured virtual desktops delivered from Dell’s state-of-the-art data centers and powered by Desktone’s industry-leading, secure, multi-tenant DaaS platform. DVS Simplified DaaS is ideal for organizations that want a cloud-based virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) solution, simple onboarding and management (deployment takes only a few days and can include a proof of concept), a low set-up cost with monthly subscription-based pricing, and the flexibility to scale from a few seats to thousands of seats.
    DVS Simplified DaaS provides organizations of all sizes – SMBs, large enterprises and public sector entities – the ability to quickly deploy a VDI solution to address a variety of business imperatives. Picture workers in industries such as healthcare, insurance, construction, etc. using different devices to connect to their desktops while in the field. Or picture a company needing to quickly provision hundreds of desktops for an incoming class of interns (and also needing to redeploy these desktops at the end of the internship program). Or think of an organization that has a few employees on a different continent but does not want to invest in data centers and IT resources there. DVS Simplified DaaS can be the right solution in each of these cases.

    Knock Down the Barriers to Desktop Virtualization by Ann Newman, a technology writer, blogger and editor for Digital Online Marketing at Dell with specialties in BYOD, desktop virtualization, Windows 8 and other high-technology topics. Follow Ann on Twitter at @DellWebWoman [DellWorld 2012 blog, Oct 12, 2012]

    In today’s business environments, where BYOD (bring your own device) is becoming a fact of life, desktop virtualization is becoming a must-have. Don’t let the old barriers hold you back.

    Winning the data center by Paul Shaffer [Direct2Dell blog, June 18, 2012]
    Dell’s Enterprise Solutions Strategy Will Drive Company’s Long-Term Growth [Dell press release, July 13, 2012]

    “Through strategic acquisitions and organic growth, we are creating innovative solutions that provide more value and competitive edge for our customers,” Michael Dell, chairman and CEO, told stockholders. …
    Mr. Dell and Brian Gladden, Dell CFO, outlined the steps taken by the company to establish Dell as a full-service solutions company, and how the company’s business has shifted, with enterprise solutions and services accounting for 50 percent of its gross margin in the first quarter of fiscal year 2013. Among those actions was the formation earlier this year of a Software Group to add to Dell’s enterprise solutions capability, accelerate strategic growth and further differentiate the company from competitors with standards-based, scalable and flexible Dell-owned intellectual property.
    Dell is building its software portfolio in part through strategic acquisitions. The company recently announced a definitive agreement for Dell to acquire Quest Software, an award-winning IT management software provider offering a broad selection of IT solutions. The Quest acquisition is expected to be completed in Dell’s fiscal third quarter. Dell has made eight acquisitions in the last 12 months and 16 in the past two years.

    Dell Software Leadership Team Event #DellSoftware by Sarah Richardson Luden [Direct2Dell blog, July 19, 2012]

    Dell’s software organization leverages the strength of existing Dell software assets, as well as those obtained through organic and acquisitive growth, to better provide our customers with competitively differentiated hardware, software and services solutions. Dell recently announced its intent to acquire Quest, an IT management software provider, which extends Dell’s existing capabilities in security and systems and data management.
    Dell Software will initially focus on these four core areas:

    Dell CloudExpo Keynote Presentation from Kevin Hanes, Executive Director of Dell Services by Stephen Spector [#DellSolves blog, June 14, 2012] about Dell’s solution oriented approach to cloud computing to meet the challenge for any organization how to evolve, to adopt new architectures and processes that increase business agility, scalability and governance/compliance and decrease risk.
    Dell Cloud Client Computing launches public beta of Project Stratus by Allison Darin [Direct2Dell blog, Aug 27, 2012]

    Project Stratus is a comprehensive cloud-based management console that is geared at helping enterprises thrive in a world of “Consumerized IT” where corporate and consumer technologies intermingle. It empowers employees with the highest productivity and the best user experience, while giving IT organizations the required control to allow them to welcome employee owned devices into the enterprise. Through its unified, cloud-based console, IT administrators will be able to to securely manage user devices as well as deliver applications and services to their users across a variety of scenarios; in office, mobile and remote, corporate owned and managed, user owned and self-service.
    “As the BYOD trend expands the private or public cloud access paradigm beyond PCs to include mobile devices of all types, and organizations start to adopt other consumer technologies like apps, we see IT needing the ability to rapidly adapt and embrace new end user service delivery models,” says Hector Angulo, Product Manager for Project Stratus at Dell. “Project Stratus was designed to provide this agility in a simple, secure and cost-effective package – if IT needs to manage end user devices, they can; if all they care about is managing how corporate data and apps are delivered regardless of device, it supports that too.”

    Data Center Evolution by Scott Herold [Direct2Dell blog, Sept 6, 2012]
    Powering the Possible in Smart Grid by David Lear, Executive Director—Sustainability [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 3, 2012]
    Building a Practical Foundation for Big Data Transformation by John Igoe [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 3, 2012]
    My New Role as CTO of Dell’s Enterprise Solutions Group by Jai Menon, the former CTO of IBM Systems and Technology Group [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 10, 2012]
    Executing BYOD programs by Rafael Colorado Marketing Director, Desktop Virtualization Solutions [Inside Enterprise IT blog from Dell, Oct 10, 2012]

    Let’s start with a common use case of an enterprise customer enabling remote and internal employees to access company resources through various devices and provide more than simple e-mail; they need access to a variety of corporate applications.
    The first variable to consider, Device Management, ensures that governance and policies are applied to all end points. Dell KACE offers a practical device management solution deployed as an appliance or SaaS offering. Additionally, Dell can provide BYOD consulting for organizations that need a more customized solution.
    The second variable, Secure Data, is mission critical because it safeguards the integrity of corporate information. Dell’s SonicWALL ensures secure access to intranet resources with secure SSL/VPN technology to manage encryption across all corporately-managed mobile devices. For a higher level of enhanced security Dell SecureWorks can be added to account for threat management.
    The third variable, Develop and Modernize Applications, helps organizations optimize applications for deployment into BYOD environments. Dell offers AppDev services that provide image optimization and application rationalization services. With PocketCloud, Dell also offers a comprehensive application delivery solution to remotely connect to your desktop with your iOS or Android device. Here’s a quick video on PocketCloud:
    The expanded Wyse PocketCloud family fuses streaming apps and data with search, file management and sharing across personal devices delivering content management from the cloud.
    Finally, Infrastructure Optimization is the variable over which my team, Dell Wyse, has the most influence. Infrastructure Optimization is about providing the backend infrastructure to host and manage your desktops and applications by centralizing data and applications in the cloud or the data center. Dell Desktop Virtualization Solutions (DVS) provides the datacenter infrastructure, including preconfigured networking equipment, storage, and Dell 12G servers to accelerate the adoption of VDI and application virtualization. DVS also offers virtual desktops in Simplified or Enterprise “as-a-service” configurations where virtual desktops are hosted and managed in the Dell Cloud. Finally, DVS offers an assortment of services to help you asses, plan, and roll-out desktop virtualization deployments.

    Dell’s Desktop Virtualization Strategy from Citrix Synergy 2012 [DellTechCenter YouTube channel, June 6, 2012]: [1:10] We are the only company that can offer an appliance, a VDI appliance [(DVS) Simplified appliance]. Nobody else has that. [1:19]

    Rafael Colorado from Dell talks about Dell’s Desktop Virtualization Strategy from Citrix Synergy 2012 in San Francisco.

    Feeling the Energy at Synergy by Janet Diaz Solutions Communications Manager, Desktop Virtualization Solutions – End User Computing at Dell [Inside Enterprise IT blog from Dell, May 10, 2012]

    After viewing a live demo of our Dell Desktop Virtualization Solutions (DVS) Simplified appliance featuring Citrix VDI in a Box software coupled with a Wyse zero client in action, or testing out our DVS Simplified Desktop as a Service (DaaS), or seeing how our Dell Virtual Labs solution is purpose- built to solve the specific IT problems in the education field; our customers came away impressed that Dell’s transformation into a solutions-focused company is gaining major traction.
    As part of the DVS Simplified demo, we are also excited to be showcasing Dell’s partnerships with both Citrix and Wyse, which gives our customers a truly end to end VDI solution that is easy to buy, easy to deploy, easy to manage and easy to scale.  Dell worked closely with Citrix to develop DVS Simplified, incorporating Citrix’s VDI-in-a-Box, to deliver VDI as an applianceBy adding Wyse to the partnership, Dell can now deliver a wide array of plug-and-play, automatically managed thin clients to further extend that simplicity to the end points.  We are very excited to be demonstrating this end to end solution in our booth for all Synergy attendees to see first-hand.

    What the new release of [Citrix] VDI-in-a-Box 5.2 means to you by Rafael Colorado Marketing Director, Desktop Virtualization Solutions [Inside Enterprise IT blog from Dell, Oct 18, 2012]
    – see also: Accelerating desktop virtualization gains [Dell Power Solutions, 2012 Issue 2, May 16, 2012] discussing the issues which lead to the creation of Dell desktop virtualization portfolio of end-to-end solutions—available in Simplified and Enterprise segments—in order to effectively address the diversity of organizations
    – see also: Thin/Zero Client and Virtual Desktop Futures [this same ‘Experiencing the Cloud’ blog, May 30, 2012]
    BYOD: A Love Story by Ann Newman, a technology writer, blogger and editor for Digital Online Marketing at Dell with specialties in BYOD, desktop virtualization, Windows 8 and other high-technology topics. Follow Ann on Twitter at @DellWebWoman  [DellWorld 2012 blog, Oct 26, 2012]

    At Dell, over 15,000 employees use their iOS®-, Android™- and Windows®-based devices at work, worldwide. The company is thriving because the BYOD strategy is built on a solid foundation of mobile device management, application modernization and end-to-end security and networking IT.

    Dell Cloud Client Computing Solutions Support Citrix HDX 3D by Dan O’Farrell Director of Product Marketing, Dell Wyse [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 17, 2012]

    Dell Wyse Cloud Client Manager Eases Consumerization of IT and BYOD Challenges by Rami Karam Product Marketing Manager, Dell Cloud Client Computing [Direct2Dell blog, Nov 7, 2012]
    Release of Dell Quickstart Data Warehouse 2000 Hits Sweet Spot for Mid Market by Matt Wolken [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 17, 2012]
    Unveiling Dell’s next generation converged infrastructure solutions — Active System 800 by Ganesh Padmanabhan [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 18, 2012]
    Converged Infrastructure without the Compromise: Introducing Dell Active Infrastructure and Dell Active System by Dario Zamarian [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 18, 2012]
    Dell developed and acquired IP converge in Active System by Ben Tao [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 22, 2012]
    Taking a more “Active” approach to delivering applications and IT services by Marc Stitt [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 25, 2012]
    One Million Reasons to Celebrate – DCS [Dell Data Center Solutions] Ships its One Millionth Server by Tracy Davis, VP/ GM—Dell DCS Team [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 30, 2012]
    Dell and SAP Hana, or how organizations can harness the power of in memory databases and analytics with joint solutions from Dell and SAP, by Kay Somers  discussing with Mike Lampa, Global Practice Lead for Dell Services Business Intelligence practice and Jeffrey Word, Vice President of Product Strategy at SAP on Direct2Dell blog:

    Part 1, Oct 30: about in memory databases, SAP HANA and how it can dramatically alter organization responsiveness and performance … the capabilities and performance of the SAP HANA platform.

    Part 2, Nov 5: the various ways to add SAP HANA to your database and analytics environment

    Part 3, Nov 11: building the business case for an SAP HANA installation or migration

    Dell Speeds Path to SAP HANA with New Service Offerings in Europe by Andreas Stein [Direct2Dell blog, Nov 12, 2012]
    The Year of the Virtual Desktop- really! by Eric Selken [Direct2Dell blog, Oct 31, 2012]
    Dell Services Introduces New Microsoft Dynamics Solution for Manufacturers by M J Gauthier [Direct2Dell blog, Nov 6, 2012]

    Our manufacturing customers will benefit from the best practices Dell learned from implementing Microsoft Dynamics AX in its own manufacturing supply chain in 2010. Dell’s own implementation generated a 75% reduction in factory IT footprint, 50% reduction in server downtime and a 40% decrease in the IT cost of goods.

    What you may not know about Dell SonicWALL by John van Son [Direct2Dell blog, Nov 13, 2012]
    Dell Acquires Gale Technologies, a Leading Provider of Infrastructure Automation Solutions to help accelerate the momentum of Dell’s converged infrastructure family, Active Infrastructure [Dell press release, Nov 16, 2012]
    Enterprise Business Momentum and Major Milestones by Jai Menon CTO of Dell’s Enterprise Solutions Group [Inside Enterprise IT blog from Dell, Dec 3, 2012]
    Project RIPTide: Business Analytics meets innovation at Dell by Shree Dandekar Director BI Strategy [Direct2Dell blog, Dec 21, 2012]

    Real-time analytics solution for midsized customers is enabled by Dell Boomi and real-time business intelligence capabilities

    Imagine a midsized company collecting data in real time from different sources. Of course they’ll want to convert this data into meaningful insights to improve their business, also in real time. There’s a catch though, they don’t have the IT resources or, necessarily, the expertise to extract those meaningful insights, much less in real time or in plain English.
    Sounds like the right kind of challenge to tackle for Dell’s incubation program.
    With RIPTide, we designed a solution that can assemble relevant data sets (structured and unstructured) on-the-fly, using real-time data integration enabled by Dell Boomi and real-time business intelligence capabilities for reports, dashboards, analytics, and services for easy deployment.
    And it gets even better. This solution simply scales – it can be delivered on a laptop, a server, or an enterprise class platform depending on the customer’s size and needs. A customer also has the option to start off with the Dell Quickstart Data Warehouse and then build the solution on top of it. As part of this project, we’re also exploring to offer this capability as a service for customers to use within their private cloud environment, using Dell managed services.
    We wanted to help customers simplify interpretation of their data – ask a question, get an answer. What is my sales pipeline in real-time? What is my account status with a given customer? What are they saying about me in social media? What does my retail stock look like? Is my fall collection trending on Pinterest?
    We put our project to task, just in time for the two major shopping days of the year – Black Friday and Cyber Monday – with Team Express, a San Antonio-based sporting goods retailer with a small IT staff responsible for maintaining their legacy SQL-based transaction system as well as reporting on daily business activities. Team Express, just like other midsized companies, is challenged with assembling data from various sources, including Salesforce.com and their legacy transaction system, to glean actionable business insights, quickly and easily.

    With the RIPTide solution running on a PowerEdge R720xd 12th generation server, Team Express is now able to capture key business metrics along with new insights, including:

    • Top-performing products by region, customer, and revenue
    • Close-rate per salesperson
    • Sales team productivity
    • Opportunity and lead conversion rates
    Here’s what Brian Garcia, CIO of Team Express … has to say about his experience with this project, “This solution will transform the way almost all of our departments think about how our business is behaving. Now we can see more, we can do more and we will get more with less effort.”

    Dell Retail Announces Industry-Leading Solution to Help Retailers Move to the Cloud by Mike Adams [Direct2Dell blog, Jan 14, 2013]
    2012 – The Channel Perspective by James Wright EMEA Channel Marketing Director at Dell Europe [Direct2Dell blog, Dec 21, 2012]

    It’s almost five years since we started selling through the channel in Europe with Dell PartnerDirect, and it’s safe to say that, while the previous four years were headline years, 2012 has also been outstanding for both Dell and our partners; I want to talk about some of the great highlights that have come out of the Dell PartnerDirect program this year.  Three things really stick out for me – more partners (and more partners growing their Dell business), our continued move from pure PC sales to a far more comprehensive solutions offering for partners and customers, and a steady stream of acquisitions helping to build out our end-to-end solutions portfolio.

    • More than half of Dell’s European sales now go through indirect channels . We’ve now got over 900 Certified Partners in Western Europe. Many are seeing their Dell businesses growing by 30 per cent or more. Now, growth is nothing without volume, but this shows that you can use Dell to survive and thrive in your business despite the current economic climate.
    • We’re building far more complex, integrated solutions. Both server and networking businesses within Dell grew by 14 per cent in Q2. A third of Dell’s revenue, and over half of our profit comes from data centre solutions. In fact, we’re the only major computer vendor to increase server sales in the third quarter, according to both Gartner and IDC. We’re also seeing revenue growth year-on-year in this market. Let’s not forget about the other areas, too. Storage is a big deal for us – and the latest European event proved that it’s a big deal for the channel, too.
    • Thirdly (and this is linked to the point above), we’re acquiring organizations that give us – and our partners – significantly more scope, breadth and reach. Here’s a quick run-down for 2012. While it’s worth understanding what each business does, that is less important than understanding the bigger picture – what we are building in conjunction with partners:
      • Quest – scalable systems management, security, data protection and workplace management.
      • AppAssure – streamlined datacentre operations with backup and recovery software
      • Wyse – client cloud computing. See our earlier blog on what this means for partners here.
      • SonicWALL – network security and data protection – and one of the most recognised firewall and unified threat management brands in the business.
    What of next year? If anything, it’s likely to be just as eventful for the industry as this and previous years. From my perspective, I’m looking forward to carrying on the great work we began five years ago with our partners; we’ve come an awful long way, but there are also plenty of great places we can go to. One thing I do know: it’s never going to be dull. Here’s to a fantastic, profitable 2013!

