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300 VENDORS ADOPT HDMI FOR CONSUMER ELECTRONICS & PC PRODUCTS.


The seven HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) A digital interface for audio and video signals designed as a single-cable solution for home theater and consumer electronics equipment.  Founder companies (Hitachi, Ltd., Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. (Panasonic), Philips Consumer Electronics Philips Consumer Electronics is a part of Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. (usually known as Philips); and is one of the largest electronics companies in the world. In 2005, its sales were € 30.4 billion (US$38.  International B.V., Silicon Image, Inc., Sony Corp., Thomson, Inc. and Toshiba Corp.) has highlighted key capabilities under development for the next version of High-Definition Multimedia Interface The High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) is a licensable audio/video connector interface for transmitting uncompressed, encrypted digital streams. HDMI connects DRM-enforcing digital audio/video sources, such as a set-top box, a Blu-ray Disc player, a PC running  (HDMI) targeted for the first half of 2006, including support for deep color Refers to pixels with a bit depth (color depth) greater than 24 bits. See pixel and HDMI. , higher speed and easier integration into personal computers. By delivering crystal-clear, all-digital audio and video via a single cable, HDMI dramatically simplifies cabling and helps provide consumers with the highest-quality home theater experience.

New capabilities under development for HDMI include:

-- Higher speed: Though HDMI has more than twice the bandwidth needed to support all HDTV formats, HDMI will increase its single-link bandwidth to support the demands of future HD display devices, such as higher resolutions, deep color and high frame rates.

-- Deep color: HDMI will support 30-bit, 36-bit and 48-bit color depths for stunning rendering of over one billion colors in unprecedented detail.

-- Greater PC/CE convergence: HDMI will be enhanced for easier integration into low voltage, AC-coupled PC graphics controllers, cementing HDMI's position as the de facto standard Hardware or software that is widely used, but not endorsed by a standards organization. Contrast with de jure standard.

de facto standard - A widespread consensus on a particular product or protocol which has not been ratified by any official standards body, such as ISO,
 digital multimedia interface enabling true convergence across PC and CE platforms. The HDMI Founders also support compatibility between HDMI and the Unified Display Interface See UDI.  (UDI (1) (Unified Display Interface) A digital interface from the United Display Interface SIG that is designed to replace the analog VGA interface common on CRTs and flat panel monitors. UDI is expected to provide backward compatibility with DVI and HDMI interfaces. ), the HDMI-compatible digital video interface for PC displays announced recently by a group of leading PC technology makers.

-- New mini connector: With small portable devices such as HD camcorders and still cameras demanding seamless HDTV (High Definition TV) A set of digital television (DTV) standards that offer the highest resolution and sharpest picture. Although some HDTV sets are available in standard (rather square) screen sizes, the overwhelming majority of sets are wide screen, which eliminates  connectivity, HDMI will offer a new, smaller form-factor connector option. Since HDMI offers the highest quality digital audio and video on a single connection, such devices will be also benefit from a reduced connector count.

-- Lip Sync: CE devices are employing increasingly complex digital signal processing See DSP.

Digital Signal Processing - (DSP) Computer manipulation of analog signals (commonly sound or image) which have been converted to digital form (sampled).
 of high-resolution video and audio formats to enhance the clarity and detail of the content. As a result, synchronization of video and audio in user devices has become a greater challenge and could potentially require complex end-user adjustments. HDMI will incorporate features to enable this synchronization to be done automatically by the devices with greater accuracy. -- New compressed audio formats: In addition to HDMI's current ability to support high-bandwidth uncompressed digital audio and all currently- available compressed formats (such as Dolby Digital and DTS (1) (Digital Theatre Sound) A digital audio encoding system used in movie and home theaters. Popularized by the movie Jurassic Park, the six-channel (5. ), HDMI will add additional support for new compressed digital audio formats Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD.

Products implementing these new versions of the HDMI specification will continue to be fully backward compatible with earlier HDMI products.

"HDMI is an evolving standard, designed to meet the needs of a dynamic marketplace," said Leslie Chard, president of HDMI Licensing, LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
. "These new capabilities, currently under development, reflect how HDMI continues to adapt to new market developments, specifically the need for increased bandwidth and the inevitable convergence of consumer electronics with PC devices."

