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Technologies


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 Last update: 2003/07/14

 

A vast array of Digital Media Technologies, necessary to provide the new functionalities enabling the Dream, have been developed.

  
Technology
Function
Sensor to transform various types of signals into digits representing signal samples
Presentation to transform digits representing signal samples into various types of signals in a form that can be perceived by human senses
Processing to represent signals in digital form so that they can be efficiently processed
VLSI Very Large Scale Integration, to implement signal processing functions in small-size devices
Transmission to move bits across physical channels
IPMP Intellectual Property Management and Protection, to enable the management of the rights to the bits and the protection against unintended use
Storage to store bits on physical devices
Protocols to intelligently move bits across a network between devices
Computing to make devices that are capable of getting, processing and outputting bits
Software to instruct computers to process bits in the way a user intended

For decades, thousands of academicians, scientists and researchers from hundreds of companies in wide swathes of industry have worked collaboratively to make this happen. Billions of dollars have been invested by Public Authorities, organisations and companies to fund this R&D work.

Obviously many of the mentioned technologies have other uses than Digital Media, but to make the Digital Media dream real, all these technologies were needed for integration.

November 1992, when the first MPEG standard was approved, can be taken as the point when Digital Media Technologies achieved a maturity such that deployment became possible.

With Digital Media Technologies becoming available it was quite natural for people to use them to create instances of Digital Media solutions and therefore realise the implicit promises for a new and better future.

 

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