    Interview Marius Haas, Dell, about its enterprise strategy [Marco van der Hoeven YouTube channel, Feb 6, 2013]

    Witold Kepinski, editor in chief of Dutch IT Channel, speaks with Marius Haas, president, Enterprise Solutions, at Dell Technology Camp 2013, Amsterdam.

    Marius A. Haas [Dell Executive Leadership Team]

    Marius Haas serves as president, Enterprise Solutions, for Dell. In this role, he is responsible for worldwide engineering, design, development and marketing of Dell enterprise products, including servers, networking and storage systems.
    Marius came to Dell in 2012 from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P. (KKR) [the leader of the leveraged buyout boom of the 1980s with its biggest LBO deal, still the biggest one in the histroy of mankind, well documented in both a book and a film Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco] where he was responsible for identifying and pursuing new investments, particularly in the technology sector, while also supporting existing portfolio companies with operational expertise. Prior to KKR, Marius was senior vice president and worldwide general manager of the Hewlett-Packard (HP) Networking Division, and also served as senior vice president of Strategy and Corporate Development. During his tenure at HP, Marius led initiatives to improve efficiency and drive growth, including the execution and integration of all acquisitions, and he also managed the company’s strategic planning process, new business incubation and strategic alliances.
    Earlier in his career, Marius held a wide range of senior operations roles at Compaq and Intel Corporation. He also served as a member of the McKinsey & Company CSO Council, the Ernst & Young Corporate Development Leadership Network and as a board member of the Association of Strategic Alliance Professionals.
    Marius has a bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University and a master’s degree in International Management from the American Graduate School of Integration Management (Thunderbird) in Glendale, Arizona.

    Dell sets out enterprise solutions strategy [Tech Central, Feb 4, 2013]

    New software group integrates acquisitions to offer end-to-end solutions

    Dell has set out its strategy to offer end to end enterprise solutions.
    At the Technology Camp 2013 in Amsterdam, Tom Kendra, vice president and general manager of the newly formed Dell Software Group, said the company was “steadily executing the strategy of becoming a full service solution provider to enterprise”.
    Software is the next step in Dell’s evolution, said Kendra in a presentation. Leveraging its core strengths, Dell will provide solutions in the client, services and enterprise spaces, with an emphasis on adding value, differentiation and a focus on growth.
    “Software’s intersection with our core strengths, combined with disruptive market trends, allow us to create relevant solutions for today’s, and tomorrow’s, challenges,” said Kendra.
    Under the headings of data centre and cloud management, information management and mobile workforce, Dell will provide software solutions in Windows Server management, performance monitoring, virtualisation management, data protection and management, application and data integration, business analytics and intelligence, bring you own device (BYOD) and endpoint management.
    The newly formed software group brings together elements from Dell’s recent acquisitions, Kace, SecureWorks, SonicWall, Quest, Gale and Wyse.
    A “tough, rapidly changing market fosters transformation,” said Aongus Hegarty, president, Dell EMEA. “All these capabilities from the acquisitions are coming together to form integrated strategies.”
    Hegarty said that Dell is now established as a key player in enterprise technology, as it boasts more than $1.5 billion (€1.1 billion) in software revenue, a 6,000 member software team, of which some 1,600 are engineers, with a 2 million user community from 100,000 customers.
    Kendra cited an EMA Radar report that classed Boomi as a value leader for cloud integration, an NSS Labs highest overall protection award for SonicWall and 9 software Magic Quadrant appearances from Gartner.
    “Customers asking for end to end solutions, right from SME to mid-market and enterprise,” said Hegarty.
    Dell has clearly stated a position of open standards for its solutions. Stephen Davies, Services Solutions Group EMEA, Dell, said that its cloud offerings would be based on OpenStack. With the aim of protecting customers from vendor lock-in, the approach allows for elements of any solution to come from other vendors or providers, without any loss of capability or performance. Where a customer may have a significant investment in one area, Dell’s approach would be to have its solutions work wherever possible with existing implementations.
    Dell launched two new offerings as part of integrated enterprise strategy, Active System Manager 7.0 and new workload solutions optimised for the SAP HANA platform.
    Active System Manger 7.0 is based on Gale Technologies applications and extends the management capabilities of Active System beyond the physical infrastructure to the virtualised infrastructure and workloads. It will be embedded into an Active System 800 and its associated reference architecture.
    Dell has said that it has certified the first of its server, storage and networking technologies in its pre-integrated systems to run SAP HANA. The systems are high-availability configurations that scale from 1 terabyte to more than 4 terabytes and are based on the same architecture found in its single-server appliances.
    For full products details see page the February issue of ComputerScope, available 8 February.

    What Dell Is Doing Today [VideoLifeWorld YouTube channel, Feb 6, 2013]

    Dell Tech Camp 2013 – Tom Kendra VP & GM SW Group at Dell – Key Themes For What Dell Is Doing Today. Dell’s latest technologies and solutions that address customer issues and challenges around Cloud Computing, Data Insights, Mobility and Converged Infrastructure . Video By Dell’s Official Flickr Page http://www.flickr.com/photos/dellphotos/8450786­781/ creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed­.en

    Dell Acquisition Strategy [DellVlog YouTube channel, Oct 25, 2012]

    Dave Johnson VP of Strategy demonstrates how Dell’s recent acquisitions all fit together

    Conversation with John Swainson, President of Dell’s Software Group [DellVlog YouTube channel, Oct 2, 2012]

    On Friday September 28, 2012, Dell announced that we completed the acquisition of Quest Software, an award-winning IT management software provider offering a broad selection of solutions that solve the most common and most challenging IT problems. John Swainson, President of Dell’s Software Group joined us on DellShares to discuss the importance of Quest to Dell’s Software strategy. We invite you to listen to John as he provides perspective on the following: • Quest fit within Dell’s Software strategy • Synergies between Quest portfolio and existing Dell solutions • Platform nature of Quest acquisition and what that means Thanks and we look forward to your thoughts and feedback.

    Dell Completes Acquisition of Quest Software by Tom Kendra [Direct2Dell blog, Sept 28, 2012]

    If you haven’t already heard, I am excited to announce that Dell has completed the acquisition of Quest. This is an important acquisition for Dell Software because Quest helps extend our capabilities in systems management, security and business intelligence software, and it also strengthens our ability to bring industry-leading, differentiated, and easy to manage solutions to our customers around the globe.
    With Quest, Dell will be able to deliver a broad selection of software solutions that will help simplify and solve our customers’ everyday problems and tackle their most challenging IT needs. Quest also brings with it critical mass and key talent. Quest currently has more than 100,000 customers worldwide, 5,000 partners worldwide, 1,500 sales and marketing resources, and 1,300 software engineers. As a relatively young and growing organization, these resources are invaluable to the Dell Software Group.
    The acquisition of Quest is a critical step forward for Dell Software because, with Quest, Dell is better able to provide end-to-end solutions that help our customers simplify their operations, maximize workforce productivity, and deliver results faster. Quest supports heterogeneous and next-generation virtualized and cloud environments which is complementary to Dell’s design approach to develop solutions that scale with our customers’ needs. But most importantly, Quest’s software solutions and key technologies are strongly aligned with Dell’s software strategy to expand, enhance and simplify our capabilities and enterprise solutions in four focus areas: Systems Management, Security, Business Intelligence and Applications.
    Quest will be joining other Dell Software assets Dell KACE, Dell SonicWALL, Boomi, Dell Cloud Business Applications and AppAssure as part of the Dell Software Group. Dell Software helps customers of every size take advantage of new technologies and address organizational challenges to grow their businesses and remain competitive. For more than a decade, Dell has been making strategic software acquisitions and partnering in the industry to support and enable the hardware and services solutions that we provide to our customers.  Our Software Group, now including Quest, will continue to extend Dell’s capabilities in software IP and total solutions offerings, and draw on the strength of Dell’s distribution capabilities and reputation to help clients in every industry achieve better business outcomes.
    Please join me in welcoming Quest to Dell Software, and I look forward to the many opportunities we will have to demonstrate that Quest and Dell are truly “Better Together.”
    For more information about Quest software, go to: www.dell.com/quest

    Software strategy and innovation related excerpts from Cover story: Piloting innovation [Dell Power Solutions Magazine 2012 Issue 4, Dec 7, 2012] the executive Q&A by John Swainson

    make the cloud more accessible
    My vision for the cloud is an intelligent technology that organizations can literally just plug into without the need for excessive configuration, security measures, and other manual interventions. All of these things need to be automated and policy-based, but making this vision a reality will take a lot of invention, systems work, and integration. But, that’s the direction we need to take if cloud computing is to achieve its full potential.
    Cloud environments today, in general, are far too siloed, complex, and inefficient to really deliver on their full potentialBut as we move forward in time, the cloud can become so much easier to use and so much more automated than it is today. We want to give customers the best of both worlds—on-premises access to resources when they want it and access to the public cloud when they need it—seamlessly.
    security solutions
    Right now, our particular focus is on securing the pieces in the middle of the security equation. How can we secure data center access through a firewall? That’s Dell SonicWALL™ software. How can we secure access to applications and databases? That’s where the Quest™ identity and access management solutions come in. How can we measure and monitor all of these parts to build confidence that security has not been breached? Dell SecureWorks provides security monitoring and risk remediation services. And finally, how can we enforce security policies on the endpoints of the data environment? Dell AppAssure™ and Dell KACE™ software address that area. Dell Software is all about making sure that the right people get access to the right data, and that the wrong people do not get access. Risk management and secure access to information are at the core of all of these solutions.
    It’s a big, complicated world out there. A threat environment that once comprised casual hackers has evolved into a complex landscape of advanced persistent threats—including industrialized espionage, or cyber-espionage—in many places around the world. One important aspect of Dell’s comprehensive approach to security is the SonicWALL consulting service, which helps organizations safeguard their valuable data and protect the productivity of their workforce.
    big data analytics
    To help improve efficiency, the Dell Quickstart Data Warehouse Appliance provides a prepackaged solution that combines Dell PowerEdge™ 12th-generation servers, the Microsoft SQL Server® database, Dell Boomi™ cloud-based data integration software, and Dell-provided consulting and training services.
    We also offer database tools that allow organizations to go back and forth between conventional data sources and open source solutions such as the Dell | Cloudera Apache Hadoop solution. Our Dell Toad™ family of products has been enhanced to support big data as well as conventional relational data management tasks. On the services side, we have created Hadoop offerings that enable organizations to gain access to the power of Hadoop without having to set it up themselves. They can deploy Hadoop in production environments quickly and transform large data sets into intelligent information. And our Dell Boomi solution makes it easy for organizations to integrate data from various sources within a single data warehouse for analysis.
    And, we have only scratched the surface. We can do so many other things to make it easy for people without data science skill sets to collect and analyze data for enhanced decision making in business settings. This data analysis area is where we are going to see a lot of investment from Dell over the next couple of years.
    bring-your-own-device (BYOD)
    Looking ahead, the BYOD trend presents an enormous opportunity for Dell to offer additional products that manage personal and mobile devices. It also provides the software and services that help organizations simplify IT and derive added value from their systems. The cloud, mobile devices, converged infrastructure, social media—all of these trends have very positive implications for our customers if they have the tools to manage them securely. And that’s obviously where we at Dell Software come in.

    More information:

    Dell Targeting $5 Billion in Software Sales, Swainson Says [Bloomberg, July 20, 2012]

    Dell plans to build or acquire software in areas including computer security, PC and server management, data analysis and business applications for midmarket customers, he said. … It may also compete with SAP AG (SAP) and Oracle Corp. (ORCL) in some segments of the business-applications market, said Swainson. … “Companies like IBM, HP and Dell have to provide a computing platform with the server and the software as a service,” he said. “That’s what all these acquisitions and vertical integration are about.”

    Dell Outlines Big Software Ambitions [InformationWeek, July 20, 2012]

    Its target buyer is the often overlooked small to medium-sized company with 215-2,000 employees, said Swainson. These companies have small IT staffs with large responsibilities. “The sweet spot for Dell is the mid-market…We want to produce a set of solutions designed for that market,” Swainson declared. … Dell will also get into business applications but it has no intention of going head to head with Oracle or SAP, two of the largest application suppliers. Both tend to address customers above the mid-market and both are key Dell business partners, he noted. … Dell faces a formidable task in training its large direct salesforce and many channel partners to add software products to the long list of Dell hardware they are already trying to sell, said Swainson. IBM spent 20 years converting itself from primarily a hardware company into a server company that also sold services and software. … To get to $5 billion, “it won’t take us 20 years, but it will take us longer than a year and half,” he noted.

    Dell Power Solutions Magazine 2012 Issue 4, Dec 7, 2012

    Special section: Dell Software

      • Unfolding strategic new dimensions [Jan 27, 2013] excerpts giving a brief overview of the article describing the current software portfolio:

        – The Quest™ Identity and Access Management family adds to the solid set of Dell SonicWALL™ and Dell SecureWorks assets.
        – Dell AppAssure. From data centers to the cloud, Dell AppAssure™ software is a backup solution well suited for virtual, physical, and cloud environments.
        – Dell Boomi. Organizations can deploy Dell Boomi AtomSphere™ software to connect any combination of cloud, software-as-a-service (SaaS), or applications on-premises without requiring appliances, additional software, or coding.
        – Dell Clerity Solutions provides application modernization, legacy system rehosting, and capabilities that enable Dell Services to help organizations reduce the cost of transitioning business-critical applications and data from legacy computing systems to innovative architectures—including cloud computing.
        – Dell KACE. Servers, desktops, and laptops can be managed cost-effectively with Dell KACE™ systems management appliances, which provide time-savings benefits for systems management professionals and their organizations. The Dell KACE appliance-based architecture provides easy-to-use, comprehensive, and end-to-end systems management.
        – Dell Make Technologies. Application reengineering is a key capability in the growing field of application modernization and an important area of investment for Dell Services. Dell Make Technologies offers application modernization software and services that help reduce the cost, risk, and time required to reengineer applications.
        – Dell SecureWorks provides automated malware detection and analysis with real-time protection, 24/7 monitoring and response by security experts as needed, and security consulting and intelligence to identify gaps or respond to incidents.
        – Dell SonicWALL dynamic network security and data protection enable Dell to provide comprehensive Dell next-generation firewall and unified threat management solutions as well as secure remote access, e-mail security, backup and recovery, and management and reporting. Its Global Management System (GMS) enables network administrators to centrally manage and provision thousands of security appliances across a widely distributed network.
        – Dell Wyse desktop and mobile thin clients provide low-energy, highly secure, cost-effective access to data. Dell Wyse PocketCloud™ software—a remote desktop client—provides enterprise-grade access to cloud services along with desktop and enterprise applications, and it helps extend the benefits and security of virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) environments to mobile phones and tablets. In addition, organizational and end user–owned devices can be managed from profiles that are set up using a single, cloud-based console in Dell Wyse Cloud Client Manager.
        – Dell OpenManage Essentials. Centralized monitoring of Dell servers, networking, storage, and client systems is available in Dell OpenManage™ Essentials (OME) version 1.1 software—a complimentary download from the Dell Support site. This one-to many hardware management console helps reduce the complexity of common management tasks.
      • Defending against advanced persistent threats
      • Gaining holistic insight into enterprise networks
      • Boosting virtual desktop performance with compact cloud clients
      • Business analytics: Gaining a competitive edge from the data deluge
      • Migrating to Windows 8 for heightened productivity
      • Accelerating the benefits of Windows Server 2012

    BYOD Reality Check: Focusing on users keeps companies ahead of the game by Tom Kendra Vice President and General Manager, Dell Software Group [Direct2Dell blog, Jan 28, 2013]

    If you are involved in the Systems Management business or follow it, you can’t help thinking about the incredible rate of change going on! Advances in Virtualization, Converged Infrastructures, Cloud Computing and an explosion in end-user devices are driving the need for a new generation of management and operations solutions. At Dell, we intend to lead in defining and delivering on that next generation of solutions.

