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Welcome to the Connected Home Series


The digital home is evolving into a network hub, a place where content is received, consumed, stored, moved to other devices and, increasingly, redirected onto other networks. The boundaries of the trusted Pay TV domain are expanding beyond the PVR to mobiles and devices that re-broadcast content across the Internet, while premium content is appearing on the Internet and being routed via the PC to mobiles and even the TV.

Consumers have the chance to control their living room experience from remote locations and source content stored there. This media revolution knows no boundaries but the maturity of these concepts, the competitive dynamics behind them, and the business models that support them all vary by market - which is why we have developed the Connected Home Series, a group of events focused on the new role of the digital home in Europe, North America and Asia.

 
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Global Wireless Home Device Sales To Reach 314 Million Units By 2010

July 27, 2006 - The escalating use of broadband wireless home networks will lead to the implementation of a whole host of new wireless home devices over the next 5 years, according to "Wireless Home Devices Global Market Forecast," the latest research from the Strategy Analytics Connected Home Devices service.

The report predicts that consumers worldwide will purchase up to 950 million wireless home devices, such as games consoles, wireless MP3 players and connected TVs, over the next five years.

"Leading edge broadband users are keen to make the most of their service by connecting multiple devices to their home network," notes Peter King, Connected Home Devices Service Director. "Wireless is used on the PC first, but we fully expect many other digital devices to follow the same path to wireless connectivity."

"Strategy Analytics' vision of the digital home is one where a variety of digital devices use wireless home networking technologies to seamlessly interact with each other and with the available broadband and digital services," says David Mercer, VP, Digital Consumer Practice. "The arrival of the first wave of wireless home devices is a signal that this vision is on the way to becoming realized."

This new report assesses the global market opportunity for four key wireless home devices segments: home PCs, TV devices, portable media devices and mobile phones. It also examines the forthcoming transition from current WiFi technologies to next-generation MIMO and 802.11n and provides detailed forecasts for these technologies. The report predicts that annual demand for MIMO and 802.11n devices will reach 134 million units by 2010.

To read the full report visit: www.strategyanalytics.net

 
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