Las Vegas, NV. Every year at COMDEX, BYTE Magazine distributes its “Best of Show” awards. These recognize new products and technologies that are innovative and will have a large impact on the industry. The awards are co-sponsored by SOFTBANK, the COMDEX hosting organization.
For this year’s round, with COMDEX wrapping up in Las Vegas today, the prestigious Best Technology award went to an audio processing technology. The Lexicus Division of Motorola, won the award for the Mandarin Chinese version of its speech recognition algorithms.
Lexicus edged out a couple of very high-profile runners-up: Microsoft’s Windows CE operating system (for handheld computers), and Digital Versatile Disc (Toshiba, Sony, Philips, Pioneer et.al.), the fast-rising star of mass multimedia storage for consumer applications.
The Lexicus software runs on several DSP platforms, including Motorola’s own 56000 DSP series and Motorola MemOS, ARM microprocessors, Windows ’95, and Microware. It delivers continuous voice dictation for people speaking Mandarin. Motorola positions the technology for applications such as car phones home portable phones and answering machines, low cost toys and video games.
Aureal Semiconductor won good reviews for the sound quality of its chip set when it was demonstrated at the AES Convention, and the company is getting a similar response from the less-discriminating (audio-wise) audience at COMDEX. The chip set features Aureal’s ASP301, an optimized DSP engine that provides the company’s Aureal 3D (A3D) spatialization and accelaration support of the DirectSound API; and the ASP311 PCI bus interface chip. The chip set is positioned as an OEM upgrade to existing Sound Blaster cards.
Also at COMDEX, VLSI Technology Inc. introduced its SongBird 3D™ DirectSound Accelerator chip (VL82C829), featuring VLSI’s ActiSound™ positional 3D audio. Like the Aureal chip, this one functions as part of a set. The main SongBird processor is the DSP HRTF engine, with interfaces to Dolby AC3 and MPEG audio processors, plus a separate AC’97 codec made by Sigma Tel.