    It is impossible to discuss all of these trends and what they mean in a single article. Over the next couple of months, we will provide points of view on each. Today, let’s start with the trend that many of us actually participate in—bringing our own laptops, phones and smart devices into our work environments.  This is commonly referred to as Bring Your Own Device, or BYOD. Many companies are actively working on their BYOD strategies and we recently conducted a study to get some insight on their approaches.
    The results of our recent global BYOD survey confirm what we have long suspected: organizations that build their BYOD strategies around the users realize a higher sustainable business benefit than those that focus their strategies solely on devices, or are slow to adopt BYOD at all. Survey responses indicate that three-quarters of organizations deploying a mature, user-centric approach to BYOD have seen improvements in employee productivity, customer response times and work processes, giving them a secure competitive advantage over those that don’t.
    We weren’t surprised by this. We know that early on, our customers’ first reaction to employee requests to use their own devices for work produced a scramble to figure out how to manage all those devices. Security was, and still is, of paramount importance. Over time, though, as their BYOD strategies matured, some IT organizations began to realize that by focusing on the users, they could respond quicker to the changing demands of the organization. They didn’t have to address those changes on every smartphone, tablet, laptop and any other device their employees bring to work, and, by focusing their BYOD strategy on managing user identities, they could resolve their concerns about security and other issues like access rights and data leakage, and still give employees everything they need to do their jobs.
    Our survey polled almost 1,500 IT decision-makers across the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Australia, Singapore, India and the Beijing region. The results showed that more than 70 percent of those companies have realized benefits to their corporate bottom lines. Even more significantly, 59 percent say that without BYOD, they would be at a competitive disadvantage. Two-thirds of the companies surveyed said the only way BYOD can deliver significant benefits is if each user’s specific rights and needs are understood. Among respondents that both encourage BYOD and deploy a mature, user-centric strategy, this number jumped to three-quarters. They also reported that BYOD provides their employees the benefits of more flexible working hours, and increases morale and provides better opportunities for teamwork and collaboration. Overall, survey respondents with a user-centric BYOD strategy reported significant, positive improvements in data management and security, in addition to increased employee productivity and customer satisfaction.
    The survey results have confirmed for us ─ without a doubt ─ that organizations still trying to address BYOD by managing devices, or that have been slow to adopt BOYD at all, risk competitive disadvantage. The highest competitive edge, in terms of the increased business value gained from greater efficiency, productivity and customer satisfaction, goes to those embracing user-centric BYOD.
    We invite you to explore the key findings of Dell’s survey in our whitepaper, and if you want to “see” how this data reinforces our perspective on the importance of a user-centric management strategy for BYOD, take a look at our new infographic (Note: click on the image below to see a larger version of it, or you can download a copy of the PDF here).

    image

    Dell Names John Swainson President of New Software Group [Dell press release, Feb 2, 2012]

    • Software Group created to enhance solutions capabilities
    • Expanded software focus will extend Dell ability to improve customers’ productivity
    Dell today announced the appointment of John Swainson to serve as President, Software Group, effective March 5, 2012. Mr. Swainson will report to Michael Dell, chairman and CEO of Dell.

    The Software Group will build on Dell’s software capabilities and provide greater innovation and organizational support to create a more competitive position in delivering end-to-end IT solutions to customers. The organization will add to Dell’s enterprise solutions capability, accelerate profitable growth and further differentiate the company from competitors by increasing its solutions portfolio with Dell-owned intellectual property.

    “John is an outstanding leader with an unparalleled record of achievement,” said Mr. Dell. “He brings to Dell extensive experience in leading and growing software businesses, unique expertise in managing complex software organizations, and a passion for listening to and serving customers. I look forward to working with John as he expands our enterprise solutions and builds on our software capabilities.”
    “This is an exciting time to join Dell,” said Mr. Swainson. “As a leading IT solutions provider, Dell brings key assets and advantages to the software sector, including a strong global brand, a diverse global customer base and customer loyalty that creates opportunities to expand relationships with software.”

    The Software Group will bolster Dell’s ability to execute in several strategic areas critical to its customers. The combination of strong internal development capabilities in hardware, software and services gives Dell the ability to serve the largest possible group of customers within the $3 trillion technology industry.

    “The addition of software, both within the Software Group and across all of Dell, will help catalyze our transformation,” Mr. Dell said. “As software will be a part of all of our products and services, the group’s success will be largely be measured by the success of Dell overall.”

    Most recently, Mr. Swainson was senior advisor to Silver Lake, a global private equity firm. Prior to Silver Lake, he was CEO and director of CA, Inc. from early 2005 through 2009. Under his leadership at CA, the company significantly increased customer satisfaction, its operating margins, and revenue.

    Prior to CA, John worked for IBM Corp for more than 26 years, holding various management positions in the U.S. and Canada, including seven years as general manager of the Application Integration Middleware Division, a business he founded in 1997. During that period, he and his team developed the WebSphere family of middleware products and the Eclipse open source tools project. He also led the IBM worldwide software sales organization, and held numerous senior leadership roles in engineering, marketing and sales management.
    Mr. Swainson holds a bachelor’s degree in engineering from the University of British Columbia, Canada.

    John Swainson [Forbes profile, Aug 10, 2010]

    … Mr. Swainson is also a Senior Advisor to Silver Lake Partners, a global private equity firm, which he joined in June, 2010. Mr. Swainson advises Silver Lake’s portfolio companies on value creation activities. …


    The Indian case as a proofpoint of readiness 

    ‘Software’s becoming key to our biz, and so is Bangalore’ [The Times of India, Jan 9, 2013]

    Marius Haas President, enterprise solutions, Dell
    As Dell works to transform itself into an enterprise solutions and services company, Marius Haas has a pivotal role. He heads the $63-billion company’s enterprise solutions business. He joined Dell last year from investment firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. Prior to that, he was senior VP in Hewlett-Packard. Haas was recently in India, where Dell has a quarter of its 1.1 lakh employees, and spoke exclusively to TOI.
    How important is the India enterprise market for Dell?
    The top ten markets in the world represent 70% of the total spend in the enterprise space for the things that we do. Out of the top ten markets, three markets represent 60% of the incremental spend over the next three years. And those three are India, China, and the US. So the India market is very, very important to us. You can imagine that we are gonna be focused quite a bit on what we can do for this market.
    What segments of industry do you see demand coming from?
    In India I think 80% of the growth comes in customers that are 500 employees or less. So clearly we need a small business led market strategy, and for the solutions we create. You will see us with solutions that bring together server, storage, networking in a very scalable way, so that you buy what you need, at the scale that you need, at the price points that you need. They are pre-integrated, pre-configured, and designed to run specific workloads. For small businesses, it will save a lot bother in trying to put together systems from different components.
    Several IT vendors today talk of pre-integrated stacks. Do you see customers opting for such stacks?
    The estimate is that 30% of the enterprise purchases in 2016 will be with a systems view (pre-integrated, pre-configured stacks). There will be cannibalization of the traditional silo selling mode – of buying servers, storage, networking separately. All of a sudden a big part of how people are thinking is, I want to buy the cloud solution that enables me to run application X, Y and Z. So we recently announced our Active Systems infrastructure family that brings together server, storage, networking all in one chassis with one common management capability. It requires 75% fewer steps from the time you receive it to the time you are actually running workloads. We have optimized all components to work together for specific workloads in such a way that it generates 45% better performance per watt than what’s out there from the competition. Saves money for our customers.
    Is your India R&D contributing to these systems?
    Clearly if you are going to go towards a more systems view, there will be a lot more focus on software. Software provides the value add to servers, storage and networking coming together. Our Bangalore team has capabilities in servers and specifically around software. A big part of the management capabilities built into the system is done by a team here in India. The skill sets and capabilities in India are part of the core competency that we need today. Indeed, one of every four of our servers sold worldwide is sold with work done in Bangalore. And that’s what gives us the confidence to do more here.

    SME Channels : Ajay Kaul, Head, GCC Dell India talking about the company’s growth strategy [smechannels YouTube channel, Feb 6, 2013]

    Watch Ajay Kaul, Head, GCC Dell India talking about the company’s growth strategy … interview taken by Sanjay Mohapatra, Editor, SME Channels

    + [8:39] I believe Dell is moving to the services business …
    + [10:38] How would you help partners create their own brands?
    + [12:20] How fast are you in integrating all the products and go to market?
    + [13:58] How do you engage your finance arm to enable the partners?
    + [16:30] What is your strategy around cloud computing for the partners?
    + [17:36] What is your investment roadmap in terms of technology for this year?

    Dell’s 7 strategies to stay top of mind for channel partners By Ajay Kaul [The DQ Week, Feb 5, 2013]

    What are the strategies that the companies can adopt to ensure that they keep their channel partner programs alive and thriving?
    Putting together an effective channel partnership program to take the company’s products and services can be just as challenging as rewarding. A good channel partner program does not end with identifying and enrolling like-minded and trustworthy resellers. It goes on to nurture and nourish these relationships through a host of incentives, training initiatives and many long-term measures.
    Those who recognize the economies of scale that such programs bring are also aware of how vital it is to stay top of mind at all times. In order to leverage the considerable boost that these can bring to revenues and sales, companies need to ensure that their resellers acknowledge them as a priority over the competition. This is easier said than done. Channel partners sell what they know best and in today’s competitive landscape, where resellers have the choice of dozens of brands, it becomes imperative to stay top of mind at all times.
    What strategies can companies adopt to ensure that they keep their channel partner programs alive and thriving? While most dealers and distributors will always be more attracted to methods that help them boost margins; they are also enthusiastic about measures that will help them address their challenges of training and retention of sales staff, competition, product and service expertise or growing consumer loyalty.

    Here are seven strategies from Dell that can help ensure a win-win environment for both reseller and your company:

    Invest in your channel partner’s success: Channel partners need to know that they are an important part of your company strategy and they need to feel the benefits of their association with you, through better margins, training and other initiatives that create success opportunities for them.
    Focus on their profitability and they will focus on yours: The conditions you create for your partners needs to be win-win for both sides. Last year, Dell announced a new GCC (Global Commercial Channel) structure, which is a single point of contact for partners, with an aim to increase productivity and improve time cycles and enable more customized programs for partners support. The new structure protects partner profitability by bringing consistent pricing across different Dell commercial businesses and offers the partners growth opportunities with solution centric offerings and a broader end customer base.
    Provide Product Support: The more your partners know of your products and services the easier they will find it to sell. Partners who have access to information and the means to understand your company offerings are more likely to push your products with their customers. Structured programs to boost product knowledge and bring to the forefront product and service USPs will equip partners with the right knowledge to sell your products.
    Continuous education programs for channel partners: Channel partners need to be constantly reminded about your product or service. What better way than through education programs? Dell offers over 100,000 training sessions a year to all partners globally and Dell’s Engineers Club further invests in the development of individual engineers and partners by bringing together technical experts and pre-sales and post-sales engineers across the IT industry to network, exchange ideas, and share industry trends and best practices with the channel partners.
    Listen to your partners: They can keep you in-tune with the pulse of the market. Structured listening programs will give partners a platform to voice recommendations and act as an additional source of market information.
    Incentivise your partners: Create exciting incentives for sales, profits, rewards & recognition. Dell’s PartnerDirect program features a structure which rewards certification and training, including new rebates for premier partners, expanded deal registration terms, financial incentives, and marketing and technical assistance. Dell has 115,000 partners globally, in its highly successful PartnerDirect model. Dell has also doubled its channel sales force and has added more enterprise specialists enabling and supporting the partners to address customer needs and optimally provide solutions within limited IT budgets.
    Make sure your program is high visibility and high impact: Don’t forget that your competition may be wooing your partners away from you. Your partner program needs to be more visible, more impactful and needs to give your partners what they need to sell for you.
    A satisfied channel partner will push your brand with their customers, protect your margins and will also be more accommodating to your needs. Needless to say, a poor channel relations strategy will have just the opposite impact on your company margins and sales.

    Dell GCC Engineers’ Club Now in India [SME Channels, Jan 11, 2013]

    To build on existing GCC initiatives to strengthen and showcase its commitment to its partner community
    Dell’s Global Commercial Channel (GCC) has launched the Dell Engineers Club in India, as part of their long-term commitment to channel partners in the country. The platform will enable technical experts across the IT industry to network, exchange ideas, and share industry trends and best practices.
    This club will also help train channel partners and their engineers to be knowledgeable in Dell’s advanced server, storage, security, networking and cloud solutions, announced the company’s press release.
    The company further announced that Dell’s long term aim is to qualify its partners to become not just the solutions provider but to be considered IT consultants for their end-customers. Dell believes in empowering their customers with the ‘Power to do more’, and therefore aims to create and offer real solutions with the intention of making technology smarter, more effective, and in service of its end-customers.
    Ajay Kaul, Director & GM (Global Commercial Channel), Dell India, said, “Dell’s GCC business is very committed to the Indian market and the Engineers Club aims to strengthen the enterprise knowledge of our partner community, helping them become consultants for their end-customers.”
    Dell offers over 100,000 training sessions a year to all partners globally and the Dell’s Engineers Club will further build on this initiative to invest in the development of individual engineers and partners.
    Dell’s Global Commercial Channel (GCC) division retains around 1700 commercial relationships in India. The division takes care of programs and policies relevant to channels, which cover all types of business entities such as public companies and large-/medium-sized companies.

    See also:
    Dell Global Commercial Channel Launches Dell Engineers Club in India [Dell India press release on BusinessWire India, Jan 10, 2013]
    After China, Dell introduces Engineers Club in India [The DQ Week, Jan 10, 2013] from which the following excerpt adds to the above important information:

    Ajay Kaul, director and GM, global commercial channel, Dell India, informed, “This program has been extended by Dell to the Indian market to cater to the market potential in India and we feel it is important for us to bring the Indian channel partners at par with their global counterparts. As a start, the Dell’s Engineers Club is by invitation only. Partners with a certain level of certification already attained from us through the Partner Direct program will be sent an invitation to join this club. In that invitation, we will include details on where and how to sign up. Once their registration is approved, they will have access to all the programs and activities under this initiative. At the start of the program, we will be looking a limited number from the top 8 and will expand the program to more partners from the top 11 cities by the end of the month.”
    With the recent acquisitions of companies like Quest Software, SonicWALL and Wyse, Dell has been able to add extensively to its solutions portfolio with leading management, security, virtualization and cloud capabilities. Hence, the focus on these enterprise solutions and services creates tremendous opportunity for its channel partners and therefore the necessity to ensure that partners receive the required training to help them understand the extended portfolio of solutions and services and provide customers with the right solutions and advice. The Dell Engineers Club is designed to provide maximum training about datacenter solutions so that the partners are better informed and can rise up to becoming IT consultants to the end-customers rather than just being a solutions provider.
    “Our channel partners play a significant role in our business, 25 to 50 percent of our commercial business, depending on country to country. In some countries, it’s 100 percent and we see it growing further. India is a very important market as far as our partner community is concerned. We engage with our partners in this region at the highest level ensuring that the programs and policies designed are favorable to their benefits which leads to their overall growth,” said Kaul.

    See also:
    DELL Partners with HCL Infosystems for Distribution of Enterprise Products [HCL Infosystems Ltd. press release on BusinessWire India, Jan 10, 2013]

      • DELL enters into a strategic partnership with Digilife Distribution and Marketing Services (DDMS), distribution arm of HCL Infosystems
      • DELL takes the next leap in enhancing its commercial and enterprise solutions offering through this new distribution partnership and which is a further expansion of Dell’s PartnerDirect program which has developed a significant amount of the commercial channel partners in India
      • Partnership to target Mid-Market customers

    Dell’s Global Commercial Channel (GCC) division retains around 19,000 commercial partners in the Asia Pacific region. The division takes care of programs and policies relevant to channels, which cover all types of business entities such as public companies and large-/medium-sized companies. In India, Dell currently engages with 1700 commercial channel partners, and this agreement will further strengthen the reach of its enterprise solutions to key markets.

    The partnership will enable DDMS to supply the complete range of Dell Enterprise Products and Services. HCL‘s DDMS will help boost the growth of Dell, through the distribution providers in the market. HCL Infosystems widespread network of distributors will further ensure a robust funnel to Dell products and services.
    In the past two years, Dell has made 15 strategic acquisitions to enhance its capabilities as an end to end solutions provider and has carefully aligned its channel program with the acquisitions it makes. To enhance Dell’s security capabilities, the company recently acquired SonicWALL, Inc. Having an immense focus on the distribution of its products and its channel partners, Dell has offered SonicWALL’s existing channel partners, an opportunity to join the company’s current PartnerDirect program, which will enable them to preserve the investments made with SonicWALL. Also, in order to offer best to the channel partner community the company will take the best of SonicWALL channel programs and model and combine it with Dell’s PartnerDirect program. This move has not only provided the best for the channel partners but also Dell has expanded its own channel team’s customer relationships by further enabling its existing partners to sell SonicWALL solutions.

