Linux powers Panasonic broadband TV set-top box
Published: 16 Apr 2003 08:05 BST
Panasonic has selected MontaVista Software to provide the operating system for its new Broadnow Internet-enabled television set-top box.
The Broadnow device, available in Japan, is the first of several products Panasonic plans that receive video and audio over high-speed Internet connections. MontaVista -- a Sunnyvale, California-based start-up that sells Linux and programming tools for consumer-electronics devices -- said it will demonstrate the device next week at the Embedded Systems Conference in San Francisco.
The Broadnow box can receive ordinary TV signals as well as Internet data. And the system can be programmed to record specific video or music to a hard disk and watch or listen to it later, like the technology offered by TiVo's personal video recorders.
Linux, which works in many ways identically to Unix but which is created through the shared open-source development model, got its start in servers. However, MontaVista and some competitors are working to adapt it to "embedded" computing systems such as consumer-electronics devices, network routers or in-store kiosks. One of its better-known successes is the TiVo device.
Linux competes in the embedded market with several other major operating systems, including Microsoft's Windows CE. The embedded market is significant for software providers because it is very large, but is not yet dominated by one operating system, as are PCs.
Panasonic is one of several consumer-electronics companies that invested in MontaVista, along with Sony, Toshiba America and Yamaha. The start-up debuted a version of Linux for consumer-electronics devices in January.
Panasonic in January announced an Internet videophone, also powered by MontaVista's Linux.
Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom.





