Updated: 4/14/2003; 4:44:21 PM.
Ross' Multimedia Journal
News and Events In The Convergence Space Between The Entertainment, Information and Communications Industries
        

>

Monday, February 17, 2003
> Ultra Wide Ban (UWB)

Time Domain (http://www.timedomain.com) and the other UWB folks won this round at the FCC and would seem now to have the regulatory cover to begin commercial depolyment of UWB technology.

Time Domain is also pushing this "Wimedia Alliance" ( http://www.wimedia.org/about.asp ) whose purpose is to promote UWB as the best solution:

"To promote wireless multimedia connectivity and interoperability between devices in a personal area network."

> ENUM

The FCC published a letter from Chairman Powell today (http://www.fcc.gov/commissioners/powell/gross_enum_letter-021303.pdf) suggesting that they are positive about US participation in the ENUM initiative of the IETF. ENUM is an effort to establish a universal numbering schema that converges today's separate telecom and internet numbering schemes.

> TeleGeography Telecom Traffic Study
TeleGeography's recent study apparently indicates that VoIP traffic accounted for >10% of global voice traffic (in minutes) during CY2002.
> opencola

Here's how opencola describes their P2P approach to enterprise knowledge management...

Inefficient search and the resultant rework costs billions.
According to the Meta Group, workers spend approximately 25-35% of their time searching for the information they need, rather than working on strategic projects and business opportunities. IDC states that Fortune 500 companies will lose $31.5 billion by 2003 due to rework and the inability to find information.

Search breaks down because it can't find distributed information
The Delphi Consulting Group has found that only 12% of a typical company's knowledge is explicitly published. The remaining 88% is distributed knowledge, which is comprised of employees' personal knowledge. This knowledge is captured by their work-in-progress Office® documents, e-mail, web sites they visit, and the searches they perform. Knowledge workers are in a constant process to keep their own personal knowledge and knowledge relationships current. However there are limited tools to perform this personal knowledge gathering well, and even worse, some companies are trying to solve the problem of what somebody knows by automatically profiling them - a solution that Opencola does not support.

Opencola® is a distributed solution for distributed information
Instead of auto-profiling, Opencola provides the knowledge worker with a powerful desktop tool that allows them to automate the collection and management of information. Once organized and automated, people can easily share folders with their team and the enterprise. The ability to create local folders of information on topics that the user already tracks and automatically find other people who have relevant information, is a powerful motivator to use the tool. When the time comes to share information, it can easily be shared from desktop to desktop via the secure peer-to-peer network easing the friction of uploading information to a central repository. 

> Pixim Digial Imaging System

According to Pixim there is an annual market for ~15 million of these security cameras and they are addressing the problem that most of them have, which is picture quality. Interesting approach:

"The D2000 Video Imaging System consists of two chips - one focusing on image capture, one on image processing and camera interfaces - and the optimized software and settings to enable manufacturers to build high-quality video cameras. By placing an analog-to-digital converter inside of each pixel in an array, each pixel can act as its own camera, optimizing for the proper amount of light. This solution provides high quality pictures under any lighting conditions that no other competing or legacy architecture can deliver."

> Blogger Goes Google

Dan Gilmore of the San Jose Mercury News apparently broke the story [in his weblog] that Google bought this company called Pyra which is behind one of the key weblog software makers Blogger.

Google Buys Pyra: Blogging Goes Big-Time. NOTE: This is a slightly edited version of a special column running in tomorrow's San Jose Mercury News. We're posting... [Dan Gillmor's eJournal]

> Electronic Media story about SBC bid for Direct TV
Electronic Media is reporting that News Corp is bidding $7.5 billion for DirecTV (25%  less than SBC is thought to be bidding).

© Copyright 2003 Douglas L Ross.
 
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