    Ajay Kaul to head Dell’s Global Commercial Channel biz in India [exchange4media News Service, Nov 8, 2012]

    Dell India has announced that Ajay Kaul, Director & General Manager, will lead the Global Commercial Channel (GCC) business for Dell in India. Kaul’s focus as business leader will be to oversee the expansion of Dell’s partner community and its growth in the upcountry markets. As the GCC Business Head, Kaul will also focus on strengthening the company’s relations with its partner community.
    During his seven-year tenure at Dell India, Kaul was Director – Sales for the Public, Education and Healthcare business from February 2009 to August 2012 in the South & West Region across Central / State Government, PSU, defense and covering all products of Dell for revenue, margin and market share growth. As the Regional Enterprise Manager from 2007 to 2009, he headed the pre-sales team and managed the servers and storage business in North and East region across large enterprises and government segment. Kaul had joined Dell in May 2005 and managed key global accounts to grow revenue and profitability covering all products.
    Dell’s Global Commercial Channel (GCC) division was created in early 2011 with an aim to be a single contact point for its commercial channel partners, thereby leading to higher productivity and improved time cycles and enabling more customised programmes to support the partners in the market. The GCC team is responsible for designing and implementing profitable schemes and policies for Dell’s channel partners and collecting and using channel feedback to execute best structures for its channel partners.
    Dell currently engages with 1,700 commercial channel partners in India, which cover all types of business entities such as public companies and large-/medium-sized companies.

    Dell’s position on the Indian market two years ago, and the approach taken by the company to achieve that is well described in How Dell conquered India [CNNMoney, Feb 10, 2011] in the end of which the summary of the position is given as:

    For Dell, India has emerged as a local and global service delivery hub. It is the only market outside the U.S. with all business functions—customer care, financial services, manufacturing, R&D, and analytical services—operational at the local level and giving global support. “We evaluated market trends and growth potential, enabling us to invest ahead of the curve in India, resulting in our phenomenal growth,” says Midha. It is a growth story that resonates around the world.

    Dell India has made not only big progress relative to that position but in the enterprise business as well. See CIO CHOICE 2013 Awards Recognizes Dell for its Outstanding Performance in Server, Storage and Data Center [Dell India press release on BusinessWire India, Feb 4, 2013]

    Dell’s commitment to addressing CIO needs with their best in class technology and customer commitment wins them accolades

    Bangalore, Karnataka, India, Monday, February 04, 2013 (Business Wire India)
    Dell India has been awarded the CIO CHOICE 2013 award for their solutions in Server, Storage – Hardware, Data Centre Consultant and Data Centre Transformation Services categories. The CIO Choice Awards is a B2B platform positioned to recognize and honour products, services and solutions on the back of stated preferences of CIOs and ICT decision makers. These awards demonstrate Dell’s “best-in-class” ability and commitment to meeting CIOs evolving needs in today’s dynamic business environment.
    The process for the “CIO CHOICE award” is conducted via an independent advisory panel of eminent CIOs and an independent survey voting from across the country with CIOs and ICT decision makers.
    Sameer Garde, President and MD, India Commercial Business, said “Dell has been investing in its enterprise capabilities and building solutions that address the business goals of customers. Being honoured by the CIO Choice award so early in our transformation into an end-to-end solution provider is truly a cherished achievement and a testimony to the efforts of the Dell India team. It shows that our open, scalable and affordable solutions have resonated well with customers and that we are well on our way to becoming the preferred choice for enterprise solutions.”
    Commenting on Dell’s success in the enterprise space Venu Reddy, Research Director IDC India said, “The infrastructure market has been showing some positive sights in the current marketplace. This is due to some segment specific traction and focus by key vendors like Dell. In the server market the stabilization and growth is driven by key industries like Finance & Insurance, Distribution, and Manufacturing which have driven a 12% growth Year-on-Year for the 1st 3 quarters of 2012. While in the storage market the additional momentum has come from mid-size organizations which have started investing in key infrastructure that is helping them drive faster growth and better ROI.”
    With the strongest ever enterprise product line up, Dell today is innovating and expanding its enterprise offerings to customers. Moving out of their legacy systems is one of the biggest challenges most Indian CIO’s are faced with. Dell works closely with customers to help them move out of their existing applications to newer platforms without hurting their IT budgets.
    “Dell has been our partner in data centre management and has helped us focus our resources on our business and customers instead worrying about our IT infrastructure. Dell’s solutions in storage, servers and data centre bring more flexibility, resilience and optimize security and costs while lowering downtime. We would like to congratulate Dell on winning the CIO award, which is a demonstration of Dell’s ability to understand and deliver on CIO needs in these changing markets.”Rinosh Jacob Kurian, Enterprise Architect, UST Global
    “In today’s always-on marketplace and turbulent business environment, a partner like Dell is truly an asset. Dell helps us manage our datacenter and server and storage requirements to deliver better business results and market success. Over the past years of our association with Dell, they have demonstrated a strategic insight into the emerging global business scenario and have been instrumental in helping our IT department gear up to meet these challenges. Dell is truly deserving of the CIO Choice award, and we extend our congratulations and best wishes to the team at Dell.”Subodh Dubey, Group CIO, Usha International.

    The first Windows Phone 4Afrika from Huawei for $150 = Huawei Ascend W1 for $240 (in China) and more elsewhere

    It is no surprise as two years ago we had a Huawei’s IDEOS U8150 smartphone for US$86 in Kenya: 350,000 units sold in 8 months [this same ‘Experiencing the Cloud’ blog, Aug 17-23, 2011]. In that device we had the Qualcomm MSM7225 SoC (announced in Feb’07 and first delivered in 3G phones in June’07), with a single 528 MHz ARM1136EJ-S core CPU, Adreno 200 GPU, embedded QDSP5 DSP @ 320 MHz and UMTS (HSPA, GSM/GPRS/EDGE), among others.

    The difference is immense as in the Windows Phone 4Afrika we have the Qualcomm MSM8230 SoC (announced in Nov’11 and first delivered in the similar Huawei Ascend W1 in Jan’13), with a 1.2 GHz Krait dual core CPU, Adreno 305 GPU, embedded Hexagon QDSP6 DSP @ 500 MHz and UMTS (DC-HSPA+, TD-SCDMA), among others. This is bringing a huge performance difference on the SoC level:
    – CPU: 7920 (2 x 3.3 x 1200) vs. 623 (1.18 x 528) DMIPS of raw CPU performance
    – GPU: Adreno 305 GPU vs. software rendered 2D support only
    Even within the Adreno GPUs the Adreno 305 has quite a high performance, see the below benchmark from Mali-T604 vs 400MP vs SGX 554MP4 vs 543MP4 vs 543MP3 vs 543MP2 vs 540 vs 535 vs Adreno 320 vs 225 vs 220 vs 305 vs 203 vs 205 vs Mali 400 vs Intel XOLO [Techivian, July 26, 2012]:

    image

    Note that the North-Amerian (SGH-T999, SGH-I747, SCH-R530, SCH-I535 and SPH-L710) and Japanese (SGH-N064) versions of Samsung Galaxy S III smartphones are using the Qualcomm Adreno 225 GPU (within the MSM8960 SoC of the phone) which has just 8% higher performance (closely corresponding to the above chart) than the Adreno 305 GPU. The SGH-I747 (Galaxy S III AT and T) has 30.4 FPS for the above banchmark, while the SPH-L710 (Galaxy S3 Sprint) 30.2 FPS.
    The International (GT-I9300, GT-I9305), South Korean (SHV-E210K/L/S) and Chinese (GT-I9308, SCH-I939) versions meanwhile using the ARM Mali-400 MP4 GPU (within Samsung Exynos 4 Quad –Exynos 4412 – SoC of the phone). The GT-I9300 has 66.4 FPS for the above banchmark, while the GT-I9305 58.6 FPS.
    See Model variants and GLbenchmark Results.

    – resolution: QHD (960×540 of which only 800×480 is used) vs. HVGA (480×320 of which only 320×240 is used) display support
    – mobile Internet: 42 Mbps downlink and 11.5 Mbps uplink and TD-SCDMA
    vs. 7.2 Mbps dowlink and 5.76 Mbps uplink
    etc.

    To sum it up:

    • The MSM8230 SoC first delivered in smartphones in Jan’13 is representing a more than five years of technology advance over the MSM7225 SoC first delivered in phones in June’07.

    • Functionally the Android 2.2 on the IDEOS U8150 two years ago vs. the Windows Phone 8 on Windows Phone 4Afrika (= Huawei Ascend W1) now is as big a difference. Windows Phone 8 is even better than the latest Android 4.1 and 4.2.

    • The target audience in Africa for $150, and in other countries for $240-300 (see below), is getting a state-of-the-art mid-range device which will not be outdated for the next two years at least.

    Ascend W1 [HuaweiMx YouTube channel, Jan 29, 2013]

    Huawei Ascend W1 [engadget YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2013]

    If you were following Huawei’s presser from earlier today, you may have thought the company’s CES 2013 story was “All About Android.” Turns out, it’s not. On the showfloor here at Pepcom, the company was able to give us a first look at the Ascend W1: it’s first entry for the Windows Phone 8 space. Admittedly, the W1 doesn’t share any of the lust-worthy, high-end specs that adorn the Ascend Mate and D2, but that’s not its angle. As one Huawei rep put it, this is a value proposition, outfitted with a 4-inch display (we couldn’t verify resolution) and 1.2GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4 paried with 512MB RAM. Software-wise, this is about as stock WP8 as it gets, so don’t expect to see any applications come pre-loaded onto the hardware. Continue reading here: http://goo.gl/VmkhH.

    Huawei launches the first Windows Phone 4Afrika [Huawei Device press release, Feb 5, 2013]

    image

    Shenzhen, China, February 5, 2013: Huawei, a leading global information and communications technology (ICT) solutions provider, today launched the first Windows Phone 4Afrika. Exclusively selected to help boost mobile accessibility and adoption within the fast-growing African continent, the Huawei 4Afrika will be available from Huawei, in Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, Ivory Coast, Angola, Morocco and South Africa towards the later part of the 1st Quarter 2013.

    “We are thrilled to be partnering with Microsoft to ensure that more people have access to leading technology, communications and information services,” said Mr Peter Hu, Managing Director of Huawei Device, Eastern & Southern Africa. “By launching the Huawei 4Afrika we will be bringing leading technology within reach for more people in Africa, thereby giving them access to a world of new opportunities. ”

    The Huawei 4Afrika is a customized version of the HUAWEI Ascend W1, launched earlier this year at the 2013 Consumer Electronics Show. The smartphone is 10.15 mm thin and features a 4-inch IPS LCD 480 x 800 touchscreen with Zero-Gap Touch technology. With a 1730 mAh Li-Polymer battery and unique power saving technology, the Huawei 4Afrika phone provides up to 420 Hours of standby time and up to 560 minutes of talk time on 3G. The higher efficiency hardware design ensures power-saving up to 20%. It is powered by the high-end Qualcomm Snapdragon ™ S4 MSM8230 dual-core 1.2 GHz processor and Adreno 305 GPU. Additionally, the phone includes a 5 MP Auto-Focus Camera and VGA Front Camera, and comes in an array of bold colors including blue, black and white initially and red to follow in the next couple of months.

    Available exclusively for the African market, the Huawei 4Afrika phone features a customized Store in Store with a variety of applications and exclusive content including those built and designed by Africans for Africans. The Windows Phone 8 start screen allows users to customize the Windows OS Live Tiles with topics of personal interest, providing real-time updates unique to their needs. Assisting with all business requests on-the-go, the Huawei 4Afrika phone features Microsoft Office and Skydrive for easy access to files. The Huawei 4Afrika phone marries great technology with a fashionable design, at a price that is right for its customers.

    “The Huawei 4Afrika phone is a fantastic addition to our Windows Phone product line, and we’re particularly proud to be introducing it as an exclusive offer for the African Continent today as part of the launch of the Microsoft 4Afrika Initiative,” said Ali Faramawy , corporate vice president for Microsoft Middle East and Africa. “We believe strongly that improved access to affordable and high quality smartphones in Africa can have a strong impact on the continent’s overall economic development and competitiveness, and we are confident the Huawei 4Afrika phone will help deliver on this. ”

    Since its entry into the African market in 1999, Huawei has created solutions that enable customers to reduce power consumption, carbon emissions and costs, thus contributing to the development of the society, economy, and the environment across Africa. To date, Huawei has worked with more than 18 African governments build E-Government networks in countries, such as Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, Senegal, Angola, Guinea, and Djibouti, enabling 250 million Africans in rural areas to enjoy affordable communication services.

    As per the 2012 Qualcomm Snapdragon classification presented below the MSM8230 is a dual Krait UMTS (DC-HSPA+, TD-SCDMA) SoC:

    Microsoft and Huawei of China to Unite to Sell Low-Cost Windows Smartphones in Africa [The New York Times, Feb 4, 2013]

    BERLIN — Microsoft, taking aim at the world’s fastest-growing smartphone market, said on Monday that it would team up with Huawei of China to sell a low-cost Windows smartphone in Africa.

    The phone, called the Huawei 4Afrika Windows Phone, will cost $150 and initially be sold in seven countries. Microsoft’s Windows Phone software is fourth among smartphone operating systems, with just 2 percent of the worldwide market in September, according to Canalys, a research firm in Reading, England.

    Fernando de Sousa, the general manager for Microsoft Africa, said that in the next few months, Microsoft and Nokia planned to introduce two new Windows phones for the African market.

    Microsoft plans to introduce the Huawei 4Afrika phone on Tuesday at events in Lagos, Cairo, Nairobi, Johannesburg and Abidjan, Ivory Coast. It will also be sold in Morocco and Angola.

    Prioritising Africa – Introducing Microsoft 4Afrika [TechNet Blogs > Microsoft on the Issues Africa, Feb 4, 2013]

    Posted by Ali Faramawy
    Corporate Vice President, Microsoft Middle East & Africa

    There is an African proverb that reads, “The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The second best time is now.” We couldn’t agree more. Microsoft has been operating in Africa for 20 years, and today we have offices in 14 countries. As we look forward to our next 20 years, we wanted to explore new ways to link the growth of our business with initiatives that spur economic development for the continent. The world has recognized the promise of Africa, and Microsoft wants to invest in that promise.

    This is why today, we are introducing the Microsoft 4Afrika Initiative, which is designed to help improve Africa’s global competitiveness. Our goal is to empower African youth, entrepreneurs, developers, and business and civic leaders to turn great ideas into a reality that can help their community, their country, the continent, and beyond.

    By 2016, the Microsoft 4Afrika Initiative intends to:

    – help place tens of millions of smart devices in the hands of African youth,

    – bring 1 million African small and medium enterprises (SMEs) online, and

    – help 200 000 Africans develop skills for entrepreneurship and employability. This will include up-skilling 100,000 members of the existing workforce, as well as training 100,000 recent graduates, 75 percent of whom we intend to help place in jobs.

    A smart, affordable device

    In Africa today, smartphones account for only about 10 percent of total phones in the market. As a first step toward driving the adoption of smart devices, Microsoft and Huawei today introduced the Huawei 4Afrika phone, a full-functionality Windows Phone 8 preloaded with select applications designed for Africa, by Africans. The Huawei 4Afrika phone, which is the first in what will be a series of “4Afrika” smart devices, will be targeted toward university students, developers and first-time smart phone users to ensure they have affordable access to best-in-class technology, so they can access the information and tools they need to be active global citizens. (See related blog.)

    HUAWEI ASCEND W1 В РОССИИ: СРОКИ ПОЯВЛЕНИЯ И СТОИМОСТЬ [Hi-Tech Mail.Ru, Jan 24, 2013]

    Как стало известно Hi-Tech Mail.Ru, первый Windows Phone 8 смартфон Huawei — модель Ascend W1 — появится в России в феврале. Стоимость аппарата — 8 990 рублей.

    As hi-tech mail.ru, the first Windows Phone 8 Smartphone Huawei Ascend model W1-will appear in Russia in February.
    Unit cost is RUB 8990 [$300].

    As the standard value added tax rate in Russia is 18% the net price will be $254.

