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- Tuesday, February 7, 1995
-
- APPLE ANNOUNCES QUICKTIME CONFERENCING
-
- Apple today announced a cross platform conferencing, collaboration and
- multimedia communications technology that allows personal computer users to
- share real-time information, images and sound anywhere in the world. Apple is
- currently making the technology, called QuickTime Conferencing, available to
- corporate allies who plan to create or have announced they are creating end
- user applications based on the technology. QuickTime Conferencing is a
- standards-based architecture that allows users to:
-
- -- video conference and collaborate--to share and annotate text,
- images, screen capture, sound, video and virtual scenes real-time
- among fellow conference participants in a variety of locations
- worldwide. QuickTime Conferencing allows users to record
- conversations and transform those conversations into QuickTime
- movies. All of this can be done on a variety of networks such as
- an Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN), the worldwide
- internet, local area and wide area networks and Asynchronous
- Transfer Mode (ATM) networks. QuickTime Conferencing can be used
- by a number of simultaneous users, the total number being only by
- available network bandwidth.
- -- conduct cross platform video conferencing connectivity
- between Macintosh computers, PCs, UNIX systems and room-based
- conferencing systems through the use of the H.320 worldwide
- teleconferencing standard.
- -- broadcast and view multimedia content--digital audio, music
- and video on a local or wide area network.
-
- Through alliances QuickTime Conferencing technology is expected to yield
- product bundles such as:
-
- -- Apple Media Conference Kit--Consisting of the QuickTime Conferencing system
- extension, the Apple Media Conference application and a high quality, color
- video camera.
- -- Apple Media Conference Pro Kit--Consisting of the QuickTime Conferencing
- system extension, the Apple Media Conference application, a color video camera
- and an H.320 codec/ISDN adapter board. Being developed by Sagem/SAT, a leading
- international communications product company, the board is designed to allow
- interoperability between platforms (Power Macintosh to Macintosh, PC, UNIX and
- room systems) and full-screen image sharing.
- --Complete Media Conference System--Consisting of an Apple Media
- Conference Kit, a Power Macintosh 7100 AV, a 17 inch color
- monitor, external speakers and a keyboard.
-
- Because QuickTime Conferencing is software-based, it is easily incorporated
- into new and existing third party products. As such, Apple believes that
- QuickTime-compatible products could yield extremely affordable prices:
-
- -- Apple Media Conference Kit--under $200
- -- Apple Media Conference Pro Kit--under $1,750
- -- Complete Media Conferencing System--under $6,000
-
- Apple is working with a wide range of companies including telcos,
- network, software and hardware providers and developers to provide
- a range of solutions that take advantage of the benefits of
- QuickTime Conferencing (see associated releases). These allies
- have announced that they expect to make products available in the
- second quarter of 1995.
- From the home office to university campuses to the multinational
- enterprise network, QuickTime Conferencing will allow users to communicate with
- people across the country or across the world. Users won't have to worry about
- whether their hardware equipment, networking equipment and applications are
- compatible with the solutions being used on the other end of the network line.
- QuickTime Conferencing is designed to be fully operational with H.320
- standards-based systems.
- "The introduction of QuickTime Conferencing will not only extend Apple's
- leadership in multimedia, but will make an important difference in the video
- conferencing and collaboration market," said Rick Shriner, vice president of
- Apple's Core Technologies Group. "Our goal in designing QuickTime Conferencing
- was to develop a solution that allowed people the opportunity to communicate
- and collaborate. By making it open in every sense of the word, our users
- can metaphorically break down the walls of their homes, schools and offices and
- expand the boundaries of their lives."
- Because QuickTime Conferencing allows for sharing of multimedia data
- and reduces the time and expense of travel, it allows people to be more
- productive than ever before.
- "In the past people found video conferencing easy to resist because prices
- were high and the number of people they could communicate with was extremely
- limited," said Rick LeFaivre, senior vice president of the Apple Technology
- Group. "Now for what we expect to be very aggressive prices, people can
- conduct a media conference with virtually anyone, anywhere in the world. A
- Power Macintosh QuickTime Conferencing user can share QuickTime VR (virtual
- reality) images, annotate text documents and share digital music over networks
- from basic rate ISDN to the internet to ATM."
- Because QuickTime Conferencing is a software-based architecture,
- application developers, communications providers and hardware vendors can
- easily develop compatible solutions. For example, Crosswise Corporation, the
- maker of Face to Face, a cross-platform document conferencing application,
- developed a QuickTime Conferencing-compatible version of their software in just
- one month. A QuickTime Conferencing compatible application shares the
- interface of other QuickTime Conferencing-enabled third party applications, so
- customers can begin using applications quickly and easily.
- QuickTime Conferencing is based on Apple's award winning QuickTime
- technology. It is a conferencing architecture which allows support for both
- industry standards such as H.320, as well as proprietary architectures, and
- codecs such as Indeo by Intel Corporation. QuickTime Conferencing is
- transport, compression and media-device independent. Apple's built-in AV
- capabilities combined with the performance of the PowerPC RISC architecture,
- make it easy for users to make multimedia connections with others on the
- information superhighway almost as soon as they pull QuickTime Conferencing out
- of the box.
- To use the Apple Media Conference Kit on the Macintosh, users need at least
- 16 Megabytes of RAM, a 68040 or PowerPC-based Macintosh, System 7.5, a
- network interface such as Ethernet, ISDN, Token Ring, and optionally
- the ability to digitize audio and video using the built-in AV subsystem or a
- third party digitizer card. To use the Apple Media Conference Pro Kit on
- Macintosh, users need at least 16 Megabytes of RAM, an AV PowerPC-based
- Macintosh and an ISDN connection. To communicate with QuickTime Conferencing
- users from the PC and other platforms, users will need an H.320 compatible
- codec on their machine, available from a variety of vendors. QuickTime
- Conferencing technology is currently under development and products using the
- technology have not yet been completed. Apple will provide pricing and
- availability information when products are completed and ready for release.
-
-