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Posted By: Dan Rayburn

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List members,

I currently have "limited" speaking positions remaining on the below
round-table panel sessions and in particular am looking for "end
users" who may be interested in speaking on one of the below panels
in May in NYC. If interested, please contact me offline. These are
the only positions available.

Thanks

Dan Rayburn
StreamingMedia.com

Tuesday, May 17, 2005
11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Entertainment Delivery For Broadband Service Providers
This session will address the current landscape of digital
distribution of games and entertainment by broadband service
providers. Hear an overview of delivery models and benefits to
participants, and an explanation of different models that allow
consumer to play, rent, and purchase games, movies, and music. Listen
to the panel discuss which models are most appropriate for the
streaming market.

Tuesday, May 17, 2005
2:45 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Enabling Open-Architecture-Based IPTV Services
Video has been touted as the answer to service provider revenue
challenges-allowing them to offer the "triple play" of bundled
services: voice, data, and video. However, before offering
interactive video services they first need the infrastructure to
encode, ingest, manage, distribute, and deliver video assets-and
manage and bill subscribers. A solution must intelligently distribute
all types of content while interfacing with legacy applications for
billing and CRM. This session discusses industry challenges for
broadcasters, content providers, and service providers,
open-architecture platform benefits, the evolution in interactive
video services, and customer successes.

Wednesday, May 18, 2005
11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
MPEG-4 and H.264 - The Future of Open-Standard Internet Video
MPEG-4 has long promised to do for video on the Internet what MP3 did
for audio ... standardize delivery, make playback easy and players
interchangeable. But synchronized video and audio has proved more
challenging than audio alone, video quality hasn't been up to what
the proprietary formats can achieve and adoption is going slowly.
Will the new H.264, also know as Advanced Video Coding (AVC), change
all that? Join us while we delve into the fascinating technical and
business issues and try to explain what it all means to content
providers.

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Available Speaking Spots At SM
East
List members,

I currently have "limited"
speaking positions remaining on the below round-table panel sessions
and in particular am looking for "end users" who may be
interested in speaking on one of the below panels in May in NYC. If
interested, please contact me offline. These are the only positions
available.

Thanks

Dan Rayburn
StreamingMedia.com

Tuesday, May 17,
2005
11:30  a.m. -
12:30 p.m.
Entertainment
Delivery For Broadband Service Providers
This session will address the current landscape of digital
distribution of games and entertainment by broadband service
providers. Hear an overview of delivery models and benefits to
participants, and an explanation of different models that allow
consumer to play, rent, and purchase games, movies, and music. Listen
to the panel discuss which models are most appropriate for the
streaming market.

Tuesday, May 17,
2005
2:45  p.m. -
3:45 p.m.
Enabling
Open-Architecture-Based IPTV Services
Video has been
touted as the answer to service provider revenue challenges-allowing
them to offer the "triple play" of bundled services: voice, data,
and video. However, before offering interactive video services they
first need the infrastructure to encode, ingest, manage, distribute,
and deliver video assets-and manage and bill subscribers. A solution
must intelligently distribute all types of content while interfacing
with legacy applications for billing and CRM. This session discusses
industry challenges for broadcasters, content providers, and service
providers, open-architecture platform benefits, the evolution in
interactive video services, and customer successes.

Wednesday, May 18,
2005
11:30 a.m. - 12:30
p.m.
MPEG-4 and H.264
- The Future of Open-Standard Internet Video
MPEG-4 has long
promised to do for video on the Internet what MP3 did for audio ...
standardize delivery, make playback easy and players interchangeable.
But synchronized video and audio has proved more challenging than
audio alone, video quality hasn't been up to what the proprietary
formats can achieve and adoption is going slowly. Will the new H.264,
also know as Advanced Video Coding (AVC), change all that? Join us
while we delve into the fascinating technical and business issues and
try to explain what it all means to content providers.



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