MrSingh said:and Cell isn't going to change anything for Sony.
MrSingh said:Korean and Chinese companies will own the future market of CE devices (and every segment that Cell wants to be in)
Vince said:A term: "Product differentiation" ... lost on Aaron. In a time of increasing commoditization, one needs to find a way to differentiate himself; technology is ultimately the way it's going to be done. You just helped make the case for my position, thank you.
expletive said:Using a Cell processor, regardless of the cost does not guarentee product differentiation or even 'best of breed' wahtsoever.
Vince said:I was merely talking in terms of enabling such differentiation; Cell is an enabler, ASICs and DSPs are not. It's just that simple.
scooby dooby said:So to break it down there is no lack of processing power in CE devices right now, just lack of good ideas?
That's basically what you're saying right?
aaronspink said:Pretty much. All the enhancements people have come up with fit comfortably within the existing processing envelope. The primary driver in the CE space always has been cost, with the secondary driver being cost, with the tertiary driver being cost, eventually features come into it, but features are at best a temporary advantage often lasting less than 6 months.
Remember that we are talking about devices that in mass production have a BOM of under $50.
flf said:Can you give some hypothetical examples where CELL is such an enabler, and a custom ASIC or DSP somehow can not fill the same role?
flf said:Can you give some hypothetical examples where CELL is such an enabler, and a custom ASIC or DSP somehow can not fill the same role?
[url=http://www.beyond3d.com/forum/showpost.php?p=643660&postcount=622]Earlier Post[/url] said:And on your comments of "dedicated chips," it's related to my comment to Aaron on implications of NFLT in computing; DSPs are only useful for their specific and static program landscape; they are useless outside of it. NFLT dictates that you look to the niche and back-propogate for the strategy which is optimal if you want to be sucessful. Cell is dynamic and yeilds a balance between the preformance of a DSP and the general computation of a CPU, targeting the digital media computational landscape. They looked at the near future needs and designed an architecture around it: HD stream manipulation; multiple HD stream decoding; HD recording, compression, archiving, searching; DVD archiving and HD upconversion; Video-over-IP to client devices; augumented reality, visual-based GUIs; Multiple Tasking, IM, SMS, video email; Seemless device connectivity; etc.
You will not find another system, especially a static DSP based on which can come close to this type of functionality, across such a broad spectrum, so effortlessly.
[url=http://www.beyond3d.com/forum/showpost.php?p=585151&postcount=1]B3D Thread on CEATEC JP2005[/url] said:Toshiba brought 2 demos for this Cell devkit, well-known 48 MPEG2 streams playback and the new "Digital Kagami Type F" (digital mirror type F) demo. This new image-based rendering demo converts user's face into polygons and applies makeup to it by texture-mapping, template-matching and motion prediction by matrix calculation, and makes it into 720x480@30fps in realtime, on a half-mirror.
Vince said:. Nobody stated that Cell was going to replace x86, Sony was going to amazingly surpass Intel, that Cell would be the last IC ever designed or used, or even kill Alpha... again.
Vince said:I haven't seen a consumer DSP do the following. More importantly, I don't know of an ASIC which can do all of the above mentioned features:
Trying on different makeup styles using the "3D makeup simulation"
expletive said:Cool, as soon as the mass market embraces 3d makeup simulators, Sony is all set.
expletive said:Cool, as soon as the mass market embraces 3d makeup simulators, Sony is all set.
mckmas8808 said:OMG! Somebody finally said it. Some people feel like they have to fight to their death to prove that CELL is only good for the PS3 and for some reason Mercury Systems. Why is it that Mercury Systems is the only company that would want the CELL processor? I'm thinking that it might be possible for the CELL processor to make CE products better. For people to put that thought down and say it never going happen is living in the land of OZ.
Vince said:I can't imagine its that far fetched to have such a system which recognizes your facial features (as the Toshiba video did 500 points) and then loads personal things: Say your saved DVR list, TV channels arranged by your viewing habits or shows/movies which would likely interest you, perhaps IM, Email, SMS. Hell, they could pull a Google and sell ad space tailored to you, ala. Minority Report.
expletive said:Heck if we get to the point where we the consumers and the associated technology is ready for that, and the cell is a uniquely qualified component in providing it, i'm sold.
expletive said:No, i think what the debate is surrounding is the propagation of hype surrounding what the processor will mean to CE (and civilization as we know it ). Vince, and now you, want to turn this around so the arguments that dont see the cell as some sort of CE epiphany as 'bashers'. Theres just no compelling reasons right now, or at least none that have been presented, that convince me that CEs are now on a new, better, course since the use of Cell is imminent. Thats really all ive ever debated
expletive said:I think the best argument is honestly the marketing one by avaya. I'm not convinced its all AS big a deal as he feels but theres certainly a chance. Trinitron was a household name and carried some wieght for awhile. I think trinitrons were visibly superior for awhile too so Cell will have to provide SOME tangible benefit along with the marketing imo.
Actually Vince, this is all because of the way that you convey things.Vince said:Again, will people stop taking what's stated and mentally inflating it into this all-or-nothing, best/mythical/legendary/only mentality?
Dave Baumann said:Actually Vince, this is all because of the way that you convey things.