Connected Home Entertainment

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Connected Home Entertainment Bill Rose President WJR Consulting Inc. Myths, Hype and Reality

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Connected Home Entertainment. Myths, Hype and Reality. Bill Rose President WJR Consulting Inc. Connected Entertainment – Two Perspectives. Consumers & The CE Industry. Radio TV Transistor Radio Walkman. VCR Cable Ready TV CD DVD. A Brief History of Successful CE Products. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Connected Home Entertainment

Page 1: Connected Home Entertainment

Connected Home Entertainment

Bill Rose

President

WJR Consulting Inc.

Myths, Hype and Reality

Page 2: Connected Home Entertainment

Connected Entertainment – Two Perspectives

Consumers & The CE Industry

Page 3: Connected Home Entertainment

A Brief History of Successful CE Products

Radio

TV

Transistor Radio

Walkman

VCR

Cable Ready TV

CD

DVD

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What Is A Home Entertainment Network?

It is NOT a PRODUCT

It is NOT an APPLICATION

It IS a FEATURE

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Connected Entertainment Is Not Home Networking

Customer

Retail Buyer

Aisle

Salespeople

Merchandizing

Product Life

Cost of Returns

Consumer Expectations

More Differences Than Similarities

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Consumer Expectations

Wired or Wireless Simple, Reliable connections Instant Gratification: 15 minute rule Full resolution: SD today, HD tomorrow Coverage: Everywhere – No Excuses Premium content Security

In short: Connectivity plus everything their CE products give them today

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CE Industry NeedsIn room connectivityIn room connectivity Multi-room connectivity

Agreed upon Standards

Mass Market Sales Channel

Compelling applications

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3 Main Benefits

Reduce wire and connector proliferation, expense, confusion

Enable features not otherwise available or understandable

Share device resources

In-Room Connectivity

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The Contenders:Ethernet vs. 1394

Prediction

1394 wins the A/V connector if it achieves Mass-Market penetration for entertainment before Ethernet delivers reliable and simple to use connectivity and a solution for Ethernet CP / DRM is accepted

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CE Industry Needs

In room connectivity

Multi-room connectivity Agreed upon Standards Mass Market Sales Channel Compelling applications

Internet Connection

1394

Wireless

1394100

Base-T

Media Server

STB

DVD

Adapter

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Multi-room Connectivity Requires No-New-Wires

Channel, Channel, Channel “No Assembly Required” A/V aisle won’t sell CAT5 or

solutions from other departments Connectivity is a feature Education is expensive

And so is wiring

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No-New-Wires: Which Ones?

Wireless – WiFi set the table but can’t serve the main course

Coax – The Entertainment Connector

PLC – maybe HomePlugTM v2.0

Phone - DOA

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CE Industry Needs

In room connectivityMulti-room connectivity

Agreed upon StandardsMass Market Sales ChannelCompelling applications

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Standards: The Consumer View PHY/MAC – The connector is the Standard Discovery and Addressing – Easy install Media Formats – Ease of use Command & Control – Remote Control QoS – Reliability Copy Protection/DRM – Content availability,

ease of use, … Network Management – Customer support

(Huh?)

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The Consumer Electronics Association

Helping to Plugthe Holes

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CEA Connected Entertainment Initiatives R7.5 WG8, WG1

WG8: CEA 2007 – QoS over IP/Ethernet WG1: CEA 2005 – Network Adapter to connect 1394

(61883 streams) to Ethernet WG3: CEA 931B – Man-Machine Interface WG4: IP browser based interface

R7.6 CEA 2008 – Digital Entertainment Network: IP over

Ethernet (Separating 2008 into Architecture plus interfaces)

Possible New Interfaces: 1394, wireless

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CEA, Wireless and UPnP

R7.7 WG1 Wireless Networking: Mapping Apps to

Wireless HN solutions New Work: Standardized Specs

UPnP v1.0 Referenced in CEA Standards CEA 2008 (DENi – Entertainment over home

IP networks) R7.4 / CEA 851 (IP over 1394 backbone) Draft CEA 2005 – A/V Adapter

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Other Initiatives With CEA Member Support

Content Protection/DRM – PERM, SmartRightTM, DTCP, others

IP over 1394 Isochronous channel

Isochronous Ethernet

Digital Home Working Group

UPnP

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CE Industry Needs

In room connectivity Multi-room connectivity Agreed upon Standards Mass Market Sales Channel

Compelling applications

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Applications Drive Sales

Media Server drives HN drives DTV drives Server

A/V Service Providers DSS – Levels the playing field MSO – Moving to retail Both provide messaging

WEB Services Adds BB to the mix, drives convergence Requires integrated networks for many services

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Web Services and Consumer’s Electronics

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Nearly invisible Web Services

Consumer sees or uses directly

Browser based interfaces, information augmentation

Purchasing goods & content

Gaming

Etc.

