Post by dkennedy on Apr 22, 2008 17:18:03 GMT -5
Digeo Clears a Big Legal Hurdle
April 21, 2008
By Jeff Baumgartner, Cable Digital New
Set-top maker Digeo Inc. has swept away one significant distraction -- a legal entanglement with Gemstar-TV Guide International Inc. -- as the company recovers from several embarrassing setbacks.
On Monday, Digeo said it signed a multiyear patent license agreement with Gemstar-TV Guide, which is in the process of being acquired by Macrovision Corp.
Digeo and Gemstar did not disclose the financial terms of the deal, but the parties did agree to dismiss all claims tied to a 2006 lawsuit in which Gemstar accused Digeo of infringing on some of patents.
The new license covers Digeo's currently deployed IPGs (interactive programming guides) and others that Digeo plans to deploy with TV service operators and for use on consumer electronics and PC-based platforms, the companies said.
Digeo, backed by Paul Allen, laid off about half its staff and altered its product strategy in January following the 2008 Consumer Electronics Show.
Though Digeo promoted two high-end DVR products in January, it quickly changed strategies and now says it is focused on a "next-generation consumer" box, with more details expected later this year.
The company has touted deployments with eight cable MSOs, with Charter Communications Inc. being the largest, but the vendor has lacked a viable cable set-top platform since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) mandate on integrated security went into effect last July.
The company is also working on a CableCARD-based, cost-reduced HD-DVR for direct distribution through cable MSOs, but has not disclosed an expected product release date. However, next month's Cable Show in New Orleans (May 18-20) will give Digeo its first high-profile opportunity to make a formal announcement.
A Digeo spokeswoman confirmed that the company will participate in next month's cable confab, but declined to provide any additional data on Digeo's cable product roadmap.
April 21, 2008
By Jeff Baumgartner, Cable Digital New
Set-top maker Digeo Inc. has swept away one significant distraction -- a legal entanglement with Gemstar-TV Guide International Inc. -- as the company recovers from several embarrassing setbacks.
On Monday, Digeo said it signed a multiyear patent license agreement with Gemstar-TV Guide, which is in the process of being acquired by Macrovision Corp.
Digeo and Gemstar did not disclose the financial terms of the deal, but the parties did agree to dismiss all claims tied to a 2006 lawsuit in which Gemstar accused Digeo of infringing on some of patents.
The new license covers Digeo's currently deployed IPGs (interactive programming guides) and others that Digeo plans to deploy with TV service operators and for use on consumer electronics and PC-based platforms, the companies said.
Digeo, backed by Paul Allen, laid off about half its staff and altered its product strategy in January following the 2008 Consumer Electronics Show.
Though Digeo promoted two high-end DVR products in January, it quickly changed strategies and now says it is focused on a "next-generation consumer" box, with more details expected later this year.
The company has touted deployments with eight cable MSOs, with Charter Communications Inc. being the largest, but the vendor has lacked a viable cable set-top platform since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) mandate on integrated security went into effect last July.
The company is also working on a CableCARD-based, cost-reduced HD-DVR for direct distribution through cable MSOs, but has not disclosed an expected product release date. However, next month's Cable Show in New Orleans (May 18-20) will give Digeo its first high-profile opportunity to make a formal announcement.
A Digeo spokeswoman confirmed that the company will participate in next month's cable confab, but declined to provide any additional data on Digeo's cable product roadmap.