Wireless pioneer
Motorola has struck a deal with both
IBM and
Toshiba to provide the computer manufacturers with its
Bluetooth-enabled computer products. Bluetooth is a wireless protocol that allows devices to communicate via short-range radio over distances up to 30 feet. The technology—developed jointly by
Ericsson, Toshiba, IBM,
Intel and
Nokia—is projected to enable links between cell phones and computers or handheld devices and cars. (A Bluetooth-enabled car kit is expected from Motorola later this year.) Motorola doesn't have a corner on the market, however, as
The Bluetooth Group Web site shows. The technology is an open standard:
Lucent,
Texas Instruments and
Philips Electronics, among others, are also developing products. Merrill Lynch has projected the market for Bluetooth products to top $3.4 billion by 2005. As for the Bluetooth chips the government has already installed in our heads, there was no word at presstime what purpose they might serve… Ads in the July issue of
Wired magazine, on newsstands today, will feature brand-new technology courtesy of
Digimarc. When Digimarc-coded ads are shown to a Web camera on a computer running the
Digimarc MediaBridge reader software, the computer will launch a browser instantly connecting readers to advertisers' Web sites. So far, the number of consumers who read
Wired, have a Web camera and run the MediaBridge software is estimated at 13… Online music guide
Listen.com promoted
Sean Ryan from VP of Business Development to the position of President/COO. Ryan will continue to work closely with Listen.com CEO
Rob Reid in developing strategic business partnerships and strategic partnerships for beating
Tomb Raider III…
Webnoize will hold a two-day
Venture Forum in New York City, Sept. 7-8, to bring together financial management and new media pioneers to consider "new economy business models, content strategies, consumer trends and technologies driving the digital entertainment economy." Anyone still awake and interested is invited to attend the
Webnoize 2000 annual conference in L.A., Nov. 13-15… Online video and DVD purveyor
Reel.com announced it is shutting its virtual doors.
Hollywood Entertainment, which purchased the site for a reported $100 million in July '98 and is the parent company of brick-and-mortar
Hollywood Video, will continue to use Reel's database for its video stores. "Unfortunately, the business model of rapid customer acquisition required large losses and significant cash funding," said Hollywood Entertainment CEO
Mark Wattles. "I guess we invested too much in that
Carrot Top flick, ‘Chairman Of The Board.'"… Stepping into the streaming media game is dot-com upstart
Singingfish.com, which proclaims "to deliver the most comprehensive, relevant and updated multimedia search results to their most valuable asset—the end-user." Um, whatever that means. The site will draw upon its database of 2.5 million media clips—from music and video-related MP3s to sports and breaking news clips. Said a spokesman for Singingfish, "We hope to help Web enthusiasts find the
Pamela Anderson/
Tommy Lee footage faster than any other service."… The
MTVi Group has partnered with the
CDDB music recognition protocol. Thus, when fans listen to their favorite music on CDDB-enabled media players, they can receive related artist information from
MTV.com,
VH1.com or
SonicNet.com. Like the Digimarc technology, the information is mostly ad-driven, pointing fans to
Santana's line of shoes or
Britney Spears collectibles, but what are music fans anyway if not gaping voids waiting to be filled with useless crap?…
Reciprocal Inc. and
Microsoft Corp. announced today that Reciprocal became the first clearing service to process one million digital rights management transactions using the
Microsoft Media Rights Manager. Reciprocal currently has relationships with just over 50 percent of the music industry, including
Sony Music,
BMG Entertainment and
Zomba Records. "Digital rights management is the fundamental enabler for digital media e-commerce," said
Will Poole, VP of Microsoft's Digital Media Division. Insiders noted that it was the first time inten days Poole had completed a sentence without using the words "infrastructure," "paradigm" or "synergy."… With its launch of
www.dealwithepic.com yesterday,
Epic U.K. became the first British record company to take advantage of the Web when looking for new artists. The site invites the pop stars of tomorrow to download their material directly to the label's A&R scouts. "The system is set for auto-response," said Epic's
Tony Martin, "which means that we don't actually ever have to handle or listen to your tape."