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2000 Consumer
Electronics Show
READ
ALL ABOUT IT!

PAGE 1
New Technologies Help Consumers
Tune in to TV, Internet
The wide variety of devices
and services on display at this years CES are proof that
the melding of video, the Internet, and computers is upon us,
panelists said yesterday. Any number of options are now available,
or in development, that will change how, where, and when consumers
watch video programming, speakers said. There is a huge
array of services consumers want to tap into, Microsoft
Director of Platform Marketing Alan Yates said. The year
2000 is a breakthrough year in terms of set-top boxes going interactive.
For instance, consumers will use high-speed cable connections
to watch high-definition video on their personal computers, and
at the same time be able to purchase products over the Internet,
panelists said. This will allow the home PC to be the principal
way of getting information. It simply will be the fastest way,
said Simon Wegerif, director of product marketing and business
development for Philips. Others suggested consumers will use
super sets that will give them access to numerous
functions that are even more advanced than products such as TiVo,
Replay, and EchoStar Communications DISHPlayer. The increasing
availability of high-speed Internet access will further boost
the number of people accessing video and audio content on the
Internet, Real Networks Chairman Rob Glaser suggested. Though
access to such high-speed Internet connections has been slow
in coming, things are accelerating, he contended. There now are
27.4 million U.S. households with access to wireline high-speed
Internet connections, he said. In addition, satellite-delivered
Internet services hold great promise, Glaser said. All
of the pieces are coming together so that consumers will
have limitless choice on what they watch and when they watch
it, he said.
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