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‘Corona’, Microsoft’s hope in digital media market

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CIOL Bureau
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Scott Hillis

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SEATTLE: Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday took the wraps off "Corona", a

new package of digital media products it hopes will help let the Internet

deliver theater-quality entertainment to consumers and big profits to content

providers.

"Corona" is the code-name for a set of software including a server

that enables Web sites to "stream", or broadcast, audio and video over

the Internet, as well as a new player to receive that content on a PC, general

manager of Microsoft's Windows digital media division Dave Fester, said in an

interview.

Microsoft is battling rival RealNetworks Inc. for supremacy in the digital

media market. Real recently launched a new consumer product, RealOne, that melds

its media player with a subscription service to deliver content.

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Among the biggest improvements Microsoft claims for Corona is the elimination

of "buffering", the process by which a streaming video or audio clip

is readied for playback. Buffering helps prevent delays or skips in playing a

clip, but can take several seconds or longer to load, frustrating many consumers

who expect content to play immediately.

Web sites deploying Microsoft's new server will be able to stream clips in

its Windows Media format immediately, giving instant gratification to consumers

who otherwise might get fed up and leave for another Web site, Fester said.

"You can say goodbye to buffering. In effect that will give you a

stream-surfing experience. This is going to be dramatic for content

providers," Fester said.

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Better video, audio quality



Corona also includes new formats for encoding audio and video content for
delivery over the Web. In particular, the updated video format is capable of

quality double that of DVDs while taking up half the space, Fester said.

The audio update will support 5.1 surround sound, a standard of quality

usually confined to home theater systems and in the past unavailable for Web

media, he said.

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Microsoft had struck deals with several chipmakers representing 90 percent of

the market for the chips inside DVD players to support Windows Media technology,

Fester said. That means someone could use their PC to record music or video on a

CD or DVD, then play it back on a future DVD player.

"In effect, Windows Media is moving into the living room's hottest

product," Fester said.

Fester said Corona was significant enough to propel Web media into a third,

profitable phase -- the first phase being Internet radio and stamp-sized video,

and the second phase being higher quality over fast Internet connections and the

emergence of rights management to prevent piracy.

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"The third generation is how do you get pretty much a home theater

experience? It is all about improved performance and how to improve the overall

experience," he said.

New player



Microsoft is also working on an update to its Windows Media Player software,
Fester said.

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The existing version won praise for its ease of use and diverse capabilities

but also came under fire for only being available on Microsoft's latest

operating system, Windows XP, and for not supporting the ability to record music

in the popular MP3 format without buying add-on software.

Fester declined to say what kind of MP3 support the next version of the

player would include. Microsoft executives would formally unveil Corona at an

Internet media convention in New York on Tuesday. The server will be available

from Tuesday with the other parts of the package expected to hit the market

early next year, Fester said.

(C) Reuters Limited.

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