Sanyo Demos Wireless HD Projector at 2007 CES
Santa Clara, Calif. – January 3, 2006 – In the booth, attendees and exhibitors will witness a SANYO HD projector displaying HD content it receives wirelessly via WHDI link from an HD-DVD player. This AMIMON and SANYO demonstration will highlight WHDI’s ability to deliver uncompressed HD video to HD displays from CE devices. AMIMON’s WHDI technology achieves the same quality and speed consumers currently enjoy with standard HD video inputs, including HDMI™, DVI and component video.
"Integrating AMIMON’s WHDI technology in a SANYO HD projector is an appealing idea to consumers, prosumers and installers who are ready to take the next step in the home viewing and entertainment experience by freeing themselves from a wired mess," said Kazuto Sugimura, senior manager, SANYO Electronic Co., Ltd. AV company, Projector Technology BU, Product Development Department. "Additionally, WHDI's ability to deliver flawless uncompressed HD streams was a key ingredient and differentiator in our selection of AMIMON’s technology."
A wireless SANYO projector is an ideal solution in a variety of settings: corporate boardrooms, arenas, home theaters, trade shows, conference centers, amphitheaters, showgrounds, etc. The flexibility and ease-of-use of a wireless projector opens the door to many possible applications.
"The installation of HD projectors has traditionally been exasperating and expensive because of the hassles of connecting wires between CE devices. WHDI eliminates these costs and simplifies the process, delivering the same quality picture as would be received over a wired connection," said Noam Geri, AMIMON’s vice president of marketing and business development. "This demo with SANYO establishes that uncompressed wireless HD video is here now and WHDI is the technology of choice."
Developer kits of AMIMON’s WHDI technology are currently available. The developer kits enable consumer electronics manufacturers to test and validate the uncompressed high-quality HD performance of AMIMON’s WHDI technology. Manufacturers can then design CE devices (DVD players, set-top boxes, computers, gaming consoles, etc.) that are integrated with WHDI, freeing the home of the tangled web of wires.
About WHDI
AMIMON’s WHDI™ technology enables
wireless transmission in the 5GHz unlicensed band of uncompressed HD video
streams with equivalent video data rates of up to 3 Gbps (including 1080p) using
40 MHz of bandwidth in compliance with FCC regulations. Video data rates of up
to 1.5 Gbps (including 1080i and 720p) can be delivered using 20 MHz of
bandwidth, conforming to worldwide 5GHz spectrum regulations. WHDI has been
demonstrated at ranges of up to 100 feet through walls, and has a latency of
less than one millisecond. All other wireless solutions are limited to
delivering compressed video such as MPEG, which is typically not available at
the output of most consumer electronics video devices.
About AMIMON
AMIMON is a fabless semiconductor
company pioneering wireless uncompressed high-definition video for universal
connectivity among CE video devices. AMIMON’s uncompressed Wireless
High-definition Interface (WHDI™) allows flat-panel televisions and multimedia
projectors to wirelessly interface to all HDTV video sources at a quality
equivalent to that achieved with wired interfaces such as component video, DVI
and HDMI™.
The company is headquartered in Herzlia, Israel, with offices in Santa Clara, Calif., USA, and Tokyo, Japan. More information is available at www.amimon.com.
About SANYO
SANYO Electric Co., Ltd. is a $23
billion manufacturer and distributor of consumer electronics and commercial
equipment, including multimedia and telecommunication products. SANYO Fisher
Company (a division of SANYO North America Corporation, a subsidiary of SANYO
Electric Co., Ltd.), based in Chatsworth, California markets PCS phones, audio
systems, portable and mobile electronics, televisions, dictation devices,
digital camera/camcorder combinations, home appliances, LCD projectors, security
video equipment and air conditioning systems. For more information, visit
www.sanyo.com.