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# Sunday, January 22, 2006

Audioholics did an interview with Sage Schreiner, HD DVD Program Manager which helps to clear up some misconceptions about the coming format.  Personally, I got one of the sample (production-ready) hybrid HD-DVD/DVD discs that was being handed out at the Microsoft booth at CES and can't wait to try it out.  It's literally a single-sided disc with both the HD-DVD and DVD formatted movies on it and plays in both types of drives.

posted on Sunday, January 22, 2006 2:31:10 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

CD Freaks, the self-ascribed, "World's Largest CD/DVD Community" recently did a poll which format would be the follow-up to DVD.  The results of over 500 respondents polled can be found here.

While this doesn't mean anything from a scientific perspective, it is interesting to see that HD-DVD and Blu-Ray are effectively neck and neck with this audience, with a good-sized # of holdouts.

In other news, reportedly Blu-Ray drives for PCs will be ready in March. The drives can read CDs, DVDs but will not be able to burn until the second generation hits the market this summer.

posted on Sunday, January 22, 2006 2:25:27 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

Mano Clement has a great roundup here thanks to Robert Scoble. Items of interest to Digital Media enthusiasts:

- Many times the perf on Networking stack (and USB stack too BTW) ;)

- All new Audio stack with per-app audio and more.

- FAST search through tens of thousands to millions of tracks in WMP11 (I can't go back)

- Other features I just can't talk about yet...

I talked to Robert last week and we're going to line up a bunch of videos for Channel 9 on digital media efforts in Windows Vista in the coming month.  Stay tuned for more.  And congrats to Robert and Shel on their book- sorry I missed the party- had another party last night!

 

 

posted on Sunday, January 22, 2006 10:34:15 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Sunday, January 15, 2006

(Update: All my Beta invites are spoken for. If I get more, we'll have another runoff.  Thanks!)

I'm a huge believer in "dogfooding" our own products.  After my friend Harry (who runs the Windows Vista demo lab) moved his own home PC to the December CTP (Customer Technology Preview), I decided to take this integrated build thing for a spin.

You see, for "the field" at Microsoft (that's what we call the subsidiary offices), they also need to be able to show Vista to customers.  Of course, they have all sorts of different hardware, so creating a master demo image can be a pain.  With Vista, the drivers are "abstracted" from the core OS - the result is that you can build a single image and deploy it on multiple PCs of different types and in most cases, no additional drivers are required. 

In my case, I run an Intel D865PERL mobo and P4HT processor w/ a mix of SATA and IDE drives and the like.  Vista recognized everything, including the ATI Theater 550 and Hauppauge TV tuner boards.  It set up no sweat, off of the demo disc Harry gave me.  Sure, there is the occasional bug and performance optimizations haven't started yet, but it's looking pretty good.

I have a raft of feedback for my team on areas we can provide fit and finish.  Overall though, I'm finding it really hard to go back to Windows XP and WMP10 on my freshly installed dual-boot system.  WMP11 is sooo much better.  Sidebar is really coming along as well (I know I'm teasing- good things come to those who wait!)

Want to do a little dogfooding yourself?  I have 9 invites to Windows Live Messenger (formerly MSN Messenger) top 9 answers for why you'd make a good beta tester (pictures may be submitted  via email) will get the invites. 

Oh and in case you haven't noticed, I've switched my photoblog to Flickr - I'm sean_alexander there. Gosh I love that service, more on that another time.  Now we need a totally tricked out Flickr screensaver (I was unimpressed by Slickr, sorry).  We also need a general tag/cropping mechanism for display on 16:9/16:10 displays (most widescreen PC monitors are 16:10 <g>).

posted on Sunday, January 15, 2006 8:17:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [17] Trackback
# Saturday, January 14, 2006

The winners of the Next-Gen Windows PC Design Competition have been announced.  This was a risky idea I had back when I worked on Vista planning. While I'm not longer associated with its development, I'm excited to see the team do a great job carrying through on this competition and the winning design, "Bookshelf" was personally my favorite as well.  I understand it was so successful it may become an annual event.

There's a ton of good talent and good ideas out there.  I just wish the economics of the PC industry were such that more manufacturers had premium brands that looked premium as well as the innards (hello, Dell XPS?)

posted on Saturday, January 14, 2006 4:41:32 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Wednesday, January 11, 2006

I have a cold, so I'm a bit cranky tonight.  Can someone please add this one to snopes.com alongside the idea that Bill Gates will give you $5000 or a trip to Disneyland if you send some random email to 5 of your friends and family?

There have been recent reports in the blogosphere that Verizon's new upgraded V-Cast service won't allow users to play MP3s, and this is Microsoft's doing.  This is categorically false.  Yes, Microsoft was a technology provider to Verizon to enable their new services, but in now way put restrictions on Verizon using other technologies.

<rant> I mean, come on, Microsoft added high-bitrate MP3 encoding to WMP10 (ok, it was a bit late) but at the end of the day, I don't know of anyone wringing their hands thinking about how Microsoft can kill MP3.  WMA and MP3 happily co-exist in most portable music devices (ahem, except for iPod, but you'd have to ask Mr. Jobs about that one).

Another case in the textbook on why it's best not to assume the worst of intentions before you start pointing fingers.

 

 

posted on Wednesday, January 11, 2006 6:25:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [5] Trackback
# Sunday, January 08, 2006

CNet has posted their Best of CES award winners and Creative has done it again with the Zen Vision:M. I've been playing with a Zen Vision:M for a few weeks now and I love it.  It has twice the video playback of the video iPod (4hrs vs. iPod's 2hrs) and frankly, I'll exhange a bit of thickness for being able to watch a full movie on a charge any day of the week.  The UI is familiar and friendly.  My only major complaint so far is the adapter needed for USB/charging and it has too many controls (4 discrete buttons + 2 rocker positions + touchpad.

So, this got me thinking about how Windows Media might have fared this year at CES. Here's a rundown of my report card:

  • Best in Show: Creative Zen Vision:M - does WMV, WMA, and is PlaysforSure
  • People's Voice: Pioneer Inno (aka Samsung Helix) - it does 50 hours of XM Radio recording, WMA and cool bookmarking feature for Napster so it's going to be PlaysforSure. Not bad- not bad at all.
  • Cameras and Camcorders: Sanyo Xacti HD1 - a slick little HD (720p) camcorder/digital still camera that records to 1GB SD cards. Though no direct support for WMV, it records into MPEG-4 which Microsoft is a member of the patent pool.
  • Home Audio: Denon AVR-2807 - supports playback of multiple formats including HDCD owned by Microsoft, but what's really stellar is the built-in WM Connect digital audio receiver in it's older sibling product, also called out in the article.
  • Car tech: Pioneer AVIC-Z1 - This double-din unit is a multimedia powerhouse w/ 30 GB HDD, GPS, bluetooth built-in all atop Windows Automotive so it should be able to support WMA as well. iPod connector support coming too.
  • Home Video: Pioneer BDP-HD1 Blu-ray player - noted to be around $1800 vs. $499 HD DVD players, this is still a win because Blu-Ray requires the SMPTE-standard submitted Microsoft VC-1 codec.

So how did Microsoft do? Both of the grand prizes support PlaysforSure services and WMA and 6 out of 8 winning products (in eligible categories) for awards include Microsoft digital media technologies.  Not a bad roundup at the end of the show and there's still a ton of work to be done.

I also just learned that all 3 nominees in the Best of CES: MP3 and Digital Video category support PlaysforSure and WMA (or WMV), including Windows Media Player 11 :).

posted on Sunday, January 08, 2006 2:22:57 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

I had the rare opportunity to lounge in the grass picnic-style with Thomas Hawk, Ian Dixon and his wife and blather on about digital media in general.  Thomas has a good recap of our conversation over on his site not to mention some stunning pictures.  Thomas has inspired me to re-engage on Flickr and I've posted my own pics from the show here.

posted on Sunday, January 08, 2006 1:15:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Saturday, January 07, 2006

Lots of big announcements that are ushering in the year of HD.  I would link but have to run to my flight.  A quick recap:

More to come...

 

posted on Saturday, January 07, 2006 8:52:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, January 06, 2006

The KillersWhew.  Crazed schedule at CES, I really haven't had time to post as I'd like.  The Windows Vista/MTV-Urge party last night was completely crazed.  I've literally never seen lines that long (about 200 feet) to get in, and when in, the floors were completely packed.  Microsoft parties have had great attendance before, but the buzz I kept hearing was about the Urge announcement (and the party). I get irritated with large crowds so I ended up hanging out in the "VIP area" most of the night trying to keep away from the crowds.

The keynote went well the day before- I had lunch with BillG's speechwriter the week before and made a few jokes about the importance having an electrical engineer monitoring the power after last year's power outage. It's good to be able to laugh about it now.  It's even better when the keynote went so well.  One thing that did bother me though- little applause, little laughter. This is a fundamental difference between MS and Apple - they surround themselves with their fans, throw a bash for them, and THAT is where they announce their products (like next week).  The buzz is infectious. Press and public alike get wrapped up.  I don't buy statements that CES or other shows are the equivalent of a "WinWorld".  The problem is too many audiences to make this work effectively.

One of the pieces that has me so excited this year is the new Windows Media Player 11.  This is part of the reason I re-joined the group.  Can you say performance?  I have over 10,000 tracks in my library.  I was so tired of UI freezes and slow searches that I started using Windows Desktop Search as my way of finding music. WMP11 takes a completely rethought and highly optimized database that is hands-down the fastest media player library I've ever seen- visually and logically. Album art is amazing. There are tons of perf improvements folks are just starting to see. I'm also hearing about additional perf optimizations in Vista's USB stack that will help as well. MCE users will benefit from all of this as well.  More on this over on the new Windows Vista site at : http://www.microsoft.com/windowsvista/community/mediaplayer.aspx

I've accepted recently that I'm now more a part of the VH1 demographic than MTV. At first I wasn't wild about Urge but then I realized that MTVN (Networks) recognizes this fact, and that's part of the reason they created the Urge brand.  I'll be able to tap into my favorite "classic rock" like Alice in Chains, Aerosmith, and  Now, I'm addicted. Urge integrates cleanly into the UI, I can download and sync a playlist in one step.  And my favorite is "Feeds"- these are truly smart playlists. This concept takes the best of smart playlists, smart sync, and concepts like RSS and mashes them together.  What you get is truly smart playlists that update (and sync) to your device automatically.  More on that later.

There's so much more to WMP11 and Vista which hasn't even been announced yet.  Stay tuned.

posted on Friday, January 06, 2006 8:45:53 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [6] Trackback
# Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Some of you may have seen my earlier thoughts on the Sonos Digital Music Player system. Today, Sonos addresses two of my big complaints with their ZP80 unit - Price and Audio Connectors.

The ZP80 ditches the built-in amplifier, allowing you to easily connect the device to your existing amplifier, home theater or the like using a optical or coaxial SP/DIF connector.  The casing for the unit has also been updated.

Unfortunately still no support for Windows Media PlaysforSure Music Services or iTMS, but it will play non-DRMd WMA and a host of other formats.  Both are specifically called out as "not able to be supported". You can still connect an external source such as a PfS or iPod device and stream it around the house.

Still, this is a great step in the right direction of affordability and connectivity.  Availability is slated for this Spring.
(Courtesy iPodNN.com)

posted on Wednesday, January 04, 2006 7:32:44 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback

3kapsel.jpgYou have to hand it to Intel.  Their runaway success with the branding of their Centrino mobile technology platform (basically a reference design/chipset for WiFi/Network/Video/Sound/Processor) has given birth to the Intel Viiv brand (pronounced "VIIVe" like Vibe with a "v").  Viiv PCs will offer Windows XP Media Center and bring new technologies like Intel's Quick Resume technology, 7.1 surround sound and guaranteed HD video playback in a dual-core processor design that will offer a quieter solution than many on the market today. One of my favorite features is the ability to put the PC into a low-power state, where it appears to be off, but can continue to record TV, with Media Center at the helm.

Those in the know have discovered the coolest Media Center designs come from europe. Kapsel's just-annonced Viiv-based Media Center is one such PC.  I affectionately call it the "Mentos Media Center" because the design straight-on looks like the mint confection, chipped away to unveil a black licorice center.  You can also position it horizontally, vertically, or even mount on a wall.

The picture is a bit deceptive- visit Kapsel's site for a more front-on picture. It is a bit on the thick side but it has promise. I would like to see at least a small TFT display on the front or side, but it's not a deal-breaker.

The Kapsel is slated to go into production first quarter of 2006, price has not yet been disclosed.

posted on Wednesday, January 04, 2006 6:22:41 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Tuesday, January 03, 2006

According to last night's NYTimes/CNet report:

Starz Entertainment Group is introducing a $9.95-a-month subscription service [Vongo] that will allow people to download movies from the Internet and watch them on their computers, portable video players and television sets.

The article goes on to note:

Since 2004, Starz has offered a movie download subscription service, called Starz Ticket, using technology from RealNetworks. But the RealNetworks software does not allow movies to be downloaded to handheld devices. With Vongo, Starz will shift to technology from Microsoft that will allow movies to be downloaded and watched on portable video players using Microsoft's software.

Feedback has been mixed on Digg.com.  Personally, if I'm a paying subscriber to Starz on my TV, I think a $2.99-3.99/mo add-on price to view TV programs on my devices would be more appealing.  Then there's the offering of movies- everyone knows the premium channels each strike their own high $$ deals to secure premium content.

Personally, I think this is a big step in the right direction, but ultimately it's going to take an NCO (Comcast?) or similar to roll these up into an, "OnDemand 2 Go" subscription service to broaden appeal.

 

posted on Tuesday, January 03, 2006 6:30:45 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback