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System Integration for the Connected Home

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CEDIA Region 1 Holds Home Technology Show

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Under the new moniker of Home Technology Event, CEDIA Region 1 once more gathered together impassioned custom installers across UK and their CEDIA membership region.

More than 150 brands were represented, more than 120 hours of education, a 3D showroom and Show Floor Theatres were some of the highlights stressed in this London event at an opening press conference by Rufus Greenway from Sound Environment London and a CEDIA volunteer.

The powerful component of this CEDIA event is the dedication of the industry volunteers. These volunteers are residential systems installers who step up to run CEDIA’s various committees. They contribute their time and dedication—and their enthusiasm sets the pace for their annual event.

It’s not the world’s largest event, nor the AV industry’s largest event: but in its niche, the Home Technology Event is a well thought-out, well-organized event with happy exhibitors and satisfied attendees.

The Show Floor Seminar Theatre, host to some of the industry experts talking about the future of residential custom installation, caught our attention.

There Michael Heiss and Steve Moore presented a fast-paced Post Game Show retrospective analysis of the trends and technologies. Obviously there are not many new product launches that weren’t at February’s ISE (part owned by CEDIA) or at InfoComm (in Las Vegas just the week before this London event).

But Heiss and Moore suggested the products at the Home Technology Show confirmed many of the trends. Trends like HDMI 1.4, more Blu-ray, VoIP intercom and others.

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They crowned this year’s Home Technology Show as the king of in-wall speakers, “more than any other show we’ve seen.”

And they especially noted Ebode, a Klipsch-invented product that’s displayed and distributed in Europe by BMB.

It’s an LED light and a high-quality loudspeaker that installs like a light bulb.

They are designed to fit into most 5? and 6? (R30 or R40) recessed lighting fixtures, or with an accessory, the LightHarp, you can use them in common lamps.

The new MAC mini wasn’t at the show but Moore wondered if residential folks will soon be “greenboxing” these for their installs.

And the number one missing product at Home Technology Show? Heisse noted the absence of web content applications in boxes like Boxee Box, Roku, Hulu, DiVX and others. Those boxes would normally feature in a US-based CEDIA event.

What Home Technology Event may have missed in hardware, it more than made up for in spirit. This year’s event had a spark that doesn’t come in a box and is hard to extinguish. And that alone should earn them the attention of more exhibitors next year.

Go Home Technology Event

iPhone4 Brings Video Chat to the Masses, But Will They Use It?

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We waited decades. Now will Apple's new iPhone4 be the catalyst that sparks video chat for the masses?

Apple will sell millions of the latest iPhone and it features a technology called FaceTime. FaceTime addresses many of video chat's shortcomings. It's easy to use.

Apple's new iPhone4

You and the person you are calling both need a FaceTime-compatible device. (OK, right now, that means only the iPhone 4. Later Skype, Google and other companies could build FaceTime technology into their apps... but will they?)

You start a video call by simply pressing a FaceTime button. Once the other person accepts, the video call starts.

You don't need to download any special software. You don't need to guess whether your friends are using the same video chat service. And you don't have to worry about having an online alias.

FaceTime is far more flexible than PC-based video-chat services or POTS landline video phones. You can use it anywhere in the home…as long as you have wi-fi. It will work only over wi-fi.

Go What iPhone is Really About

How Google Video Upsets the Apple Codec Cart

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Google acquires VoIP codec developer Global IP Solutions (GIPS) for 421 million Norwegian kronor (US$68.2 million).

But that's just the NEWS...this below is the REAL STORY...

GIPS develops codecs for encoding real-time video and voice signals into a digital format for transport over IP networks. Its portfolio of products includes software that can be integrated into voice and video apps for mobile phones, PCs and tablets. Its VideoEngine lets developers integrate video conferencing into apps running on Android. Motorola has signed a deal to use the company's VoiceEngine software on Android phones.

When Google launched Google TV this week, it took the wraps off its plans for the VP8 video codec. Google's big open video plan is called the WebM project. It will make the VP8 video codec, which it acquired when it bought On2 in Feb. for $133 million, open source. It will also use the open source Vorbis codec for audio.

Google announced the new open source project, partnering with Mozilla, Opera, Google Chrome, Adobe, and others to proliferate the standard across the web.

There's a big name missing from the list: Apple. (OK, Microsoft, too, but it has thrown some support VP8's way.)

Apple is missing because it put its full support behind another video codec, H.264. H.264 is not an open standard. H.264 is free to use for the next five years, but after that MPEG LA plans on charging a royalty for using it.

H.264 is a proprietary standard, owned by a consortium of tech companies called MPEG LA. Apple and Microsoft have both contributed patents to MPEG LA, so they are part of the consortium.

Apple doesn't like VP8 for the following reasons because a new standard is only going to help Google. Google can monetize from this new format in a number of ways – from advertising to cloud services. It will also help Android, Google TV, and Google's tablet efforts, they say.

But Apple gains nothing from it.

So, get ready for more from this Clash of the Titans. it's the start of a messy codec-war.

Go Why War Over Video Codecs

CEDIA (Region1) Goes to New Heights

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Matt Nimmons, CEDIA

My first thought was: we don’t usually cover this type of article. My next thought was: “Oh, my God…that’s Matt in that photo.”

CEDIA Region 1 Operations Director Matt Nimmons is joining forces with CEDIA members to raise £10,000 for charity by climbing three of the UK's highest mountains in just 24 hours.

The Three Peaks Challenge will see the CI industry team, comprising Matt and CEDIA members Bob Hobson (Prestige Audio), Guy Singleton (Imagine This), Mike Beatty and Andy Jones (Pulse Marketing) scale over 11,000 ft., walk more than 20 miles and drive over 500 miles of driving.

The three peaks? Scotland’s Ben Nevis (1344m), Lake District’s Scafell Pike (978m) and North Wales’ Snowdon (1085m). The team hopes to raise £10,000 in sponsorship to support three selected charities (Edukid www.edukid.org.uk, One Voice for Freedom www.onevoiceforfreedom.org, and the Teenage Cancer Trust www.teenagecancertrust.org).

OK, Matt. Count me in as a sponsor…after seeing you go to great lengths at CEDIA, it’s worth it to see you now go to great heights.

Go find out how to sponsor Matt and the other CEDIA team members

Has Cisco "Flipped"?

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Networking mogul Cisco loves video but has it flipped in buying Pure Digital? Pure Digital out-smarted Asian producers to get to low-cost video first. Pure Digital's small, cellphone-like cameras sell for $130 to $230 with a simple one-button interface, a fold-out USB port and a simple software to move videos to the Web. An HD version of the camera is only $229.

That’s why Pure Digital has sold 1.5 million Flips, compared to the camcorder market's 20 million units a year in sales. And why Cisco will pay $590 million in stock for Pure Digital.

Cisco will try to integrate the Flip with home-networking products (Linksys routers and Scientific Atlanta set-top boxes), and hopefully use the Flip's cheap HD video technology to take home its pro video conferencing system, Telepresence.

By 2012, Cisco expects video will account for 50% of all consumer bandwidth, about 2X the total number of bits per second that consumers use today.

Go Cisco Buys Flip