    Huawei Ascend W1 from Conrad Electronics (Germany) as of Feb 5, 2013:

    € 199,95* [$270]

    lieferbar ab  20.03.2013      available from 20.03.2013
    * Alle Preisangaben sind inkl. MwSt. und zzgl. Versandkosten. Wir berechnen eine Versandkostenpauschale in Höhe von € 5,95 (inkl. MwSt.) Bei Nachnahme beträgt die Versandkostenpauschale 8,95 € (inkl. MwSt.). Ab einem Bestellwert von € 300.- trägt Conrad Electronic die Versandkostenpauschale für Sie.
    Bei sperrigen Artikeln (sind im einzelnen entsprechend ausgewiesen) berechnen wir den am Produkt ausgewiesenen Sperrgutzuschlag. Dieser Betrag enthält das für Sie verauslagte Transportentgeld und die Verpackungskosten.
    * All prices are incl. VAT and excl. shipping costs. We charge a delivery fee in the amount of € 5.95 (incl. VAT) For cash on delivery, the shipping fee is €8.95 (incl. VAT). From an order value of € 300.-, Conrad Electronic bears the shipping costs for you.
    For bulky items (are similarly designated in particular) we calculate the bulky contract assigned to the product. This amount includes the transport fee incurred for you and the packaging costs.
    As the standard value added tax rate in Germany is 19% the net price will be $227.

    Huawei Ascend W1 on Taobao (China) as of Feb 5, 2013:

     ¥ 1499.00 [$240.5]

    As the standard value added tax rate in China is 17% the net price will be $206.

    Huawei Showcases its First Windows Phone 8 Smartphone [Huawei Device press release, Jan 8, 2013]

    Las Vegas, USA, January 8, 2012: Huawei, a leading global information and communications technology (ICT) solutions provider, unveiled its first Windows Phone 8 smartphone, HUAWEI Ascend W1, at the 2013 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) today. The Ascend W1 is 10.15 mm thin and features a 4-inch IPS LCD 480 x 800 touchscreen with OGS Technology, powered by the high-end Qualcomm Snapdragon ™ S4 MSM8230 dual-core 1.2 GHz processor and Adreno 305 GPU. With a 1950 mAh battery, the Ascend W1 has 470 hours of standby time, the longest among all smartphones in its class. It features a visually iconic design inspired by a tropical island and comes in an array of bold colors including blue, red, black and white. The Ascend W1 is a smart and stylish alternative for consumers looking for great technology at a price that is right.

    image

    The HUAWEI Ascend W1 has a low reflective IPS LCD display with full lamination technology, which provides brilliant visibility under any lighting condition. The Windows Phone 8 Start screen lets you customize and pin Live Tiles with topics of personal interest, providing real-time updates that are uniquely yours. Additionally, a dynamic lock screen allows you to select the photos or updates most important to you and have them ready at a glance, even when the phone is locked.

    “Inspired and powered by people, the Ascend W1 is a combination of Huawei’s user-centric design philosophy and Windows Phone 8 software, bringing consumers a truly compelling alternative.” Said Richard Yu, CEO, Huawei Consumer Business Group. “The addition of the Ascend W1 to our smartphone portfolio gives consumers access to an even wider range of Huawei smartphones. At a price that makes sense to consumers, Ascend W1 underscores our commitment to put smartphones within reach of every consumer, no matter who you are or what you want from your phone. “

    “We are excited to be working with Huawei to further expand our device portfolio to new locations and price points, allowing more people to experience Windows Phone 8 while enjoying the Ascend W1’s unique features,” said Terry Myerson, Corporate Vice President of the Windows Phone Division.

    The HUAWEI Ascend W1 will be available in China and Russia from January 2013, with Western Europe, Middle East, USA and other selected countries to follow.

    More information: Ascend W1 [Huawei Device microsite]

    BYOD trends vs. Mobile enterprise platform trends

    With the literal explosion of mobile computing devices there is a huge challenge both on the enterprise computing vendor and customer sides. The easiest way of looking at those challenges is analyzing the so called BYOD (Bring your own device) and mobile enterprise platforms trends on the market where customers and suppliers meet each other.

    Note as well that these are all parts of a bigger trend, the so-called “consumerization of IT” which I already covered from an overall leading vendor point of view in the Pre-Commerce and the Consumerization of IT [Sept 10, 201] post on this site. Please read that before looking at the current trends discussed here in the below detailed sections. Then I will recommend to read The Changing Of The Enterprise Guard [TechCrunch, Jan 19th, 2013] article by the CEO of Box.com, the most successfull rising star in the enterprise IT vendor space. Even the ex MS leader Steven Sinofsky was recommending it in his Twitter meassage as:

    Interesting thoughts on enterprise computing http://techcrunch.com/2013/01/19/the-changing-of-the-enterprise-guard/ … from Aaron @levie

    Note that the BYOD trend I will present mostly through the Middle-East area where to solve the BYOD issue properly for the true enterprise space is the most pressing one in the world.


    BYOD trends

    Bring your own device [Wikipedia article, started on Jan 1, 2012]

    History

    BYOD first entered in 2009 courtesy of Intel when it recognized an increasing tendency among its employees to bring their own devices to work and connect them to the corporate network.[5] However, it took until early 2011 before the term achieved any real prominence when IT services provider Unisys and software vendor Citrix Systems started to share their perceptions of this emergent trend.

    In 2012 the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission adopted a BYOD policy, but many employees continued to use their government-issued BlackBerrys because of concerns about billing, and the lack of alternative devices.[6]

    Issues

    BYOD has resulted in data breaches.[citation needed] For example, if an employee uses a smartphone to access the company network and then loses that phone, any unsecured data stored on the phone could potentially be retrieved by untrusted parties.[7]

    It is important to consider damage liability issues when considering BYOD. If an employee brings their personal device to work, and it is physically damaged through no fault of their own it is unclear whether the company is responsible for repair or replacement.[citation needed]

    Pros

    Business

    A business that adopts a BYOD policy allows itself to save money on high-priced devices that it would normally be required to purchase for their employees. Employees may take better care of devices that they view as their own property.[citation needed]Companies can take advantage of newer technology faster.[citation needed]

    Employees

    Employees who work for a business with a BYOD policy are able to decide on the technology that they wish to use for work rather than being assigned a company device. This is thought to improve morale and productivity.[8] Exclusive control of features is given to the employee.

    Cons

    Business

    Company information will often not be as secure as it would be on a device exclusively controlled by the company.[citation needed] (Security professionals have termed it ‘Bring Your Own Danger‘ and ‘Bring Your Own Disaster‘.[9]) The company may have to pay for employee devices’ phone service, which they use outside company time. BYOD is an extreme case of the end node problem.
    Employees

    Due to security issues, the employees often do not have true full control over their devices[citation needed], as the company they work for would need to ensure that proprietary and private information is secure at all times. It is an out-of-pocket expense for the employees. They would be responsible for repairs if their devices were damaged or broken at work.[citation needed]

    Businesses that fall under compliancy rules such as PCI or HIPAA must still comply when using BYOD.[citation needed]

    Prevalence

    The Middle East was reported to have one of the highest adoption rates of the practice worldwide in 2012.[10]

    [10] El Ajou, Nadeen (24 September 2012). “Bring Your Own Device trend is ICT industry’s hottest talking point at GITEX Technology Week”. AMEinfo.com. Retrieved 26 September 2012.

    Frost & Sullivan: Consumerisation of Smart Phones and Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) are the biggest trends driving the Network Security Market in the Middle East [Frost & Sullivan press release, Nov 12, 2012]

    Dubai, the U.A.E., 21 November, 2012 – With an increase in the number of Advanced Persistent Threats (APTs), information security risks are becoming a major concern for organisations globally. Enterprises are swiftly adopting and deploying applications and new services to combat the same. In their quest to obtain high levels of security assurance and develop advanced intelligence technologies, organisations in the Middle East are increasingly adopting methods such as virtualisation and cloud computing. Over the past few years, this has led to increased Government investment in information and communication technology (ICT)-related projects in the Middle East and this is expected to proliferate further in future. To address these threats to enterprise security and brainstorm best-in-class Enterprise Security Solutions and Strategies, Frost & Sullivan convened the best minds in enterprise security at its Middle East Enterprise Security Summit 2012 on November 21, at Habtoor Grand Beach Resort, Dubai, U.A.E.

    Held for the first time in the Middle East, the Summit was attended by CIOs, CISOs, CTOs, Vice Presidents, General Managers, Network Managers, Enterprise Security Architects, Internet Security Architects, Compliance Officers, and Department Heads from across a variety of industry sectors such as Banking, Finance & Insurance (BFSI); Telecom; IT; Manufacturing; Government; Education; Healthcare; Media and Entertainment; Retail; and Automotive and Logistics.

    According to Frost & Sullivan, consumerisation of smart phones and Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) are the biggest trends driving network security issues in the Middle East today. The network security market is in a high-growth stage. Frost & Sullivan anticipates that technology convergence, regulatory compliance, and continuous growth of network infrastructure will continue to drive up sales for security suppliers in the Middle East during the period 2012-2018.

    Frost & Sullivan’s Middle East Enterprise Security Summit 2012 Summit began with an inaugural address by Andy Baul-Lewis, Director, ICT Practice, Frost & Sullivan, describing the prevalent enterprise security landscape in the Middle East. “Building security for electronic assets is one of the most critical tasks facing organisations today. In a converged world, where the threats of each system are multiplied; getting advice, sharing best practice, and talking to partners is a vital part of the construction process. This is what Frost & Sullivan endeavours to provide through this interactive Summit,” stated Mr Baul-Lewis at the Summit.

    The Summit included in-depth discussions and case studies on enterprise security management. The first of these was, ‘The Evolving Role of a Chief Information Security Officer’ by Roshan Daluwakgoda, Senior Director – Security Strategy Planning Risk Assessment and DR at Emirates Integrated Telecommunication Company, du, Dubai, the U.A.E. This was followed by a thought-provoking presentation on ‘Information Security Management – When the Going Gets Tough,’ by Kamran Ahsan, Head of Information Security, Injazat Data Systems, the U.A.E. Bashar Bashaireh, Regional Director, the Middle East, Fortinet, gave a presentation ‘How to Make your Security Aware in a BYOD World’. Thameem Rizvon, IT Director, Kamal Osman Jamjoom Group LLC (KOJ) presented, ‘Learn from your Peers: Security Implementation in a Retail Environment’. The session on Secure the Cloud,’ by Joe So, VP Business Sales, Huawei;was followed by a panel discussion on ‘Security Convergence and its Impact on Business.’

    Speaking on the occasion, Kamran Ahsan stated, “Information security is increasingly emerging as a critical concern in today’s modern business environment. This trend is very much evident in the Middle East, where enterprises have experienced information-related threats such as infiltration, data leakage, and cyber warfare among others. Injazat Data Systems will highlight how enterprises can proactively address these challenges and mitigate risks associated with business assets and services of enterprises. Moreover, with the best minds in enterprise security attending this Event, we expect to have an in-depth discussion of new trends and developments in information security in the Middle East.”

    Sharing his views on the Summit, Bashar Bashaireh said, “Information Technology has become central in driving the business processes of enterprises. However, as trends such as mobility, cloud computing, and BYOD are fast gaining momentum in the U.A.E., helping drive business profit and innovation; they are also bringing forth new challenges to IT security. Organisations in the U.A.E. should act now to regain control of their IT infrastructure by strongly securing their network and applying granular control over users, devices, and applications. The Summit organised by Frost & Sullivan is a great platform for us to share with end customers our insights on the new approach aimed towards IT security.”

    Talking about Securing the Cloud, Dong Wu, Vice President, Huawei Enterprise Middle East said, “As organisations roll out cloud-based models into their business infrastructure, the issue of security becomes an ever increasing concern.  The Middle East Enterprise Security Summit is a way for Huawei and other industry leaders to come together and discuss how businesses can be better secured and protected from the fast-evolving cyber threats that exist today. At the summit, we look forward to sharing our insights on how organisations can improve their planning processes before making their move into the cloud.”

    The Summit was supported by Injazat as Platinum Partner, while Fortinet and Huawei were the Event’s Silver Partners. Telecom Review, Teknotel and Connect-World Magazine supported the Summit as Media Partners; with Tech Channel MEA as the Online Partner for the event.

    If you are interested to know more about insights shared at the Middle East Enterprise Security Summit 2012 then send an e-mail to Tanu Chopra/Deepshri Iyer, Corporate Communications, at tanu.chopra@frost.com/deepshrii@frost.com, with your full name, company name, title, telephone number, company e-mail address, company website, and country.

    For more information on the Summit, please visit: http://www.frost.com/EnterpriseSecurityMiddleEast

    About Frost & Sullivan

    Frost & Sullivan, the Growth Partnership Company, works in collaboration with clients to leverage visionary innovation that addresses the global challenges and related growth opportunities that will make or break today’s market participants.

    Our “Growth Partnership” supports clients by addressing these opportunities and incorporating two key elements driving visionary innovation: The Integrated Value Proposition and The Partnership Infrastructure.

    • The Integrated Value Proposition provides support to our clients throughout all phases of their journey to visionary innovation including research, analysis, strategy, vision, innovation, and implementation.
    • The Partnership Infrastructure is entirely unique as it constructs the foundation upon which visionary innovation becomes possible. This includes our 360-degree research, comprehensive industry coverage, career best practices, as well as our global footprint of more than 40 offices.

    For more than 50 years, we have been developing growth strategies for the global 1000, emerging businesses, the public sector, and the investment community. Is your organisation prepared for the next profound wave of industry convergence, disruptive technologies, increasing competitive intensity, Mega Trends, breakthrough best practices, changing customer dynamics, and emerging economies?

    Mobile application management [Wikipedia article, started on Oct 17, 2011]

    Mobile Application Management (MAM) describes software and services responsible for provisioning and controlling access to internally developed and commercially available mobile apps used in business settings on both company-provided and “bring your own” smartphones and tablet computers.

    Mobile application management differs from Mobile device management (MDM) in the degree of control that it has over the managed device. As the names suggest; MAM focuses on application management, but stop short of managing the entire device. MDM solutions manage the down to device firmware and configuration settings and can include management of all applications and application data.[1]

    History

    Enterprise mobile application management has been driven by the widespread adoption and use of mobile devices in business settings. In 2010 IDC reported that smartphone use in the workplace will double between 2009 and 2014.[2]

    The BYOD (“Bring Your Own Device”) phenomenon is a factor behind mobile application management, with personal PC, smartphone and tablet use in business settings (vs. business-owned devices) rising from 31 percent in 2010 to 41 percent in 2011.[3] When an employee brings a personal device into an enterprise setting, mobile application management enables the corporate IT staff to download required applications, control access to business data, and remove locally cached business data from the device if it is lost, or when its owner no longer works with the company.[4]

    Use of mobile devices in the workplace is also being driven from above. According to Forrester Research, businesses now see mobile as an opportunity to drive innovation across a wide range of business processes.[5] Forrester issued a forecast in August 2011 predicting that the “mobile management services market” would reach $6.6 billion by 2015 – a 69 percent increase over a previous forecast issued six months earlier.[5]

    Citing the plethora of mobile devices in the enterprise – and a growing demand for mobile apps from employees, line-of-business decision-makers, and customers – the report states that organizations are broadening their “mobility strategy” beyond mobile device management to “managing a growing number of mobile applications.”[5]

    MAM system features

    An end-to-end MAM solution provides the ability to: control the provisioning, updating and removal of mobile applications via an enterprise app store, monitor application performance and usage, and remotely wipe data from managed applications. Core features of mobile application management systems include:

    • App delivery (Enterprise App Store)
    • App updating
    • App performance monitoring
    • User authentication
    • Crash log reporting
    • User & group access control
    • App Version management
    • App configuration management
    • Push services
    • Reporting and tracking
    • Usage analytics
    • Event management

    The Middle East angle #1:
    Mitigating the Risks of BYOD with MAM [ITP.net, Nov 14, 2012]

    Organizations need to decide how to manage BYOD, says Johnny Karam, Regional Director, Middle East and French Speaking Africa, Symantec

    According to a recent Symantec survey, 59% of enterprises are making line-of-business applications accessible from mobile devices in an effort to increase efficiency, increase workplace effectiveness and reduce time required to accomplish tasks.

    The average annual cost of mobile incidents for enterprises, including data loss, damage to the brand, productivity loss, and loss of customer trust was $429,000 for enterprise. The average annual cost of mobile incidents for small businesses was $126,000.

    According to Symantec’s State of Mobility Survey, 67% of companies are concerned with malware attacks spreading from mobile devices to internal networks. In addition, Symantec’s latest Internet Security Threat Report highlighted that mobile vulnerabilities increased by 93% in 2011.

    To manage or not to manage:

    The first question every business must ask around BYOD is: How much management of user-owned devices connecting to corporate resources does the company want? This is critical because the degree to which an enterprise is involved in managing various aspects of user-owned mobile devices has consequences. For example, a key anticipated benefit of implementing BYOD means often no longer having to fully manage employees’ mobile devices. In return, support costs are hopefully reduced.

    However, fully managing user-owned devices often results in intruding on the personal information and activity of those devices. This might include enforcing device-level authentication and encryption policies and complete device remote locking or wiping, including users’ personal content.

    Delivering corporate [apps and] resources

    Securing corporate [apps and] resources once they are delivered

    The Middle East angle #2:
    BYOD is not a new problem
    [Gitex Review 2012 published on ITP.net, Nov 18, 2012]

    Cloud and big data were the big talking points during GITEX Technology Week 2012. Leading UAE and global companies discuss those trends.

    Florian Malecki, head of product marketing at Dell SonicWALL, says that enterprises need to be prepared to allow employees to use their toys.

    Ilike to be a bit controversial over the growing BYOD trend. If you listen to the analysts; IDC, Gartner, Forrester; they are all predicting that the number of smartphones being sold by 2014-2015 will outgrow the number of laptops being sold.

    We all say that the employees want to use their own device, but if you look at what they want to use, it is either a tablet or a smartphone, so companies and IT managers have to accommodate all users needs.

    We did a survey and we looked at what devices our customers are supporting or are open to support, and there is no clear winner. If you look at it from a device point of view, there are people who want to use tablets (about 60%), people who want to use smartphones and people who want to use laptops.

    How to start
    A good way to start BYOD and try to minimise risks is by using an SSL VPN gateway. The beauty of an SSL VPN gateway is that you are able to identify the user and the user profile as well as identifying the device and setting up a profile for the device. You could have a profile that is a managed device or a personal device, but registered within the corporate ID system. Any organisation whether an SMB or enterprise, if they don’t really know where to start the BYOD journey, if they start looking at implementing an SSL VPN solution like the Dell SonicWALL solution then they probably meet 90% of employees requirements when it comes to BYOD.

    How to control BYOD
    The threat of personal devices on a corporate network is a big problem, according to Darren Gross, EMEA senior sales director, Centrify, and companies must be able to control information on those devices.

    Security compliance experts Centrify have released mobile device management software, which integrates one single identity for each individual employee within an organisation, so wherever they go the company can control where they are going and what they are doing, through policies and security settings.

    “There is a lot of competition in that space, but we are quite unique because we come from an angle of joining the system to Active Directory, so if I leave my iPad on the train, help desk can go and remotely wipe that device so there is no threat to the enterprise,” says Darren Gross, EMEA senior sales director, Centrify.

    Enterprises also need to look at mobile device configuration to prevent viruses from accessing the corporate network.

    … <LONG>

    People that use mobile devices tend to have no passcodes on them. Centrify is able to enforce passwords and encryption on a personal device accessing the corporate network.

    Cloud
    The company is also developing authentication for off premis cloud software and service type applications so for example SalesForce and WebEx.

    “Users will be able to sign on with one identity within Active Directory so you control what a user is doing and see where they are going, there is full accountability to what individuals are doing within the organisations,” said Gross.

    Disaster recovery in the region
    Yasser Zeineldin, CEO, eHosting DataFort, says the company is offering regional enterprises the opportunity to develop DR sites.

    We offer clients both in UAE and the Middle East region the ability to have a hot disaster recovery site where data is replicated between their production system and the disaster recovery system that is hosted with us. This means that in real time if there is a failure in the primary system they can switch over to the secondary system.

    <BIG DATA PART OF THE REPORT>


    Mobile enterprise computing platform

    Hal’s (Im)Perfect Vision on a possible (and much needed) further direction by Microsoft :
    There is no ARM in Windows RT [Jan 2, 2013]

    Windows RT is the name of Microsoft’s version of Windows 8 for ARM processors, right?  It’s aimed primarily at Consumers, right?  It’s role in business is primarily in the BYOD realm, right?  That’s so 2012!  Let’s talk about strategy and where I think Microsoft will go with Windows and particularly Windows RT.  And how their strategy may become more obvious in 2013.

    The name Windows RT wasn’t chosen to convey a message about Windows moving to ARM processors.  Nor was it chosen to convey that it was a Tablet OS.  The name appears to have been chosen primarily for one reason, it is an operating system devoted to running Windows RunTime apps.  It splits the mainstream Windows product into two families.  Windows for running Win32 “desktop” and Windows RunTime applications and Windows RT that drops the legacy Win32 application support.  Windows RT is Microsoft’s go forward client operating system, while Windows is the operating system Microsoft will need to keep selling and enhancing for a transition that will last a decade or more, but it will eventually be considered a legacy.

    I know I just sent a lot of people’s blood pressure through the roof because today they either (a) dislike Metro/Modern/whatever-you-call-it ,Windows RunTime, or the Start Screen and/or (b) the new environment isn’t really suitable for their usage scenario.  But keep in mind I’m talking about where things are going over several releases of the re-imagined Windows.  There will be many refinements, improvements, and changes before Windows RT replaces Windows as Microsoft’s primary client operating system offering.

    The desktop lives forever, right?  Well, on Windows yes but not on Windows RT.  Today Windows RT only needs the desktop for two reasons.  First, many traditional utilities from the File Explorer to much of system management are only available as desktop apps.  Second, Microsoft Office is only available as desktop apps.  But in each release going forward this will become less true.  A Metro File Explorer will become standard.  More and more system management will move to the new model.  And eventually Microsoft will remove the desktop from Windows RT.  Then it will be able to remove many pieces of legacy (including Win32), making Windows RT smaller, faster, and more secure (via smaller attack surface) than it’s Windows sibling.

    Microsoft started the ball rolling with Windows RT on ARM because that was the most practical thing to do.  With ARM unable to run existing x86 apps Microsoft had to decide if it would evangelize conversions of existing applications to ARM or put the energy into getting developers to write new Metro/Modern apps.  And without a library of Modern apps it was unlikely that any of the x86-oriented OEMs would create an x86 Windows RT system.   No rational amount of pricing difference on Microsoft’s part would encourage a OEM to use an operating system with no applications when they could just as simply use one with a huge, if aging, library.  ARM thus became the obvious place to introduce Windows RT.

    As the library of applications in the Windows Store grows it becomes more and more likely that Microsoft will introduce Windows RT for x86 systems.  Will that happen in 2013?  By the end of 2013 the Windows Store will likely have in excess of 150,000 Apps.  Perhaps in excess of 200,000.  Assuming that the quality is there (meaning they are the apps people want and are equal to their iPad and Android equivalents) the market for systems with no need to run legacy desktop apps will have grown dramatically.  Microsoft, many of its OEMs, and Intel (of course) will want the option of using Clover Trail (and its follow-ons) in those systems.  So it is quite possible that Microsoft makes Windows RT available for Clover Trail-based systems in 2013, and it seems a certainty for 2014.

    As a side note this is something that Paul Thurrott will probably not be happy about.  Paul has called on Microsoft to use Clover Trail in its next generation of the Surface so that it would have the full Windows experience.  But I expect that if Microsoft did use Clover Trail in a Surface (as opposed to Surface Pro) replacement that system would still run Windows RT.  Sorry Paul :-)

    If Windows RT for x86 is speculative in 2013 here is something I think is a surer bet.  Windows RT will expand into a family that mirrors the editions of Windows.  I expect that in 2013 we will see a Windows RT Enterprise (and perhaps Pro as well) edition.  Why?  Well the current edition of Windows RT is missing some key functionality that would accelerate its adoption within Enterprises.  And I’m not even talking about UI or Windows RunTime changes that would increase the application space it was applicable to.  I’m talking purely about lower level operating system features.

    Being able to participate in a domain is part of Microsoft’s secret sauce for enterprises, and today Windows RT can’t do that.  A Windows RT Enterprise edition would bring the ability to join a domain, use DirectAccess, use BitLocker, fully participate in Microsoft’s management capabilities, etc.  Whereas the solutions introduced in 2012 are acceptable for BYOD situations and some limited application scenarios, an Enterprise edition would allow Windows RT systems to participate as full members of the enterprise computing environment.

    Windows RT Enterprise will not allow side-loading of desktop applications, but it may allow side-loading of limited types of system software.  As great as DirectAccess is (and given my involvement in it I’m biased, but then I also lived with it as my “VPN” for a year so know how fantastic the user experience is) most enterprises use Cisco VPNs.  And while Windows RT is certainly adequately protected with Windows Defender, IE SmartScreen, etc. most enterprises will want at least the management capabilities of enterprise-oriented security products and probably the ability to use their corporate standard (i.e., Symantec, McAfee, etc.) products and infrastructure.  Unless Microsoft addresses these adoption of Windows RT will be much slower than desired.

    And what about requirements for access to desktop applications on Windows RT systems?  Many, perhaps most, enterprises are fine with using VDI to allow users of these systems to access desktop applications.  Some are downright enthusiastic.  But many do not want that access occurring off their corporate network.  Hence the need for the ability to join a domain, and use DirectAccess or VPNs when users need remote access.  You then run VDI over the corporate network.

    Now we get to another wildcard in all of this, Office.  Today’s situation with Office being a desktop Win32 application on Windows RT, and only being available in the Home and Student edition, represents a major drag on Microsoft’s ability to move Windows RT forward.  Microsoft needs to either allow upgrade of the edition of Office on Windows RT to an Enterprise edition (including, for example, making Outlook available) or to move Office fully to Metro/Modern (likely in multiple editions).  They may do both given the time it could take to create a true Office RT.

    An Office RT would benefit the entire Windows RT  and Windows 8 market and is the logical direction for Office to go.  But I find it hard to believe they can get to full equivalence with the Win32 Office apps in a year, let alone in a traditional longer release cycle.  We’ll see some, perhaps substantial, movement in this direction in 2013 but I don’t know how far Microsoft will get.  In the mean time they may find it prudent to release Office 2013 Enterprise (standalone and/or as based part of Office 365) for Windows RT systems.  However this rolls out, Microsoft will substantially improve the Office for Windows RT situation in 2013.

    Finally, let me reinforce a point I’ve blogged about before.  Microsoft is moving to annual (or more frequent) updates as a (at least unofficial) corporate standard for release cycles.  There may be exceptions from time to time, but I’d expect pretty much every actively developed product to have annual releases.  That means faster evolution in smaller chunks is the norm.  You don’t like how the Start Screen works today?  By the end of the year there will no doubt be improvements that address major complaints.  Windows RunTime missing an API that keeps you from creating a Metro/Modern version of your App?  You might have it later this year.  Can’t stand that the Share contract doesn’t work with Outlook?  Again, a solution may appear faster than Microsoft customers have ever imagined possible.

    2012 was an exciting year for Microsoft and its customers.  2013 may be even more exciting, and delightful.

    But there are new contenders for the enterprise IT space not based on any earlier paradigms, neither on the enterprise desktop and notebook (like Microsoft’s Professional and especially Enterprise editions of Windows) evolved from the PC platform, nor on the web browser based enterprise thin client (from the Java-like Apex code programmable Force.com PaaS platform usable along with standard HTML, JavaScript and CSS in the browser, to a wide range of JavaScript frameworks of a kind of “enterprise quality” which include even versions for mobile browsers) evolved from the web platform.

    A typical new contender, differing from both of the two earlier platforms in that by its very nature of cloud based file sharing can best exploit the power of new mobile computing devices, is the Box (service) [Wikipedia article, started on Nov 15, 2006]

    Box (formerly Box.net) is an online file sharing and Cloud content management service for enterprise companies. … A mobile version of the service is available for Android, BlackBerry, iPhone, iPad, WebOS, andWindows Phone devices.[4]

    Products

    The core of the service is based around sharing, collaborating, and working with files that are uploaded to Box. Box offers 3 account types: Enterprise, Business and Personal.[12] Depending on the type of account, Box has a number of features such as unlimited storage, custom branding, administrative controls and 3rd party integrations with applications like Google apps, Gmail, NetSuite and Salesforce. The service also has a variety of social features such as discussions, groups and an update feed.

    Sharing

    Box is a file sharing network, which saves and stores the information uploaded by the customer to their web site. They have the full legal right to demographic information about their customers, sales, and traffic to their partners and advertisers. Even though this company does not have the right to give, sell, rent, share or trade any personal information uploaded to their web site by their customers unless consent is given by the user of an account, a third party may be able to view some information. For which some terms and policies have been set forth, to protect the web site as well as the customers alike to establish a full functioning informative and well organized sharing network.[22]

    With the users consent, and if they are to choose they can share their private details with other customers such as:[22]

    To see your name, Email address, Photo, Profile information

    Chosen files to share –where comments can be made, and others can contact the user by email. People you invite as editors can also edit your shared files, upload documents and photos to your shared files, share those documents outside of Box, and give other users rights to view your shared files.[22]

    On the website its platform services for Enterprise IT are described in the following framework:

    Consolidate File Services: Consolidate All Your Content Services on Box

    Box – the single, secure solution for content access, sharing and collaboration – lets you replace a myriad of file transfer systems and unsecured, consumer-focused tools like YouSendIt and Dropbox. Bottom line: You reduce content silos, lower costs and give users the simplicity and functionality they want with the security IT requires. Learn more

    • Replace NFS, FTP, MFT and consumer file-sharing and sync tools
    • Streamline system administration and reporting
    • Reduce IT resource requirements while effortlessly meeting increasing storage needs

    Enterprise Mobility: Support Mobile Content Management

    Box works with any mobile device, giving remote workers access to critical content they need to succeed. Simultaneously, Box features a comprehensive and sophisticated security suite – and its seamless integration with third-party mobile device management tools like Good Technology and MobileIron provide an additional layer of data protection.Learn More

    • Users get anywhere, anytime access to critical content; and that content is synced across all their devices
    • IT enjoys remote device management coupled with auto logout and locking while sanctioning the use of specific mobile devices and apps
    • IT also gains a new level of content visibility, with insight into how content is managed and accessed in the organisation – and beyond

    Cloud Content Management: Discover Content Management in the Cloud

    As a Web-based service, Box is up and running in minutes and deployed in days. There’s no hardware to maintain or software to update and it complements existing content management platforms.
    Learn more

    • Start working in the cloud immediately: no on-premise installation, provisioning, maintenance or DMZ setup
    • Enable employees to access and share enterprise content quickly and securely, both internally and with external partners and vendors
    • Significantly lower hardware and storage costs

    Security and Architecture: Ensure Your Corporate Information is Secure

    It’s true: Box is a leader in content management security and makes ongoing investments in the safety of our data centres and corporate operations. Box has been issued an SSAE 16 Type II report, and our solution also features Safe Harbor certification and provides easy-to-use configuration tools, so you can tailor Box to meet your security requirements. Learn More

    • Global permission controls and detailed audit trails
    • Full data encryption plus data centre backups and redundancy
    • Guaranteed 99.9% uptime

    The Box Platform: Extend Box With Our Platform and Integrations

    Box is more than just a Web application; our comprehensive yet flexible platform lets you easily integrate, extend and customise your cloud deployment. Connect Box to the leading SaaS applications you already use, integrate it into your IT infrastructure or build apps designed to do whatever your business needs. Learn more

    • Easily connect to other business applications like Salesforce, NetSuite and Google Apps
    • Extend Box to meet additional needs with our 120+ Box Apps including eFax, DocuSign, FedEx and mobile Box Apps like Quickoffice
    • Create custom mobile, Web and desktop applications powered by Box

    Professional Services: Deploy Easily With Professional Services

    Our Customer Success team offers a comprehensive range of professional and client support services, from end-user training to systems integration and performance tuning. Learn more

    • Content migration services transfer your existing data to Box quickly and securely
    • Custom implementation road maps streamline deployment across the enterprise
    • A dedicated Customer Success representative gives you the responsive, personalised support you deserve

    The current state was described in Box Platform: Announcing v2 API in GA and Year in Review [on box blog by Chris Yeh, VP of Platform, Dec 14, 2012]

    2012 has been an amazing ride for the Box platform, and I’m excited to announce that we’re ending the year on a high note with the general availability of the Box v2 API. First released back in April in beta, we’ve made tremendous strides to bring our partners, developers and customers a simple, elegant and intuitive API that will power the next generation of business collaboration.

    Our v2 API represents a major step forward for Box. It is RESTful, implements the OAuth2 spec to standardize user authentication, has much improved error handling and it is well documented. Our Platform Manager Peter Rexer has a deep dive into all the details of the v2 API here. We’re also introducing Box developer accounts, which offer developers access to all of Box’s enterprise features through both the Box web app and the API. In celebration of our new API, we’re offering 25GB of Box free for any developer account created before January 18, 2013.

    API Momentum in 2012

    Our new API is being launched at a time of tremendous platform growth for Box. In 2012, every API metric that we tracked grew significantly. Here’s just a sample of some of the massive traction we’re seeing with the Box API:

    • 129%: growth in third party developers using Box
    • 140%: growth in number of third party API calls per month
    • 133%: growth in apps in the Box Apps Marketplace
    • 200%: growth in number of weekly users of third party apps on Box

    Of course, we wouldn’t have seen such strong platform growth and API engagement without the efforts and work driven by the amazing Box platform team and our ecosystem of third party developers. We built industry-first products including Box OneCloud and Box Embed, travelled the world meeting amazing companies along the way and got together as a community to hack some pretty cool projects. Here’s a brief look back at an amazing 2012.