This announcement comes as HDMI solidifies its position as the de facto standard digital interface for HD and the consumer electronics market. HDMI Licensing LLC has announced that more than 300 makers of consumer electronics and PC products worldwide have adopted HDMI. More than 17 million devices featuring HDMI were shipped during 2005 and 59 million more are expected to ship in 2006, according to market researcher In-Stat.

Most major HDTV manufacturers have incorporated HDMI inputs into their latest offerings. HDMI has also been incorporated into media PCs, DVD players, DVD recorders, cable set-top boxes, satellite set-top boxes and A/V receivers, with HDMI expected in game consoles and camcorders during 2006.

Internationally, HDMI is undergoing significant growth. In China, which alone accounts for almost a third of the world's television-owning households, 45 mainland Chinese companies have become HDMI Adopters, and the number is growing rapidly. In November 2005, China's first HDMI testing facility was announced in Shenzen, which will greatly simplify and accelerate the process of bringing HDMI to the Chinese market. In August, the Cable and Satellite Broadcast Association of Asia (CASBAA CASBAA Cable and Satellite Broadcasters Association of Asia ) recommended that HDMI (or DVI (1) (Digital Video Interactive) An earlier compression technique that provided up to 72 minutes of full-screen video on a CD-ROM. Acquired by Intel in 1988 from RCA's Sarnoff Research labs, Princeton, NJ, DVI never caught on. ) and HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) An encryption system for enforcing digital rights management (DRM) over DVI and HDMI interfaces. The copy protection system (DRM) resides in the computer, DVD player or set-top box.  "be included on every set-top box capable of outputting uncompressed high definition content." In Europe, the European Information & Communications Technology Industry Association (EICTA EICTA European Information & Communications Technology Industry Association
EICTA European Information Communications and Consumer Electronics Industry Technology Association
) in 2005 mandated that all HDTVs displaying the "HD Ready" logo must include HDMI or DVI inputs.

HDMI has also gained significant traction in the PC world over the past year. Among the PC-related companies that are HDMI Founders and Adopters are industry leaders such as ATI (ATI Technologies Inc., Markham Ontario, http://ati.amd.com) A leading manufacturer of graphics chips and display adapters. Founded in 1985 by K. Y. Ho, Benny Lau and Lee Lau, ATI chips and boards are widely used by OEMs. , Hitachi, Intel, NVIDIA, Sony and Toshiba.

"The consistent adoption of the HDMI specification by consumer electronics and PC manufacturers proves the high potential of the standard," said Scott Vouri, general manager of multimedia products at NVIDIA. "We believe in the interoperability of consumer electronics devices and personal computers as well as in the ability to view high definition content through a stable and secure standard, and this is why we support HDMI in NVIDIA's consumer PC graphics products."

"Disney has supported the deployment of HDMI since the first version of the specification was issued in 2002," said Bob Lambert, senior vice president of worldwide media technology and development at The Walt Disney Company. "The widespread adoption of HDMI in conjunction with HDCP has played an important role in enabling the transition to digital TV. We congratulate the HDMI community on achieving the important milestone of 300 adopters worldwide."

The latest HDMI specification can be downloaded at no cost by visiting http://www.hdmi.org.

About HDMI Licensing, LLC

HDMI Licensing, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary Wholly Owned Subsidiary

A subsidiary whose parent company owns 100% of its common stock.

Notes:
In other words, the parent company owns the company outright and there are no minority owners.
 of Silicon Image, Inc., is the agent responsible for licensing the HDMI Specification, promoting the HDMI standard and providing education on the benefits of HDMI to retailers and consumers. The HDMI specification was developed by Hitachi, Matsushita (Panasonic), Philips, Silicon Image, Sony, Thomson and Toshiba as the digital interface standard for the consumer electronics market. The HDMI specification combines uncompressed high-definition video and multi-channel audio in a single digital interface to provide crystal-clear digital quality over a single cable.

HDMI Licensing, LLC can be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.hdmi.org.

For more information, call 408/616-4192.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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Publication:Multimedia Publisher
Geographic Code:9JAPA
Date:Feb 1, 2006
Words:1001
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