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22nd October 2004 - Addicted to reality TV programming?
It won't be long before you can watch your favorite
real-life TV broadcasts on the go, thanks to a
chip Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) is developing
for cell phones. Texas Instruments today announced
development of the wireless industry's first digital
TV on a single chip for cell phones, which will
capture broadcast signals and allow cell phone
users to watch live broadcasts ranging from their
favorite reality TV shows to major sporting events
and breaking news. Code-named "Hollywood,"
the chip will receive live digital TV broadcasts
using new television infrastructure that is being
developed for cell phones, doing for cell phones
what HDTV did for home TVs.
Picture: Mobile Phone with Live
TV
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"Hollywood" builds on TI´s current
capabilities in the converging wireless and consumer
electronics markets, including high-quality streamed
video content on 2.5G and 3G handsets via its OMAPTM
multimedia processors. This complements TI´s current
suite of consumer device technology, including its DLPTM
technology and its proven signal processing and analog
technology for such products as digital still cameras,
audio players, and digital radio. (See: www.ti.com/hollywoodpr.)
"TI´s new ´Hollywood´ digital
TV chip will combine the two biggest consumer electronics
inventions of our time - the television and the cell
phone," said Gilles Delfassy, TI Senior Vice President
and General Manager for TI´s Wireless Terminals
Business Unit. "One by one, the industry´s
most exciting consumer electronics are being integrated
into wireless handsets, allowing consumers to get their
news and entertainment whenever and wherever they want.
With this new chip on the cell phone, users will enjoy
digital, high-quality TV in real-time."
Inside "Hollywood"
TI's "Hollywood" digital TV chip will support
newly established and open digital TV broadcast standards
for the wireless industry. While no single standard
will be used worldwide, TI believes that the most prevalent
standards will be those that are open and non-proprietary,
including Digital Video Broadcasting - Handheld (DVB-H),
which was developed for Europe and is expected to extend
to North America, and the Japanese specification, Integrated
Services Digital Broadcasting - Terrestrial (ISDB-T).
"Hollywood" will support DVB-H and ISDB-T.
Dedicated wireless networks supporting these standards
will feature high-quality live broadcast TV (24-30 frames
per second) paired with full audio to offer a more robust
mobile viewing experience versus the one-to-15-frames-per-second
streaming capability offered via cellular. These networks
also could support services once reserved for the living
room and bring them to the cell phone, including pay-per-view
programming, interactive television, and menu/guide
systems.
"The digital TV phone marketplace is in its nascent
and needs technology leaders with combined wireless
and consumer electronics experience like Texas Instruments
to drive open standards-based digital TV handset technology,"
said Michael Schueppert, Senior Vice President of Business
Development for Crown Castle, a pioneer in DVB-H infrastructure
and deployment. "Just as open standards fueled
innovation and growth in the cellular phone market,
the same will hold true for the digital TV phone market.
Crown Castle recognizes that TI is committed to flexible
and open solutions, which will help our customers get
to market in the shortest possible time and with maximum
differentiation."
Leveraging TI's revolutionary digital RF processor
(DRP) technology, TI is collapsing the traditional three-chip
solution, which includes a tuner, OFDM demodulator and
channel decoder processor, into the industry's first
highly-integrated single chip for digital TV phones.
"Hollywood" is designed to interface with
TI's widely adopted OMAP processor technology, which
handles the multimedia processing of TV content, to
provide a complete TV receiver system for wireless handsets.
"Hollywood" will use TI's advanced 90-nanometer
process technology to allow for maximum power efficiency,
smaller board area and lower overall system costs.
TI expects to provide samples of the "Hollywood"
chip to customers in 2006. TI's "Hollywood"
offering will also include all needed software for television
signal processing. The associated "Hollywood"
plus OMAP processor-based development platform will
allow handset manufacturers to create customized user
interfaces, enhancing the consumer experience. This
is expected to enable manufacturers to launch products
in conjunction with the first mobile digital TV infrastructure
mass deployments in 2007. Field trials are currently
underway in several regions, including the U.S., Europe
and Japan.
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