    Box OneCloud

    In April, we introduced Box OneCloud for iOS, the first mobile cloud for the enterprise. OneCloud helps you discover useful productivity apps that are deeply integrated with Box for productivity on common business tasks like document editing, PDF annotation, e-signature, etc. We launched on iOS with 50 apps and shortly thereafter brought this to Android. By year’s end we’ll have nearly 300 OneCloud app integration partners across both iOS and Android. 40% of all Box’s Fortune 500 customers are using Box OneCloud.

    Box Platform on the Road – New York & London

    In New York this spring, we announced our v2 API in beta, 100 new OneCloud apps and partnerships with General Assembly and TechStars. We welcomed over 650 attendees to Skylight West to hear from Box CEO Aaron Levie, Take Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick and former Editor-in-Chief of Wired Chris Anderson. Later, everyone danced to cool tunes spun by Elijah Wood. Our friends in New York include the Bizodo team, which makes a great form-filling app that puts content into Box. We also hung out with the Handshake team, which created a rich order-taking app useful in many business and retail settings. When the Handshake logo appeared on our OneCloud billboard on the 101, they tweeted that it was the startup equivalent of your voice dropping. One of the most interesting things about New York is the concentration of enterprise-focused startups. For example, we’re really pleased to support Jonathan Lehr’s NY Enterprise Technology Meetup and Nick Gavronsky’s New York City Startup Weekend, which just occurred last weekend.

    In late August, we parachuted into the middle of Carnival week in London to talk to analysts, press, London-based startups and supporting government organizations. We hosted a developer meet-up at Shoreditch House and were awestruck by the energy in London, particularly in Tech City. We spent time in Google’s shared space in London, where we first met Ben Wirtz, CEO of Unifyo, which brings together multiple sources of customer data to provide enterprises with a singular view of customers. We wandered down to Chelsea to meet Will Lovelace, CEO of Datownia, a company that allows the easy translation of Excel spreadsheets into APIs for external consumption. And we visited the lofty digs of the Chelsea Apps Factory, a super high quality app consultancy and production company.

    It’s great to meet with so many wonderful people and even better when you can get together and build some really cool things.

    Box Hack Event

    Full disclosure, our first public hack event at Box HQ was not intended to be thematically linked to astronauts shooting each other, but that’s another story. At this event, called “Redefine Work,” 150 hackers stayed overnight creating more than 40 contest entries. Participating technology partners included TokBox, Firebase, Mashery, Twilio, Parse, Iron.io and SendGrid. Our winning hack, called OMGHelp, is an application that improves the technical support experience by allowing a customer to use a smartphone camera to show a technical support person what they’re doing. If you’re interested, here is a really nice recap of our event that was created by Mashery’s Neil Mansilla on Storify.

    We closed out our active year in October with…

    BoxWorks Dev Day

    At BoxWorks, we announced a brand new technology that lets you quickly and easily extend the full Box experience anywhere you work. We call it Box Embed, our robust HTML5 framework for adding Box directly into the user interfaces of other applications. We launched with ten partners, including NetSuite, Jive, Conur, Oracle and others and we plan to continue adding to that number. Box Embed is particularly exciting to us because it’s one of the easiest ways for our partners to help make the content you have stored on Box accessible from anywhere.

    We also ran an un-conference-like Developer Day where hundreds of developers joined us to hear about the latest web development technologies and learn about enterprise development. We ran a well-attended startup camp with Boxers from various departments (design, sales, marketing in addition to developer evangelists) providing consulting. And we concluded with one of my favorite reporters/writers, Drew Olanoff of TechCrunch, interviewing one of my favorite “startup” CEOs, Jeff Lawson of Twilio, about the ways that developers should think about using APIs in their apps.

    We were fortunate to have many of our platform partners join us at BoxWorks this year. Jesse Miller and the attachments.meteam met with Box customers on the main show floor. David Klein and the SlideShark team presented in one of our sessions, as did Milind Gadekar from CloudOn.

    As you can see, we’ve had an amazing year. Thanks to all of our platform partners, big and small, for working with us. We look forward to reaching the next level in the new year.

    2013: Looking Forward

    As 2013 approaches, we’re working on making it even easier for developers to work with Box by focusing on our SDKs and other developer tools. We’re also excited to be building new platform products. On one front, we’re working on new developer-focused metadata tools. On another, we’re looking at allowing developers to hook into workflow products that will allow content to move through Box in various business flows.

    We’re sure that it will be a fun ride. Happy holidays to all and we’ll look forward to working with you in 2013!

    Regarding the most demanding enterprise customers of Box.com here are few excepts from Why Box.com is king of enterprise cloud storage [CNET, May 15, 2012]

    It may be known to some as the Dropbox-for-the-enterprise, but Box.com could be forgiven for insisting on its own identity.

    With more than 120,000 customers, including 82 percent of the Fortune 500, the company has made a name for itself as one of the leaders in the enterprise cloud storage and data management space. And though Box.com has Microsoft, and more recently, Google breathing down its neck, CEO Aaron Levie doesn’t appear the least bit nervous.

    That may be because the company has spent seven years building its business and solidifying a technology platform that gets more sophisticated — and cost-effective — every day. And as it has evolved into occupying a sizable Silicon Valley building, and employing more than 400 people, Box is now setting its sights on new businesses, including providing customers with the infrastructure on which to build cloud-based applications.

    Last week, the 27-year-old Levie sat down with CNET in a conference room at Box.com headquarters for an interview about the state of his company, the competitive landscape in the cloud storage and service space, and even the value of wearing a hoodie in a meeting with potential investors.

    How do you pitch Box.com to customers?
    Levie: So many different kinds of businesses out there are all going through the exact same challenge and transition. It’s almost counterintuitive how predictable everybody’s situation is. Because whether you’re in construction or finance or real estate or consumer or media tech, every CIO we talk with, and these are companies that are 5,000, or 10,000, or 50,000 employees, they’re going through the same kind of transition and they’re at the same junctures as organizations, where they have decades of legacy technologies that they’re still managing. And it’s, How am I going to build an IT and technology strategy for the next five to ten years. And often, if you look at how vast the change has been in the landscape, the technology strategy they’re going to end up with is very different than the one they just came from.

    So what is Box.com?
    Levie: The vision of Box is to make it easy for customers to share, manage, and access information from anywhere. That means we need lots of different kinds of technologies to make that happen, including technology that will sit on your iPhone, your Mac, your Android device or your Blackberry. And we just announced something with Nokia with their Windows Phones and tablets. We’re a 100 percent enterprise-focused company, and all the technology we’re building goes towards asking how do we make it easier or more scalable, or simpler, and just a better way for businesses to share and manage and access this data.

    Any regrets on being 100 percent enterprise?
    Levie: God, no. Our thesis is basically that if you look at the cost of storage, it goes down roughly about 50 percent every 18 to 24 months. So our hard costs are about a tenth of what they were when we started the company seven years ago. And you can predict that in the next five to ten years, we’ll have another 10x improvement in storage density and performance. Eventually you’ll get to a point where storage is infinite and free, because companies like Google, and Microsoft, and Apple can essentially subsidize the cost of storage for their consumers because it’s so cheap and the value of keeping people locked into their system is so great for them. But in the enterprise, storage is critically important, so we had to give people lots of space, but what you pay for is the security, the platform value, the collaboration, and the integration into your enterprise, and this is where we can build differentiated technology instead of just being measured on how much storage we give you and at what price.

    Who poses the biggest threat to your business?
    Levie: I would say Microsoft knows the most about the enterprise of any of these players. Google has a phenomenal brand, but it’s getting to be a broader brand, because it’s everything from your wallet to your car to your TV to your phone. The other thing that gets lost in the entire conversation because Google and Microsoft and Apple are so aggressive about this space, is the big transition companies are going to do from Oracle, IBM, EMC, and a lot of these traditional enterprise infrastructure players. Because as these dollars, and as your computing goes to the cloud, it moves away from implementing on-premise systems. It’s not going to be that Dropbox or Apple or Google loses. It’s going to be a lot of the legacy systems that we were spending lots of money on. As the $290 billion enterprise software market moves to the cloud, an entire new landscape of players and vendors are going to be the beneficiaries of that, unless these legacy vendors really get their act together.

    IGZO is coming as the ultimate future technology for LCDs

    IGZO at CES 2013 [sharpelectronicsusa YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2013]

    Írja be ide a videó képfeliratát.

    IGZO [sharpelectronicsusa YouTube channel, Jan 3, 2013]

    Írja be ide a videó képfeliratát.

    To summarize IGZO is the latest LCD technology advancement vs. Hydis: its FFS succeeding IPS [core information page on this same ‘Experiencing the cloud’ site, May 11 – Oct 12, 2012] or the earlier AH-IPS technology from LG Display and True HD IPS of LG Mobile LTE superphones: Nitro HD (AT&T) and Spectrum (Verizon) [‘Experiencing the cloud’, Jan 19, 2012], or the even more earlier Plane to Line Switching (PLS) screen technology (Samsung) [‘Experiencing the cloud’, Oct 2, 2011] which is essentially the same as the well established IPS [Wikipedia] technology.

    More information on Sharp: IGZO is coming [core information page on this same ‘Experiencing the cloud’ site, Jan 20, 2013]

    Qualcomm moving ahead of Allwinner et al. in CPU and GPU while trying to catch up with Allwinner in Ultra HD

    [Updated June 20, 2013] According to Qualcomm Expands Qualcomm Snapdragon 200 Processor Tier [press release, June 20, 2013] the entry-level S200 with quad-core Cortex-A5 @1.4GHz and Adreno 203 GPU manufacture on a 45nm proces will be expanded late 2013 (together with Qualcomm Reference Design (QRD) versions) Cortex-A7 @1.2GHz and Adreno 305 based SoCs: the MSM8x10 (8210, 8610) dual-core and MSM8x12 (8212, 8612) quad-core versions. They will feature key modem technologies that are important in China and emerging regions, including support for HSPA+ (up to 21Mbps) and TD-SCDMA. The processors will have support for dual cameras, with an 8 Megapixel rear-facing camera and up to a 5 Megapixel front-facing one, as well as feature a single platform for all SIM variants, including Dual SIM, Dual Standby, and Dual SIM, Dual Active, and Tri SIM Tri Standby.

    The latest additions to the Snapdragon 200 class also feature: integrated industry-leading IZat Location functionality and support of Qualcomm Quick Charge 1.0; support for the latest Android, Windows Phone and Firefox operating systems; RxD support; and a single, multimode modem enabling faster data rates, fewer dropped calls, and better connections.

    [Updated Feb 27, 2013] The ”Allwinner phenomenon” coming from nowhere in 2012 is threatening all established players in the SoC industry, even the industry’s undisputed leader Qualcomm. This was the reason why Qualcomm was forced to strengthen its Cortex based S4 Play class ahead of time already twice in the recent months, and came the time to announce its next-gen Krait microarchitectures with significantly enhanced GPU and video processing unit capabilities.

    In fact it was necessary to introduce two microarchitecture steps at once: Krait 300 and Krait 400. Even the SoC classification was further changed with the corresponding S600 (for mid-high tier smartphones and tablets) and S800 (for premium smartphones, Smart TVs, digital media adapters and tablets) “processor brand tiers” while the company was yet unable to decide how the existing S4 Play, S4 Plus and S4 Pro classes, introduced just in August 2011, should be transformed into the new S200 (for entry level smartphones) and S400 (for high volume smartphones and tablets) “processor brand tiers” in order to remain competitive. While Qualcomm will undoubtebly be able to defend its SoC leadership position with the announcements already made there will be even bigger trouble for the already ailing giant with Intel’s biggest flop: at least 3-month delay in delivering the power management solution for its first tablet SoC [this same ‘Experiencing the Cloud’ blog, Dec 20, 2012].

    Update: Qualcomm Snapdragon 200, 400, 600 and 800 at Mobile World Congress 2013 [Charbax YouTube channel, Feb 27, 2013]

    Update: Qualcomm Reveals the Snapdragon™ 400 and 200 Processors [OnQ Blog by Qualcomm, Feb 20, 2013] the essence of which I will include into the updated table below in order to make it easy to compare with everything introduced earlier by Qualcomm in the new “Krait era” of Snapdragon SoCs:image

    Update: LG Optimus G Pro, 5.5″ 1080p IPS display, 1.7Ghz Qualcomm S600
    [Charbax YouTube channel, Feb 26, 2013] a full HD (1080p) LTE device said to be “available in Q1 in globally selected markets” [4:11-4:18]

    HTC One announced with UltraPixel camera, 4.7-inch 1080p display and Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor Byhttp://www.bgr.in The HTC One is finally official. Yes, all the leaks of the past few weeks were true and we are indeed looking at HTC’s first smartphone with an “ultrapixel” camera. It looks every bit like the leaked render and we are indeed talking about a 4.7-inch full HD 1080p display with a pixel density of 468PPI in a unibody machine chiselled chassis.

    More information: OPTIMUS G PRO, LG’S FIRST FULL HD SMARTPHONE, LAUNCHES THIS WEEK IN KOREA [LG Electronics press release Feb 18, 2013]

    Update: HTC One announced with UltraPixel camera, 4.7-inch display and Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor [BGRIndia YouTube channel, Feb20, 2013] to be available in March worldwide

    HTC One announced with UltraPixel camera, 4.7-inch 1080p display and Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor Byhttp://www.bgr.in The HTC One is finally official. Yes, all the leaks of the past few weeks were true and we are indeed looking at HTC’s first smartphone with an “ultrapixel” camera. It looks every bit like the leaked render and we are indeed talking about a 4.7-inch full HD 1080p display with a pixel density of 468PPI in a unibody machine chiselled chassis.

    More information: Ubuntu and HTC in lockstep [‘Experiencing the Cloud’ blog, Feb 19, 2013]

    Update: Snapdragon 400 as now defined by Qualcomm (see MSM 8230 under the S400 in the above table) came first to the market with the Huawei Ascend W1 introduced at CES 2013. See Huawei Device – The Stage is Yours with the Ascend W1 [HuaweiDeviceCo YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2013]

    This device is also The first Windows Phone 4Afrika from Huawei for $150 = Huawei Ascend W1 for $240 (in China) and more elsewhere [Feb 5, 2013], and as such it is part of the Microsoft’s 4Afrika Initiative [Videos4Afrika YouTube channel, Feb 5, 2013]

    Watch from [0:54] to [1:10] part of the video for Huawei 4Afrika device with MSM 8230 Snapdragon 400 inside. This is showing quite well that for this 3-year initiative by Microsoft this Snapdragon 400 SoC will satisfy the entry-level requirements too, and not only in the smartphone space but in the tablet space as well.

    Update: The All-New Snapdragon 800 Series [QUALCOMMVlog YouTube channel, Jan 24, 2013] for which devices were said to be available in the middle of 2013

    Snapdragon 800 processors bring the power of 4G LTE advanced, delivering download speeds up to 150 mbps. Now you can stream movies, surf the web, and do so much more, better and faster. The new Snapdragon 800 delivers incredible detail and graphics with its quad core CPU and Adreno 330 graphics processing unit. Add to that UltraHD or 4K with 7.1 surround sound for capturing, viewing or watching video and movies at the highest quality possible.

    End of updates

    Here is the January 2013 SoC lineup for Qualcomm as per the new announcements at CES 2013:

    image
    Compiled from previous and current (see below) Snapdragon announcements from Qualcomm. The previous announcements were described in the following posts on this blog:
    Qualcomm quad-core Cortex-A7 SoCs with Adreno 305 and 1080p coming for the high-volume global market and China [Dec 9, 2012]
    Qualcomm decided to compete with the existing Cortex-A5/Krait-based offerings till the end of 2012 [Sept 30 – Dec 7, 2012]
    Next-gen Snapdragon S4 class SoCs — exploiting TSMC’s 28nm process first — coming in December [Aug 9 – Nov 25, 2011]
    Qualcomm Snapdragon SoCs with a new way of easy identification [Aug 4 – Nov 16, 2011]
    See also the post which described the availability problem of the company in 2012:
    Qualcomm’s critical reliance on supply constrained 28nm foundry capacity [July 27 – Nov 13, 2012]

    Paul Jacobs Demos the new 800 Series Snapdragon Processors [QUALCOMMVlog YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    During the Qualcomm CES 2013 Keynote, Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs shows off the incredible power of the new 800 Series Snapdragon processors. The new processor renders videos and games in stunning speed. Using the Fortress Fire app, Jacobs showed how the 800 series processor takes it to the next level.

