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Technology Wins Early Support From Leading Consumer Electronics Companies, PC OEMs and Content Service Providers |
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LAS VEGAS, Jan. 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Today
at the 2004 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Microsoft
Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) announced Windows(R) Media Connect, technology
designed to enable hardware manufacturers to easily develop devices
such as Digital Media Receivers (DMRs), which have rich functionality
for playing digital media files stored on personal computers over home
networks. A broad range of industry leaders have announced their
support of this upcoming technology, including leading PC OEMs and
consumer electronics device manufacturers including Arcadyan
Technology Corp., Creative Labs, Dell Inc., Mediabolic Inc., PRISMIQ
Inc., Rockford Corp., Roku, Simple Devices Inc. and Toshiba. Leading
content service providers such as LAUNCH Music on Yahoo!, MusicNow
(formerly FullAudio), and Napster also endorsed Windows Media Connect
for its ability to extend the reach of their content and services to a
new range of consumer devices. Available in 2004, Windows Media
Connect technology will overcome two critical hurdles faced by
networked media devices today: compatibility between proprietary
devices and ease of access to content stored on the PC. "With the growing popularity of legitimate
music and video services and the exponential growth of digital media
collections on Windows-based PCs overall, Windows Media Connect solves
a looming home networking problem for consumers," said Amir
Majidimehr, corporate vice president of the Windows Digital Media
Division at Microsoft. "The industry support we're announcing
today is evidence of the benefits that Windows Media Connect will
provide to manufacturers and consumers alike." Eighty-two percent of home PC users in the
United States already use their PCs for digital media activities,*
leading to the emergence of a new class of related networked devices,
such as DMRs, in the home. For these devices to best meet the needs of
consumers, they must be able to automatically discover supported
content on the PC and provide seamless playback of that content.
Windows Media Connect helps these devices find and access digital
media on Windows XP-based PCs -- something the devices are often not
well equipped to do out of the box. Leading DMR manufacturers Arcadyan, Creative,
Mediabolic, PRISMIQ, Rockford, Roku and Simple Devices, and consumer
electronics (CE) manufacturer Toshiba are announcing their support for
Windows Media Connect in future versions of their products. "The ability to offer consumers access to
their photos, music or videos anywhere in the home has been talked
about before, but doing it in a way that is seamless to the consumer
is really the focus here," said Takashi Kamitake, general manager
of Core Technology Center at Toshiba Digital Media Network Company.
"Toshiba's strategy is that CE devices and PCs are harmonized by
Home Network, and given an inventive new usability. Windows Media
Connect helps harmonize CE devices and PCs without adding any
complexity to a consumer's familiarity with their PC or their home
network." PC OEM Dell Inc. also announced support for
Windows Media Connect and is encouraging consumer electronics
manufacturers to make standards-based networked media products that
are compatible with Microsoft's new technology. "We are committed to offering our customers
simple yet effective ways to integrate digital content that resides on
their PCs with other devices in the home," said Tim Mattox, vice
president of the client product marketing group at Dell. "With
standards-based technology like Windows Media Connect, we can provide
our customers an intuitive way to share digital content throughout
their homes, bringing them closer to our vision of the digital
home." In addition, leading content service providers
LAUNCH Music on Yahoo!, MusicNow (formerly FullAudio) and Napster see
Windows Media Connect as a key technology to enable their customers to
enjoy music anywhere, because it enables streaming and playback of
protected content from Windows Media(R) Audio (WMA)-based music
services. "We are supportive of Microsoft's
initiative to enable legitimate music services to work with home
networks and allow consumers to enjoy their music in any room of their
house," said Laura Goldberg, senior vice president of operations
at Napster. Windows Media Connect supports interoperability
standards such as Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) and HTTP, and is
planned to conform to the guidelines under development by the Digital
Home Working Group. This will make it easy and cost-effective for
consumer electronics companies to build support for Windows Media
Connect into their products while following industry standards for
home networking products. Windows Media Connect supports popular media
formats including WMA, MP3 and PCM for audio; Windows Media Video (WMV),
MPEG-2, MPEG-1 and AVI for video; and JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP and TIFF for
images. In addition to Windows Media Connect, consumers
have other choices for enjoying digital media in the home. For example
at CES 2004, Microsoft also announced the Windows Media Center
Extender Technology and Xbox(R) Media Center Extender Kit, which will
enable consumers to enjoy the rich Windows XP Media Center Edition
experience and Windows Media Audio and Video content throughout the
home. About Microsoft Founded in 1975, Microsoft is the worldwide
leader in software, services and Internet technologies for personal
and business computing. The company offers a wide range of products
and services designed to empower people through great software -- any
time, any place and on any device. * Source: Microsoft internal research NOTE: Microsoft, Windows, Windows Media and Xbox
are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. in
the United States and/or other countries. The names of actual companies and products
mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners. AP Archive: http://photoarchive.ap.org/ PRN Photo Desk, photodesk@prnewswire.com
CONTACT: Wayne Hickey, +1-425-452-5481, or whickey@webershandwick.com, Web site: http://www.microsoft.com/
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