Commentary: King of digital home has a familiar look
-- 5/16/2006
![]() John Croteau, General Manager, Convergent Platforms and Systems Group, Analog Devices Inc. |
The consumer.
Today, consumers have more options for digital media storage and delivery than ever before, and that freedom of choice—along with low interest rates and high discretionary spending—is fueling a manic burst of innovation. PC makers are envisioning new multipurpose machines at the center of the networked home. Unfazed, home theater leaders—Sony, Toshiba and Yamaha, to name a few—that know a thing or two themselves about the future of electronics are delivering dynamic video, audio and data from single consoles. And then there are the telcos, which believe—and are beginning to back it up—that the set-top box is the gateway to IP-based content.
Although the argument over who (both the brand and the kind of company) will win this “war” will continue to sell papers and fuel watercooler conversations, it is ultimately irrelevant, because each plays—and will keep playing—a vital role in the digital home. Call it “checks and balances” consumer-style: We don’t want a king; we want an elected body that gets us to the promised land of “digital” in the right way, and at the right time and cost that suit our individual needs. So, although younger consumers have warmed to the PC’s being the center of the entertainment universe, there’s still a large part of the population that relies on—and will continue to rely on—the comforts of the television and audio receiver.
The real fear for consumers should be that a winner actually is crowned, quelling demand for interoperability and innovation. Until then, however, expect device manufacturers to embrace complementary technologies that support internetworking and interoperable content delivery. Disparate content formats and digital rights management (DRM) formats reinforce the importance of building systems and solutions for the digital home that enable an open multiuse model.
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