Skip to main content

Microsoft Big Presence At CEDIA

Microsoft is at the CEDIA Expo. That might not seem like major news, but the company is there to push its Windows Media Center platform, which is veryhealthily supported at the show.   Several exhibitors have made announcements of new products that show the increasing stature of Windows Media Center.   Lifeware has unveiled a line of Windows Media Center hardware, including some high-end systems featuring Quad-CableCARD-tuners and a Windows Home ServerAdd-in.   Crestron Electronics plans to deliver Windows Media Center-based software next year, and Russound has aSmart Media Console line arriving this fall, allowing the company home audio solutions to integrate with advanced home automation and integration.   NiveusMedia Inc. is using a mix of its Digital Cable Receivers with Windows Vista Ultimate-based Niveus Media Servers to allow users to receive four high definition premium programs simultaneous intheir homes.   And what of Microsoft itself? It’s announced the first annual Windows Media Center Ultimate Install Contest, which allows installers to showcase their best residentialprojects. They’ve also shown new Extenders for Windows Media Center, which lets installers add the service to five additional areas in a home. As if that wasn’t quite enough for one Expo,Microsoft announced that it had abolished the cost of the WebGuide plug-in for Media Center.   “Our software and hardware alliances in the CEDIA market have created a huge amount ofinterest in Windows Media Center as the platform of choice for the digital home," said Scott Evans, group manager in the Entertainment and Devices eHome Division at Microsoft. "As a resultof our growing collaborations, Microsoft decided the time was right to establish a direct presence at the custom installation channel’s most eagerly anticipated annual event, CEDIA Expo. We are fullycommitted to making Windows Media Center-based devices the most compelling entertainment solutions, and we are here to demonstrate our support for the custom channel.”

Digital Trends Staff
Digital Trends has a simple mission: to help readers easily understand how tech affects the way they live. We are your…
Data storage and dirty energy: What Big Tech’s carbon neutral pledges leave out
Wind turbines

How green is Silicon Valley? Big Tech companies, from Apple to Amazon to Alphabet, are pledging to go carbon neutral in the next few decades. While these promises incorporate building solar farms and eliminating single-use plastic, they also require ways of compensating for corporate travel, mounds of e-waste, and contracts with oil and gas companies that don't figure into the minus column when it comes time to tally a company's environmental impact.

Many aspects of these pledges are voluntary, and how companies are going from Point A to carbon free in the next 10 to 20 years isn't always mapped out with easy-to-follow steps. To get a clearer look at their plans and exactly what they entail, we spoke with representatives from Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google parent Alphabet about their environmental initiatives, and then had environmental experts weigh in.

Read more
The Big Tech antitrust hearing is today. Here’s why it matters
Styled Graphic featuring Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai

The CEOs of four of the biggest tech companies in the United States -- Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Google -- will testify before Congress on Wednesday, which is investigating whether those companies are violating antitrust laws. It’s a dramatic escalation of the “techlash” that has been brewing the last few years, one that could lead to a massive shakeup of Big Tech. But what exactly is going on, and why should you watch?
What is antitrust?
Antitrust laws are how the United States regulates “the concentration of economic power,” as Cornell Law puts it. In the 19th century, numerous interstate industries were dominated by powerful monopolies (or “trusts” as they were called). These companies controlled so much of the markets for things like steel and oil that it was effectively impossible for competitors to challenge them, and they could dictate the market prices for products. That’s bad for small businesses and consumers.

The foundations of antitrust law in the U.S. are the Sherman Act of 1890 and the Clayton Act of 1914, which outlawed practices like price-fixing or mergers that remove competition from the markets.

Read more
U.S. government and big tech want to use location data to fight coronavirus
Essential phone review maps

The U.S. government is reportedly working with big tech to come up with ways that people’s cell phone data location can be used to combat the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak. 

Facebook, Google, and other major tech companies are in talks with the government to examine compiling location data that would help follow the spread of the coronavirus in the U.S., The Washington Post reports. Public health officials would track this type of data to improve their understanding of how the coronavirus spreads. 

Read more