    Which you should put into an overall context of new opportunities as it is presented in:
    Highlights from the 2013 Qualcomm CES Born Mobile Keynote [QUALCOMMVlog YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2013]

    Highlights from Paul Jacobs’ 2013 Qualcomm CES keynote. Featuring appearances from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, director Guillermo del Toro, Sesame Street’s Big Bird, and many more. Visit the Qualcomm CES Facebook tab: http://on.fb.me/ZUsLky For more info visit: http://www.qualcomm.com/CES

    New Qualcomm Snapdragon Processor Brand Tiers Announced [OnQ Blog, Jan 7, 2013]

    Today Qualcomm Technologies is introducing new names and tiers for the upcoming 2013 line of Snapdragon(TM) processors. You probably became acquainted with the Snapdragon processor through smartphones and tablets, though the new line will expand into other consumer electronics.

    The current Snapdragon processors are labeled S1, S2, S3 and S4 to reflect the processor generation.  But as the processor roadmap has expanded to address additional segments of smartphones, tablets, compute devices and consumer electronics, so we are taking this opportunity to introduce a new tiered structure to the Qualcomm Snapdragon processor brand. There will be 4 tiers – Snapdragon 800, 600, 400 and 200 – to make it easy to distinguish the processor segmentation and to communicate the depth of Qualcomm Technologies’ processor portfolio.

    Starting in 2013 and moving forward, processors will be categorized in the following tiers:

    Snapdragon 800 Processors

    Snapdragon 800 Processors are designed to deliver blazing fast apps and web browsing, visually stunning graphics, breakthrough multimedia capabilities, seamless communications virtually anytime, anywhere, and outstanding battery life for premium smartphones, Smart TVs, digital media adapters and tablets.

    Snapdragon 600 Processors

    Snapdragon 600 Processors are designed to deliver outstanding performance for today’s coolest apps, fast web browsing, seamless connectivity and great battery life for mid-high tier smartphones and tablets.

    Snapdragon 400 Processors

    Snapdragon 400 Processors are designed to deliver the performance, features, connectivity and battery life that consumers expect in high volume smartphones and tablets.

    Snapdragon 200 Processors

    Snapdragon 200 Processors are designed to deliver a valued balance of performance, robust connectivity and better battery life for entry level smartphones.

    It’s important to state that the Qualcomm Snapdragon processor brand continues to stand for the same thing – mobility without compromise.  Now new tiered brand structure makes it easy for customers and consumers to see that no matter what your style, device preference or budget, there’s a Snapdragon processor for you.  And when a Snapdragon processor is at the heart of your device, you can do more and recharge less.

    Click here for a deeper dive into the features and specifications of the new Snapdragon 800 and 600 Series.

    Qualcomm Announces Next Generation Snapdragon Premium Mobile Processors [Qualcomm press release, Jan 7, 2013]

    New Snapdragon 800 and 600 Processors Represent a Significant Performance Leap For High-End Mobile Computing Devices

    LAS VEGAS – January 07, 2013 – Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) today announced that its wholly owned subsidiary, Qualcomm Technologies, Inc., is sampling the first products in its latest generation of processors. With the introduction of its newest Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 and 600 processors, Qualcomm continues to lead the industry by once again raising the bar on performance per watt and delivering unparalleled user experiences.

    The new Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors target premium mobile and computing devices. They are designed to deliver outstanding overall user experience, expand the possibilities of seamless connected computing and enable brand new mobile experiences while maintaining industry-leading battery performance:

    • The Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors will deliver up to 75 percent better performance than the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro processor and the move to 28nm High Performance for mobile (HPm) technology node ensures exceptionally low power
    • New Krait 400 CPU in quad configuration, with speeds of up to 2.3 GHz per core offers best-in-class performance per watt, so processor performance can hold up to the more demanding processing and communication requirements of premium mobile devices
    • Additionally, asynchronous SMP architecture provides dynamic power sensing and control for peak performance per core, while extending battery life without the use of specialized cores
    • New Adreno 330 GPU delivers more than 2x performance for compute applications over the current Adreno 320 GPU
    • 2x32bit LP-DDR3 at 800MHz with industry-leading memory bandwidth of 12.8GBps
    • New Hexagon DSP V5 delivers floating point support, dynamic multithreading and expanded multimedia instructions for enhanced low power performance
    • New IZat™ location technology combines multiple tracking systems into a single high performance, highly accurate navigation platform for auto and pedestrian applications
    • Seamless communications anytime, anywhere: Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors offer fully integrated connectivity and a wide variety of communication options.
    • Third generation 4G LTE modem with data rates up to 150 Mbps (Category 4), fully integrated in the new Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors
    • 4G LTE Advanced Carrier Aggregation feature to maximize radio frequency bandwidth
    • World multimode and multi-band support using wafer level package (WTR1605)
    • Integrated newest generation mobile Wi-Fi connectivity, 802.11ac
    • Broad connectivity support with integrated USB 3.0, Bluetooth and FM

    INSERT: Director Guillermo del Toro and Paul Jacobs Showcase Ultra HD [QUALCOMMVlog YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2013]

    Director Guillermo del Toro visits Paul Jacobs at the Qualcomm 2013 CES keynote to discuss Ultra HD and show the Qualcomm Pacific Rim trailer for his new film, Pacific Rim. Visit the Qualcomm CES Facebook tab: http://on.fb.me/ZUsLky For more info visit: http://www.qualcomm.com/CES

    Breakthrough multimedia experiences: The Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors also introduce the very latest mobile experiences.

    • Capture, playback and display in UltraHD video (with four times 1080p pixel density)
    • Dual Image Signal Processors (ISP) for Qualcomm Snapdragon Camera with support for computational camera
    • HD multichannel audio with DTS-HD and Dolby Digital Plus for enhanced audio
    • Higher display resolutions (up to 2560×2048) and Miracast 1080p HD support

    The Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors are currently sampling and expected to be available in commercial devices by mid-year 2013.

    The Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor targets high-end mobile devices. The Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor is designed to deliver great performance, rich graphics and enhanced user experience and will deliver up to 40 percent better performance than the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro processor at lower power. The new processor offers system-wide architectural improvements, key component upgrades and expanded connectivity options. The Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor features a new Krait 300 quad-core CPU with speeds up to 1.9GHz, a new speed enhanced Adreno 320 GPU and support for LPDDR3 memory. The Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor is sampling now and is expected to be available in commercial devices by second quarter 2013.

    “With the overwhelming success of our previous Qualcomm Snapdragon platforms, our mobile processors have emerged as the platform of choice for high-end mobile devices,” said Steve Mollenkopf, president and chief operating officer of Qualcomm. “With more than 50 design wins already secured with the first products of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 and 800 processors, we are advancing our vision and setting the standard for excellence in mobile computing.”

    For more information and to see a demonstration of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 processors, as well as the newest devices powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon processors, please visit Qualcomm during CES 2013 South Hall 3, Upper Level, Booth #30313), Jan. 8-11 in Las Vegas or visit www.qualcomm.com/snapdragon.

    Snapdragon 800 Series and 600 Processors Unveiled [OnQ Blog, Jan 7, 2013]

    Earlier today we announced several new Snapdragon processors in our new Snapdragon 800 and 600 processors (you can read more about our new brand tiers here).  Smartphones, tablets or any devices loaded with the latest Snapdragon processor will feel really fast and offer long battery and I’d like to take the opportunity to tell you more about our newest flagship processors.

    The Snapdragon 600 Processors

    Building on the momentum of our highly successful Snapdragon S4 Pro processor featured in such flagship devices like the Google Nexus 4 and the HTC Droid DNA, we have introduced the first Snapdragon 600 processor which will once again lead the industry in both performance and power efficiency.  Inside of the Snapdragon 600 processor is an integrated system featuring our custom built CPU, GPU, and much more so you’ll our feel the Snapdragon experience—fast performance and great battery life. The new Snapdragon 600 processor includes the following features:

    • Quad Core Krait 300 CPU—running at up to 1.9 GHz
    • Adreno 320 GPU –offering over 3x the performance of A225 &, as the first GPU in the Adreno 300 series and introduces support for new mobile and GPGPU compute APIs       such as OpenGL ES 3.0 , OpenCL and Renderscript Compute
    • LPDDR3 RAM— (Low Power Double Data Rate 3) this faster RAM gives a speed boost to the channels which data flows.  By increasing the speed at which the data flows to each component, performance is boosted throughout the entire processor.
    • Overall Performance Boost—we expect the Snapdragon 600 processor to deliver up to 40% better performance than the Snapdragon S4 Pro processor.

    Our first Snapdragon 600 processor is sampling now and expected to be available in commercial devices by second quarter 2013.

    The Snapdragon 800 Processors

    Fast on the heels of our first Snapdrgon 600 processor, we will once again reset the performance and power efficiency bar with the introduction of our flagship Snapdragon 800 processors.   Inside these tiny processors are all of the leading technologies that you have come to expect from Qualcomm.  And we continue to custom build these technologies in-house so they can be fully tailored and tightly integrated with the entire system.  This level of customization enables the Snapdragon experience—stunning performance and extreme battery life.  The Snapdragon 800 processors will enable the newest mobile experience with a cutting edge feature set that includes:

    • Quad Core Krait 400 CPU—speeds up to 2.3 GHz, per core
    • Adreno 330 GPU—featuring patented Flex Render Technology and leading edge API’s that are designed to expand the use of GPU processing for general computing and other SoC tasks, the Adreno 330 GPU offers a 2 times better compute performance than Adreno 320
    • 2x32bit LPDDR3 RAM at 800MHz – with industry-leading memory bandwidth of 12.8GBps.
    • 4G LTE Cat 4 and 802.11ac—these connectivity options offer blazing fast, seamless connectivity with cellular modem boasting data rates up to 150 Mbps and 802.11ac at speeds up to 1 Gbps.
    • UltraHD—video can be captured, played back and displayed in UltraHD (previously called “4K.”)  The resolution has four times as many pixels as 1080p. (1920x 1080 versus  4096 × 2304)
    • HD Audio—support for DTS-HD, Dolby Digital Plus and 7.1 surround sound.
    • Dual Image Signal Processors (ISPs) up to 55MP – with support for up to four cameras and allows for 3D captures, photo merging into a master 55MPixel image, separate autofocus and captures, 1080p30 video captures.
    • Overall Performance Boost—the Snapdragon 800 processor is expected to deliver up to 75% better performance than the Snapdragon S4 Pro.

    Not only will you see this Snapdragon 800 processor in mobile devices like smartphones and tablets, but it will be featured in computing and consumer electronic devices such as Smart TVs and digital media adapters.  Snapdragon 800 processors are sampling now and expected to be available in commercial devices by mid-2013.

    Raj Talluri Senior Vice President of Product Management, Qualcomm CDMA Technologies

    Future selling at CES 2013: 3D without glasses, Ultra HD (4K) TV, transparent display, multiscreen convergence, and upgradable smart TV – only Google TV and Gorilla Glass 3 are not

    This year CES is more about future selling than any time before. Only Google TV does look like as coming into the regular TV products as a vendor independent smart TV solution:

    LG Google TV [minipcpro YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    LG Google TV : http://mobilegeeks.com LG’s Google Smart TV (with remote) allows you to control your TV using voice command and easily search local content, movies or youtube videos.

    Marvell Google TV solution used by HiSense, TCL, Asus, Netgear launched at CES 2013 [Charbax YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2012]

    Marvell’s ARM Powered Google TV solution is ramping up usage among set-top-box and HDTV makers.

    Presentation of the Google TV from TCL (Alcatel) [FrAndroidTube YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    TCL Booth Overview – CES 2013 [HDTVNewsCom YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2013]

    [CES 2013] TCL’s chairman and Marvell’s Vice President founders’ speech [avingusa YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    Las Vegas, USA —- TCL had a small press conference within the booth to announce their press release, TCL’s partnership with Marvel, and Google Inc. Li Dong Sheng, chairman of TCL and Sehat Sutardja and Weili Dai founders of Marvell had shared their impression throughout the short speech.

    CES 2013 Google TV on HiSense.MOV [Robert McMillen YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    CES 2013 watch Google TV being tested on HiSense TV

    Other things in the very much hyped ‘3D without glasses’, ‘Ultra HD (4K) TV’, ‘transparent display’, ‘multiscreen convergence’, and ‘upgradable smart TV’ spaces are rather future selling than actual offerings from the industry this year. Below you can judge it for yourself:


    1./A Dolby: No Glasses 3D First Look – CES 2013 [jon4lakers YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2013]

    3D televisions have been around for a while now, but both passive and active glasses are a pain to deal with. A couple of companies have tried to work on glasses free solutions, but Dolby may have hit on the true winning combination with its new entry in the market. Not yet commercially released, Dolby’s new glasses free solution works somewhat like lenticular baseball cards, and it will allow people in the room to view the 3D effect from any angle. No release date has been announced yet for these televisions to hit the market, but Dolby is in active discussions with television manufacturers and content providers to integrate the technology.

    1./B Vizio: glasses-free 3D TV @ CES 2013 [CNETTV YouTube channel, Jan 7, 2013]

    Donald Bell intoduces us to Vizios proof of concept 55 inch glasses-free 3D TV

    1./C Stream TV: Ultra-D 2160 4K Glasses Free 3D [John Sciacca YouTube channel, Jan 7, 2013]

    Stream TV [Networks] Ultra-D 4K resolution glasses free 3-D TV demonstrated at CES 2013

    1./D The Trigger: Stream TV [IPGMediaLabNY YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2013]


    2./A CES 2013: Sony 4K [UHD] OLED TVs [getconnectedtvshow, Jan 8, 2013]

    Andy Baryer chats with Sony’s Brent de Waal about Sony’s 4K OLED tech and the eye-popping experience it provides.

    2./B Sony 4K [UHD] vs 1080p Resolution Demo with 86″ TVs [LinusTechTips YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    Sony put up a picture of newsprint side-by-side on their 4K and 1080p models of TVs to demonstrate the improved clarity that can be achieveed with 4K.

    2./C HiSense $2000 50″ 4K TV, up to 110″ 4K on display at CES 2013 [Charbax YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2012]

    HiSense is demonstrating that a $2000 4K HDTV is perfectly possible, it’s in fact available now at that price in China. HiSense is China’s number 1 HDTV brand, in front of TCL and Skyworth. They also show more and more affordable 58″ 4K and above, up to 110″ 4K, the worlds largest 4K LED TV.

    2./D Samsung: 85″ 4K [UHD] TV (to be released in Spring) and 110″ 4K [UHD] prototype [Charbax YouTube channel, Jan 11, 2013]

    Samsung is releasing their first 4K TVs, 4K is going to be a big push for Samsung in 2013, starting with the 85″ 4K TV to be released in Spring. No price announced yet. This video was filmed at CES 2013 with the Panasonic GH3 (12-35mm lens): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9euooiOTwXA on a Steadicam Merlin 2 with vest: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K6rO_hBC7RA

    2./E CES 2013: SHARP ICC Purios UHD 4K TV [getconnectedtvshow, Jan 9, 2013]

    GetConnected are at CES 2013, and our own Andy Baryer chats to Sharp Canada’s Chris Matto about the upcoming new 4k Sharp TV sets coming out and their innovative ICC Purios Ultra High Definition

    2./F Toshiba disappoints with little to show us aside from its Ultra HDTV [DigitalTrends YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2013]

    Toshiba’s CES 2013 booth lack both the pageantry and products we’ve come to expect at the largest electronics show in the United States.

    3./A Hisense: Amazing See-Through LED Display for Transparent 3D (CES 2013) [unboxtherapy YouTube channel, Jan 9, 2013]

    Check out this amazing, transparent, 3D LED display. Similar to last year’s transparent display from Samsung, this model from Hisense adds 3D functionality. Hisense also showed off two new UHD displays featuring 4K resolution. Stay tuned for full coverage from CES 2013.

    3./B Samsung: Transparent Display Case at CES 2013 [SlashGear YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2013]

    Samsung’s see-through displays

    4. Samsung: 2012 Smart Evolution Kit 2013 Smart TV, 2013 CES [theFTtechnology YouTube channel, Jan 10, 2013]


    5. Samsung: Multiscreen Convergence 2013 Smart TV, 2013 CES [theFTtechnology YouTube channel, Jan 90, 2013]


    Finally another real thing coming widely to the market this year: Gorilla Glass 3

    Gorilla Glass 3 Demo – CES 2013 [jon4lakers YouTube channel, Jan 8, 2013]

    Gorilla Glass 3 Demo – How Strong is it Really? Gorilla Glass is pretty much an industry standard for mobile devices, and while the previous generations have been great, but Gorilla Glass 3 promises to be three times more scratch-resistant than its predecessor. http://tchno.be/VJ9gXO