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Significant Coaxial Cable-based Home Networks

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The Multimedia over Coax Alliance (MoCA) announces the results of a study into coaxial infrastructure in homes in the UK, France, Netherlands and Poland: there is a significant addressable market for coaxial cable-based home networking in these countries.
Multimedia over Coax Alliance (MoCA)Results from the UK and France were very similar, with 56% and 55%, respectively, of respondents stating they had two or more coaxial outlets in their home, while more than a quarter of respondents in both countries indicated they have three or more.

In Poland, the results were even stronger, with 71% of respondents stating that they have two or more coaxial outlets and 36 per cent having three or more. The Netherlands recorded 45 per cent of households as having two or more outlets and 15 per cent having three or more. The four countries were chosen because of their competitive pay-TV environments, increasing penetration of HDTVs and DVRs, number of TVs per household and the high daily TV viewing hours.

"This survey helps us gain an understanding of the potential for MoCA," said Charles Cerino, President of MoCA. "The high percentage of homes having two or more coaxial outlets in these countries means that there is a significant addressable market opportunity for service providers wanting to offer advanced high bandwidth services with high reliability and without adding any new wires."

"The picture we get in the countries surveyed is that there are more outlets per home than had been presumed by the industry and that many consumers are willing to add extra coax drops as needed to enable a better TV experience throughout their home." says Stephen Froehlich, Senior Analyst, Consumer Electronics at IMS Research, who oversaw the research.

The online survey was carried out by IMS Research in February 2010 targeting respondents in the UK, France, The Netherlands and Poland. The sample size was statistically significant at 95% confidence level. These results cannot be extrapolated across other parts of Europe, and that additional research is needed.

MoCA is willing to work with operators in Europe that may be interested in replicating this study in their footprint.

Sonic Buys DivX for $320 Million

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Sonic will buy DivX for about $320 million in cash and stock . Both businesses want to evolve past the future death of the DVD, today's mainstay for both companies.

Sonic purchased CinemaNow, a pioneer in the movie-download business, and now Best Buy and Blockbuster use Sonic's platform for video service.

Sonic says DivX will bring a more extensive solution for internet video delivery and proven tools for content prep in "the cloud," video playback, and Hollywood-approved DRM.

Go Sonic Buys DivX, Not Everybody Happy

Cloud Gaming to Change Retail Market

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On the eve of E3 in America, some game publishers think retail fails to support boxed PC games.

By refusing to stock certain games (and moving PC titles to the back of the store), retail inadvertently pushes publishers into digital distribution...

Go More on Cloud Gaming

Samsung Wants Your Innovation!

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Samsung is asking: "Are you a high-tech entrepreneur, university researcher, or technology company having trouble getting the right people at a major high-tech company to listen to you about your innovative technology? If so, then the Samsung Electronics TechQuest is for you!"

Results from a meeting with Samsung Electronics could lead to:

  • technology licensing
  • funding
  • customer/supplier relationships
  • strategic partnerships
  • some other type of business relationship

Gartner: PC Now A Lifestyle Necessity

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In his address to RetailVision, Gartner consultant Ranjit Atwal told delegates we've finally crossed a threshold where Gartner can declare—based on evidence, not opinion—that consumers consider the PC is a necessity.

Besides the fact that PC sales grew during a recession, we are now averaging 1.5 pcs per person in advanced markets.

To further support the body of evidence, a Gartner study indicates—for the first time—a majority of customers would prefer their PC to a TV if stranded on a desert island.

Oops, better make that a tablet PC as the PC's newest form factor rapidly takes hold on the consumer wish list.

Go Ranjit Atwal at Gartner

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