Digital Media Center 1000 Tampa FL

The Harmon Kardon Consumer Group presents Digital Media Center 1000. The product provides dozens of media functions without the problems of a regular computer.

Local Companies

Opus South
(813) 877-4444
4200 West Cypress Street Suite 444
Clearwater, FL
P.B.S. & J, Inc.
(813) 272-7275
5300 W Cypress St. #300
Clearwater, FL
HDR Engineering, Inc.
(813) 282-2300
5426 Bay Center Dr. Suite 400
Clearwater, FL
Consultech & Associates, Inc.
813-482-6957
4026 1/2 Henderson Blvd.
Tampa, FL
Elting Mechanical Enterprises
813-966-3667
3413 S. Lightner Dr.
Tampa, FL
Hendra & Associates, Inc.
813.728.8676
5028 West Longfellow Avenue
Tampa, FL
Wade-Trim, Inc.
(813) 882-8366
8745 Henderson Road Suite 220
Clearwater, FL
IBI Group
813 988-9102 x 127
10921 North 56th Street
Tampa, AK
Hallmark Development of Florida, Inc.
(727) 539-7002
4500 140th Ave N #101
Clearwater, FL
Boos Development Group, Inc.
(727) 669-2900
2651 McCormick Drive
Clearwater, FL

provided by: Design News

A new media server from Harman Kardon won't lock up when users store, transfer, watch and listen to content from DVDs, CDs, cell phones and video cameras, thanks to the use of a specialized embedded operating system.

Known as the Digital Media Center 1000 (DMC 1000) (http://rbi.ims.ca/5724-536), the new media server is said to be the first of its kind to offer such a broad range of capabilities, which initially raised concerns among design engineers over the unit's ability to do so much without getting hung up in the process. "There are two things we didn't want," says Mike Heiss, senior technology strategist with the Harmon Kardon Consumer Group. "We didn't want a 'blue screen of death' and we didn't want an hourglass. Users will tolerate that in a computer, but they won't tolerate it in an electronic product."

To help deal with that challenge, Harman Kardon linked up with QNX Software Systems, a maker of real-time embedded operating systems (RTOS) and middleware for high-end network routers. Using the 6.3.2 version of the QNX Neutrino RTOS (http://rbi.ims.ca/5724-537), engineers from both companies worked on enabling the complex DMC 1000 box to work more reliably than a PC.

Engineers say the key to the box's performance is a modular architecture, along with an event-driven and time-triggered architecture. The event-driven architecture, they say, is responsible for handling the user interface, while the time-triggered part enables the system to pump out audio and video data synchronously.

"One of the keys is having a real-time operating system that allows you to build an architecture that can prioritize events appropriately," says Sebastien Marineua-Mes, vice president of research and development at QNX. "When you're pumping out video, you still need the ability to reserve part of your CPU to handle the user interface, so that the box is still responsive."

Harman Kardon engineers say the end result is a system that operates more like an audio/video system than a PC. "It's not meant to be a computer," says Heiss of Harman Kardon. "We went out of our way to make sure it wasn't one."



author: By Charles J. Murray, Senior Technical Editor, Electronics

Design News. Copyright © 2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Featured Local Company

Opus South

(813) 877-4444
4200 West Cypress Street Suite 444
Clearwater, FL

Related Local Events
Fall Home Show
Dates: 10/31/2009 - 11/1/2009
Location: Florida State Fairgrounds, Tampa
Tampa, FL
View Details

Fall Home Show-Sarasota
Dates: 10/9/2009 - 10/11/2009
Location: Sarasota Bradenton International Convention Center
Sarasota, FL
View Details