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Completely Invisible Web Services

Automatic Purchasing and Billing

Service Bundling – 1 phone / 3 connections

Network & configuration management, firmware updates, security, etc.

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Drivers for Web Services: Inside the home

Entertainment

Convenience

$ Savings

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Drivers for Web Services: Beyond the home

$$, $$, $$

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2 Basic Approaches

1. Existing Services Transferred RevenueTransferred Revenue

Ex: Telephony Ex: Telephony

2. New services New revenue generationNew revenue generation

Ex: GoogleEx: Google

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MYTH

Bandwidth can fix everything

Corollary: “Give me a big enough lever and I will move the world”

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FACT: Both are true in theory, not implementation

Wireless will always be bandwidth challenged

Bandwidth is like processing speed and memory – more is never enough

QoS, Guarantees are a must!!

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MYTH

There will be a single unified home network

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FACT: Ignores buying habits and market forces People buy products one or two at a time for a

single purpose No-new-wires will drive whole-home solutions A/V and PC devices have different connectivity

needs Commoditization of PC networks will keep them

separate for the next few years To become unified

QoS and CP / DRM issues must be solved Costs for entertainment connectivity must reach

parity with PC networks

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The WiFi Highway Versus High Speed Rail

How to move lots of freight, fast, “When it absolutely, positively has to get there on time”

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The Wireless Highway – CSMA/CA

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802.11 Throughput Analysis

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WiFi - Throughput Analysis

Technology Raw Through

put

Ideal TCP payload

throughput

11b 11 Mbps 5.6 Mbps

11a 54 Mbps 27.3 Mbps

11g, no protection 54 Mbps 29.0 Mbps

11g, CTS-to-self protection

54 Mbps 13.4 Mbps

11g, RTS/CTS protection

54 Mbps 8.9 Mbps

Real World application

payload – est.

1-2 Mbps

4-10 Mbps

4-12 Mbps

4-8 Mbps

3-6 Mbps

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The TDMA RAILROAD

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Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)

Support for Isochronous streams, asynchronous IP/data

Improved bandwidth guarantees

Determinant latency, jitter

Enables improved RF performance (distance/throughput)

Advantages

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TDMA Wireless Networks

Hiperlan2

802.15.3

802.15.3a (UWB)

Magis Networks’ AIR5TM

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Example:Magis Networks’ AIR5

Designed for Entertainment networks TDMA MAC – Guaranteed QoS 10 msec guaranteed delay/jitter PER: 10-10 after FEC Security – 3DES, public and private key

exchange Whole-home HDTV throughput

>30 Mbps / 3000 sq ft home

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Magis AIR5TM

Simultaneous TCP/IP, video, audio802.11a phy - Coexists with 802.11

Power and Frequency agileAdjacent Channel UtilizationStrong CE supportAIR5 SIG created to standardize

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Conclusions

1.1. Guaranteed payloadGuaranteed payload delivered to the application layerapplication layer, at the point-of-usepoint-of-use is the only measurement that counts. Everything else is hype!Everything else is hype!

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Conclusions

2.2. Think “Top Down”:Think “Top Down”:Consumer Consumer →→ Channel Channel →→ Product Product →→ Feature Feature →→ Technology Technology

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Bill Rose

President, WJR Consulting Inc.

(860) 313-8098 (Office)

(860) 704-8098 (Mobile)

[email protected]

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For the interconnected lifestyle

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Presentation Title

Speaker Name

Speaker Title

Company Name

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PowerPoint TemplateSubtitle Color

Slide guidelines Sub-bullet, limit to one layer of sub-bullets Sub-bullet Sub-bullet

Font size and color should already be formatted for you in Slide Master

Use shaded figures, when possible, using these key colors

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PowerPoint template for complicated diagrams This slide background has no UPnP

Forum logo artwork in lower left so the entire space is available for your image Sub-bullet, limit to one layer of sub-bullets Sub-bullet Sub-bullet

Font size and color should already be formatted for you in Slide Master

Use shaded figures, when possible, using these key colors

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Table Layout

Row One Row Two

Info here Info here

Info here Info here

Info here Info here

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Announcing

Announcement Title

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Demo

Demo Title

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Video

Video Title

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Customer

Customer Reference Title

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For the interconnected lifestyle