DLP Technology Finding Increasing Favor Among Manufacturers of Home Entertainment Systems.Business/Technology Editors CEDIA CEDIA Custom Electronics Design and Installation Association CEDIA Cloned Enzyme Donor Immunoassay CEDIA Century Diamond 2000 DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 7, 2000 More than twenty products expected to feature at CEDIA Expo Illustrative images for this story may be found at http://www.ti.com/dlp/resources/library/ Texas Instruments See TI. (company) Texas Instruments - (TI) A US electronics company. A TI engineer, Jack Kilby invented the integrated circuit in 1958. Three TI employees left the company in 1982 to start Compaq. (TI) (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange :TXN TXN Texas Instruments (stock symbol) TXN Transaction (databases) TXN Tunxi, China (Airport Code) TXN Tarxien (postal locality, Malta) ) today said that visitors to this year's CEDIA Expo (September 6th - 10th, Indiana Convention Center The Indiana Convention Center is a convention center located in Indianapolis, Indiana. It contains over 400,000 square feet (0 m) of open exhibit space and almost , Indianapolis) will have the opportunity to see the enormous strides made by DLP (Digital Light Processing) A data projection technology from TI that produces clear, readable images on screens in lit rooms. DLP is used in all types of projection devices, from data projectors that weigh only a few pounds to large rear-projection TVs to electronic (TM) technology in home entertainment applications over the past twelve months. No fewer than twelve of the industry's most noted players are expected to feature systems developed using Digital Light Processing(TM) technology to deliver superior video images from systems that are smaller, lighter and more visually appealing than is possible with alternative technologies. "The last twelve months has been hugely exciting for DLP technology in the home entertainment market," said Dale Zimmerman, Business Manager for Home Entertainment Systems for TI's Digital Imaging division, "as more and more household name companies have seen the benefits the technology brings and have elected to use it to develop innovative, market-leading products which are capturing the attention of home theater An audio/video entertainment center that has a large-screen TV and hi-fi system with three speakers in the front (left, right and center) and left and right speakers in the rear. Starting in the early 1990s, video inputs were added to stereo receivers and preamplifiers. enthusiasts everywhere." Rear Projection In the first half of this year, Texas Instruments announced agreements with Hitachi, Mitsubishi and Panasonic under the terms of which those companies would develop a new generation of home entertainment products featuring DLP(TM) technology. These products would be characterized by having large screens, outstanding video performance, spectacular graphics performance - and would be housed in more elegant cabinets than have previously been possible with rear projection systems using competing technologies. The first products to result from these agreements are now beginning to appear in stores nationwide. "Our vision of the future of home entertainment," continued Zimmerman, "sees the convergence of broadcast programming with web-based entertainment to deliver to the consumer a seamless, interactive, personalizable and highly immersive leisure activity experience. The implication of this is that the home entertainment screen of the future will be larger than today's average TV, and will deliver stellar performance whether in HD video mode or high resolution graphics mode. DLP technology is uniquely placed to deliver this." "Many consumers have shied shied 1 v. Past tense and past participle of shy1. shied Verb the past of shy1 or shy2 away from large screen rear projection systems, though, because the products themselves were unattractive pieces of furniture in many cases. However, the unique characteristics of DLP technology mean that manufacturers can develop cabinets that are smaller, lighter and much easier on the eye: we expect that this alone will bring new customers into the market." CEDIA Expo is expected to represent the first opportunity to see `side by side' the new, DLP(TM) technology-based home entertainment systems from Hitachi, Mitsubishi and Panasonic. Front Projection DLP(TM) technology has already achieved significant success in the market for business projectors, and is at the heart of market-leading systems which feature extraordinarily light weight (the most recent products weigh less than 3lbs) with high brightness and exceptional image quality. Now, manufacturers in the home entertainment market are seizing on these characteristics to develop award-winning home entertainment systems. "Just as DLP technology is enabling the development of more elegant, more attractive rear projection home entertainment systems, " said Zimmerman, "so it is also enabling the manufacturers of front projection systems to design units that are compact, lightweight and visually attractive. The high degree of portability that is so highly prized by business presenters is no less valued by home entertainment connoisseurs who like the idea of a `take me anywhere' solution. For fixed installations, it's important to consumers that the home entertainment system they choose should be as unobtrusive as possible. DLP technology uniquely enables these requirements to be met." CEDIA Expo is expected to see around twenty home entertainment systems, enabled by DLP(TM) technology, from manufacturers such as Davis, DreamVision, DWIN DWIN Doctor Who Information Network (Canada) , Marantz, PLUS, SIM2 Multimedia (Seleco), Runco and Zenith. "If the last twelve months have been exciting," concluded Zimmerman, "we expect the next twelve months to be even more so. We're investing an increasing amount in developing DLP technology for home entertainment applications, both rear projection and front projection. We are also involved in some exciting trials which will push the boundaries of home entertainment way back from where they are today. Our goal is that DLP should be the pre-eminent display technology for home entertainment systems of the future." Today, TI supplies DLP(TM) subsystems to more than thirty of the world's top projector manufacturers, who then design, manufacture and market projectors based on DLP(TM) technology. There are now over fifty products based on DLP(TM) technology in the market. Since early 1996, over 350,000 DLP(TM) subsystems have been shipped. Over the past four years, DLP(TM) technology-based projectors have consistently won some of the audio-visual industry's most prestigious awards, including, in June 1998, an Emmy Award Emmy award Annual presentation for outstanding achievement in U.S. television. Its name is taken from the nickname “immy” for the image orthicon, a television camera tube. from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. At the heart of TI's Digital Light Processing(TM) technology is the Digital Micromirror Device A Digital Micromirror Device, or DMD is an optical semiconductor that is the core of DLP projection technology, and was invented by Dr. Larry Hornbeck and Dr. William E. "Ed" Nelson of Texas Instruments (TI) in 1987. (TM) optical semiconductor chip. The DMD (1) (Digital Micromirror Device) See DLP. (2) (Digital Multi-layer Disk) See high-def DVD formats. (TM) switch has an array of up to 1,310,000 hinged, microscopic mirrors which operate as optical switches to create a high resolution, full color image A (digital) color image is a digital image that includes color information for each pixel. For visually acceptable results, it is necessary (and almost sufficient) to provide three samples (color channels . Texas Instruments Incorporated is the world leader in 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). and analog technologies, the semiconductor engines of the Internet age. The company's businesses also include materials and controls, and educational and productivity solutions. TI is headquartered in Dallas, Texas “Dallas” redirects here. For other uses, see Dallas (disambiguation). The City of Dallas (pronounced [ˈdæl.əs] or [ˈdæl. and has manufacturing or sales operations in more than 25 countries. Texas Instruments is traded on the New York Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) World's largest marketplace for securities. The exchange began as an informal meeting of 24 men in 1792 on what is now Wall Street in New York City. under the symbol TXN. More information on TI's DLP(TM) technology can be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.ti.com/dlp. Digital Light Processing, DLP, Digital Micromirror Device and DMD are all trademarks of Texas Instruments. All other products and names may or may not be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies. |
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