Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,694,658 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Loud and clear: CEO hopes to find international audience for multimedia services.


You might want to start looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 that soft spot on your couch, because the way Ken Lipscomb sees it, there isn't a better time than this fall to unveil the lineup of programs on his virtual broadcasting network. Lipscomb's company, DAVE A file sharing program from Thursby Software Systems, Inc., Arlington, TX (www.thursby.com) that allows a Macintosh to share files with a PC. Designed specifically for and needing installation only on the Mac, DAVE works with Microsoft's native SMB/CIFS file sharing protocols and uses  Networks, will feature more than 100 Web channels of music, movies, sports, and video content that users can stream from their PCs to their home television and stereo systems.

"In a world where the [connection] pipes were small, the actual movement of video and rich media format was very time consuming and not realistic," explains the 45-year-old Alabama native. But with broadband's increased speed and ability to deliver high-quality multimedia content via the Web, Lipscomb seized the opportunity to create his network.

Compared With traditional broadcasting companies Noun 1. broadcasting company - a company that manages tv or radio stations
company - an institution created to conduct business; "he only invests in large well-established companies"; "he started the company in his garage"
, DAVE Networks, an acronym acronym: see abbreviation.


A word typically made up of the first letters of two or more words; for example, BASIC stands for "Beginners All purpose Symbolic Instruction Code.
 for distributed audio/video entertainment, is aiming to be as unique with its content as individual PC users. "Right now you can get television through rabbit ears, cable, or satellite companies, [but] for the first time, we have the ability to build a broadcasting network on top of a broadband infrastructure," says Lipscomb.

Lipscomb started DAVE Networks, an Atlanta-based outfit, in October 2002. "I thought we needed to have a back-end portal that could aggregate content [to] work with appliances and PCs, and, ultimately, deliver media to consumers [from] portal points all over the world," he says. By partnering with broadcasting hubs worldwide, the network is promising to deliver global media content to local markets.

Besides offering in-house multimedia Webcasting production and post-production services to corporate and private individuals, DAVE Networks is designed to allow consumers to download and play digital media content on a pay-per-play/pay-per-view basis. While Lipscomb hasn't finalized See finalization.  the pricing structure, songs will be available for roughly 99 cents and movies will start at $1.99. In addition, following the examples of Comcast and DIRECTV, the basic advertiser sponsored content on DAVE will be free. With a soft-test product launch that started in June, the company is projecting $12 million in revenues over the next 12 months.

To get DAVE Networks up and running, the former Xavier University For other educational institutions using the name Xavier, see .
Xavier University may refer to:

In the United States:
  • Xavier University (Cincinnati), Ohio
  • Xavier University of Louisiana at New Orleans
  • St.
 medical student turned businessman raised nearly $2 million from friends and angel investors An individual who invests his or her own money in a private company, which is typically a startup. An angel investor is not an employee or member of a bank, venture capital firm or other financial institution that normally makes such investments. . "Creating this business, raising the money this way. was a hand-to-mouth effort. I wouldn't normally do it this way, but since the dot-corn bubble burst, sometimes you have to," says Lipscomb, who notes that the capital-raising process was "the most difficult thing I had to do in my life."

A large chunk of the initial funding went toward developing software applications and the Xport, a digital media receiver hardware component based on the Microsoft Windows See Windows.

(operating system) Microsoft Windows - Microsoft's proprietary window system and user interface software released in 1985 to run on top of MS-DOS. Widely criticised for being too slow (hence "Windoze", "Microsloth Windows") on the machines available then.
 Media 9 Series. The design enables the Xport to interface with the PC's Windows environment (1) (upper case "W") Refers to computers running under a Microsoft Windows operating system.

(2) (lower case "w") Also called a "windowing environment," it refers to any software that provides multiple windows on screen such as Windows, Mac, Motif and X Window.
. The Xport, which the network is planning to introduce to the marketplace this month, will be available in two models priced at $99 and $199. The lower priced model will work with your PC, while the higher priced model can work on its own with your TV like a VCR VCR: see videocassette recorder.
VCR
 in full videocassette recorder

Electromechanical device that records, stores on a videotape cassette, and plays back on a TV set recorded images and sound.
. Both models can deliver full motion audio and video. With the Xport "you're not restricted to your PC," says Lipscomb. "It can pull content tram the media center or from the network. When you download content with us, that content can be played on your TV and through the stereo."

The network's broadband infrastructure gives Lipscomb plenty of room to create channels that traditional broadcasters couldn't dream of developing, such as a gospel channel or a channel for Americans living in, say, Korea, "You couldn't deploy that [content] economically in a cable environment," notes Lipscomb. "Peer-to-peer technology allows [us] to pull content from various nodes within tire network, so as the network provider, my cost in bandwidth is zero."

The network's official launch is slated for this month, which is about the time that you should start brushing up on your remote control etiquette etiquette, name for the codes of rules governing social or diplomatic intercourse. These codes vary from the more or less flexible laws of social usage (differing according to local customs or taboos) to the rigid conventions of court and military circles, and they .
COPYRIGHT 2004 Earl G. Graves Publishing Co., Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Black Digerati; DAVE Networks
Author:Calypso, Anthony
Publication:Black Enterprise
Geographic Code:1U5GA
Date:Sep 1, 2004
Words:652
Previous Article:Franchise financing.(Savvy Solutions)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Come fly with me: a few sites offer discounted airfare, but comparison shopping is the best strategy.(Quick Trips)(BetterBidding.com )
Topics:



Related Articles
Loud turns up the volume: what do you get when you cross Japanese taiko drums with a thrashing electric guitar? The answer is Loud. (music).(music...
Down, not out: is the heart of technology still beating? (Postscript).(Brief Article)
Web features. (blackenterprise.com: this month on the virtual desktop for African Americans).
Capacitor: making the scene; a modern company reaches outside the box for its audience.
Slow and steady: tech firm surviving in a tough economy. (Digerati Update).(Information Management Systems Inc.)(Brief Article)(Company Profile)
Tech CEO sentenced: Gregory Evans pleads guilty to conspiracy, wire fraud charges. (Digerati Update).
New addition to top black corporate executives.(News points: deals, trends and people)(Oracle Corp. promoted Charles Phillips as the...
Black Enterprise: much more than a magazine: at the ripe old age of 35, BE keeps expanding its multimedia franchise, and there's no end in sight.(ON...
Making math interesting.(CYBERWISE)
Broadcasters call reinforcements for primetime TV.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles