1426:"It's a litmus test of the viability of video distribution over LANs," according to Jim Greene, analyst for Summit Strategies (Boston, Mass.). Microsoft's Tiger and Oracle's VideoServer will be eventual competitors predicts Greene, but for now the HP/Starlight combination is unchallenged. Although claiming that the solution is scalable up to HP 9000 systems, it remains to be seen because not be available until sometime in 1996 when Starlight's UNIX-based StarWorks product is ported to the HP-UX platform. In the meantime, the Intel solution will be available from HP direct and indirect channels and sold for information-on-demand, performance support and video training applications in the financial services, telecommunications and retail markets.
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audio files are stored on a separate, high-performance file server in a switched ethernet topology, using an intelligent hub. In this way, when an application requires the higher data rate for contiguous multimedia files, the information is directed through the intelligent switch hub to the appropriate workstation. Starlight has been successful delivering multimedia data in the worst-case scenario of 20 multimedia workstations in a classroom, where all students are working on the same lesson at the same time.
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encoder running StarCast
Multicaster will send the feed to local desktops at the New York headquarters and retransmit the feed via Smith Barneys' satellite network. At each receiving location, a video server running StarCast Recaster will then take the feed and multicast it to all local desktops. Financial consultants will be able to remain at their desks and view broadcasts on their PC desktops through the StarCast Viewer, without disrupting other applications or feeds.
953:
11,000 financial consultants and managers at nearly 500 remove branch locations across a satellite network. Smith Barney advisers will be able to receive live information from industry and market analysts directly on their desktop workstations; in the future, they will have access to commercial video feeds, custom-developed reports, and multimedia training material.
1122:"The product is outstanding, and the most important thing is they took a very pragmatic approach in terms of preserving investment," said Albert Lill, vice president at Gartner Group Inc., a market-research firm in Stamford, Conn. "It explodes the myth that ATM and FDDI are required to run video over a network."
1044:
The
Customs Service will use new video streaming technology from Starlight Networks Inc., to broadcast live over the Internet a briefing on a system for collecting information from importers. The briefing, planned for Sept. 3, will be distributed over the Internet at the same time it is broadcast by
1009:
Starlight
Networks is also marketing networking software optimized for the delivery of multimedia information over a local area network. Starlight combines the capability of controlling the delivery of motion video and audio files in continuous streams. In its optimal configuration, motion video and
883:
The recent StarWorks upgrade provides users with up to 50Mbps of video/audio streaming capacity and adds bandwidth reservation, which is designed to improve throughput to multiple users. This will provide desktop users with
Ethernet links as much as 1.2Mbps throughput. This will require, however, an
768:
Starlight
Networks understands the technology required to guarantee delivery of full-motion video to solving the problems inherent in this effort. Users are demanding access to mixed media applications on an unprecedented scale. These applications may generate enough audio/video traffic to overwhelm
1470:
It's the job of John Downey, deputy director of information management for the Office of the
Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology (ACQWeb), to get information to the people at each facility responsible for buying the supplies the military needs. But when Downey decided streaming
959:
Smith Barney has been working with
Starlight Networks for six months to complete the prototype system. The video rollout started in the second half of 1997. The primary video content will consist of analysts' daily briefings, which will be delivered directly and in real time to the desktop. A video
952:
On
February 17, 1998, Starlight Networks announced that Smith Barney, the United States' second largest retail brokerage firm, was implementing its StarCast software. The adoption represented an innovative move by Smith Barney to deliver real-time, video-based financial information to approximately
945:
In a piilot application, live feeds of
Reuters and Bloomberg television are delivered directly to traders' desktop computers via Starlight Networks' streaming video software and multicast IP. As a consequence, traders no longer have to leave their desks to watch these broadcasts in a viewing room.
1276:
Due next month, the
Starlight Media Server from Starlight Networks Inc. will transform an Intel 486-based computer into a video application server for Macs, IBM PCs and compatibles, and Unix workstation clients. Unix-based server software, called StarWorks, will control an array of hard drives to
764:
To accomplish that, the company developed a data streaming software that provides guaranteed delivery of live or stored full-motion video, audio and animation to desktops without sacrificing network speed or capacity. It is possible to run multimedia applications and video-enhanced web pages from
1000:
StarWorks from Starlight Networks, Inc. uses a different approach to providing multiple workstations accessing video files. StarWorks, when installed on an Intel468 microprocessor-based EISA server supports up to 20 simultaneous multimedia users accessing streams of video, audio, and animation.
838:
The financial services industry has also embraced Starlight with open arms, representing almost 50% of the company's sales. (Government and education sectors come in a close second and third.) Brokerage firm SmithBarney is going to replace its hoot-and-holler trading system with Starlight's
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Instead, he turned to a combination of products from corporate intranet streaming specialist Starlight Networks Inc., Mountain View, Calif., and from RealNetworks Inc., Seattle, which dominates the market for streaming video over the public Internet. The solution Downey assembled can play
862:
This report and related research is part of INPUT's Market Analysis Program (MAP). This program provides market research, reports, consulting and recommendations to the management of leading vendors in the information services industry and to information systems functions of user
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StarWorks allows multiple digitized news segments to be stored and retrieved at the same time over a standard Ethernet network. Television-quality video of 30 frame/sec. can be provided. StarWorks 3.0 provides recording and playback of a video stream at speeds up to 200M
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We could find no obvious flaws in the StarWorks' implementation. However, we did encounter some configuration problems, in part because of the lack of a Digital Video Interactive (DVI) standard. Most of the standards issues are expected to be resolved within the next 18
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Bloomberg TV, a subsidiary of Bloomberg LP in New York, has used the software for two years on its Sun Microsystems, Inc. servers. The company soon will upgrade with StarWorks 3.0, which was released in early December, for higher quality and speed, Bloomberg officials
1112:
Networked PC users will soon be able to ask themselves that question with the help of startup Starlight Networks Inc., which last week introduced a system that allows as many as 20 users to simultaneously access and view videos located centrally on a standard Ethernet
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With its StarWorks digital video networking software, Starlight Networks Inc. is the first to provide network users with a way to piggyback on a video solution that provides the familiar 30-frame-per-second data rate without requiring a dedicated high-performance
1373:
But PictureTel Corp., the leading supplier of videoconferencing systems, is hoping to marry the two technologies as a result of its pending acquisition of Starlight Networks Inc. PictureTel last month disclosed its intent to acquire Star-light for an undisclosed
879:
Its current technology includes video application servers, based on a client/server platform configuration that allows up to 40 simultaneous users to share full-motion, full-screen video applications. It also supports a variety of network configuration and video
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At government facilities with access to high-speed Internet links, Starlight Networks Starlive client software runs the video, chat, and slide presentations on user desktops. At locations with slower connections, the DoD uses RealNetworks clients and a Web
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The company has developed a $ 50,000 software package dubbed StarWorks. The software has already won widespread support. There are 300 companies--100 of which are already clients and 200 that are testing Starlight's software to stream video over their
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StarWorks 3.0 is capable of delivering both live and stored audio, video and graphical media streams from a Windows NT server to hundreds of desktops simultaneously via Netscape Communications Corp.'s Navigator or Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer
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Starlight is regarded as a leading supplier of streaming multimedia software and video-on-demand servers. The company could be just what PictureTel needs to bring the conferencing and IP multicasting worlds together, said Gartner Group analyst Al
820:
Basing his technology on MPEG1 and MPEG2 video, Long and Bass came up with a proprietary technology to achieve high-quality video streaming. (MPEG--Moving Pictures Experts Group--is a standard for compressing video, and MPEG-2 is used in DVD
1051:
Observers said the Customs event is one sign of growing interest among agencies in using Internet-based video and audio technologies. "There's a tremendous amount of initial interest, at least in examining the technologies that are
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Greg Tapper, an analyst with Giga Information Group, Santa Clara, Calif., said the Pentagons adoption of the technology shows that video on organizational intranets is creeping beyond the initial core of large, technology-savvy
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Unlike HP's own MPower and InSoft's Communique! (another HP alliance), which are UNIX-based video conferencing solutions, the Starlight bundle is a video streaming technology. "They distribute information differently," explains
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for delivering video and audio online, said Al Lill, vice president and research director with Gartner Group. He said the most prominent applications for the technology are distance learning, telemedicine and faster information
1125:
Users of the product will be "anybody who has any requirements for a visual database, anyone with complex products and extensive field service and support organizations, as well as advertising agencies and media agencies," he
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Starlight also provides a proprietary Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks (RAID)-like data storage and management scheme that supports the high-performance data streaming necessary for maintaining a full-motion-video data
1001:
StarWorks allows users to access video and other applications simultaneously, requiring no application modification to DOS and Windows applications, and coexists with other LAN protocols used by network operating systems.
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Excited VCs pumped in $ 2 million in seed money, and over the next six years the company raised an additional $ 20 million in five rounds of funding from VCs like Sequoia Capital, InterWest, Access Partners and Star
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As the chairman of Starlight Networks, a Mountain View, Calif.-based software company, Long has never lost sight of his main objective--to develop streaming products for corporations like Boeing, General Motors and
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Besides the giants of the Web, Microsoft and Netscape, smaller companies such as Icast, Precept Software, Starlight Networks, and RealNetworks have been formed in the last few years to address real-time multimedia
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Starlight Networks' challenge was to provide full-motion video and multi-media applications to desktop PCs, using existing hardware, without slowing down the network or interfering with other mission-critical
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The company's technology, as it continues to evolve, will be complementary to store and forward digital video applications, broadcast video and eventually desktop video conferencing over LAN/WAN network
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Starlight Networks offers powerful software packages that enable organizations to stream on-demand video, live broadcasts and multimedia applications to hundreds of desktops across existing networks:
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high-quality video over the ATM backbone at the Pentagon's air-conditioned offices as well as get the same message through to a supply officer sweltering in a Quonset hut at a remote tropical base.
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Starlight's competitors include Sun, Digital Equipment Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co., Oracle Corp. and IBM. But they haven't shown the working knowledge of networks that Starlight has, Ball said.
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Instead, it is kept on Sun Solaris digital networking servers in New York, Tokyo and London and accessed with StarWorks software by Starlight Networks, Inc. in Mountain View, Calif.
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Lill also said Starlight's streaming video technology is best suited for large-scale enterprise applications because it supports both low- and high-bandwidth connections.
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News is then sent by satellite around the world, and ends up on radio and television stations such as USA Network that are viewed by millions of people each day.
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1384:"Instead of going to one set of vendors to get videoconferenc-ing and another to get video-on-demand, customers will be able to go to one vendor," Lill said.
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support simultaneous delivery of QuickTime or DVI (Digital Video Interactive) video clips to as many as 10 Mac clients for about $ 23,000.
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software--a contract that could be worth a couple of million dollars for a company which did upwards of $ 5 million in sales in 1997.
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At Bloomberg TV, financial news gets shown and updated continuously around the world. But all that video isn't stored on videotape.
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video was the way to go, he realized he couldn't rely on the kind of homogeneous high-speed networks common at large corporations.
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Starlight Networks Inc. will announce this week availability of its Windows NT-based digital video management technology.
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Rather, they can keep abreast of late-breaking financial news and their investment portfolio activity simultaneously.
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Starlight Networks' products allow for real-time storage and network management of digital video applications.
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1589:- Cunard has located sources to show notability. And the nominator has been careless in the nomination and
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Starlight, which is being acquired by videoconferencing vendor PictureTel Corp., is the "most prominent
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Using Cunard's numbering above: 1 is good and meets the criteria for establishing notability; 2 fails
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The U.S. Marine Corps depends on StarWorks field training before sending soldiers into a war zone.
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Today, Paribas uses streaming video from Starlight Networks to enhance its information delivery.
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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below.
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
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Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
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Industry analysts said StarWorks will increase the market for networked video products.
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1617:. Since there are multiple sources I didn't check the rest. Topic meets GNG/NCORP.
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Full-motion QuickTime movies may be playing soon on Macintosh Ethernet networks.
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firm in the industry for applications in which video quality matters, Lill said.
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as it is from a connected source (the ex-Chairman); 3 is also good and meets
1243:"Starlight video server for Macs, PCs: 486-based system delivers QuickTime"
559:"Starlight video server for Macs, PCs: 486-based system delivers QuickTime"
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Multimedia Applications Development: Using Indeo Video and Dvi Technology
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Multimedia Applications Development: Using Indeo Video and Dvi Technology
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FDDI backbone between the StarWorks server and an Ethernet switched hub.
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The book then discusses StarLive, StarCenter, StarCast, and StarWorks.
1568:. Without delving into reliability of each individual source, trust
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9. Starlight Networks Inc. StarWorks Release 1.7 networking software
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The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate.
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to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus.
933:*Starlight Networks was acquired by PictureTel in July 1998.
1109:
Star light, star bright, what video should I watch tonight?
1288:"StarWorks taps 10BaseT LANs to provide multiuser video"
589:"StarWorks taps 10BaseT LANs to provide multiuser video"
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per the significant coverage in multiple independent
1549:Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks,
765:services quickly and reliably without downloading.
1505:Knowledge:Notability#General notability guideline
43:). No further edits should be made to this page.
1643:). No further edits should be made to this page.
846:"US Desktop Video Conferencing Market 1994-1999"
363:"US Desktop Video Conferencing Market 1994-1999"
271:Note: This discussion has been included in the
273:list of Companies-related deletion discussions
1438:"Selling the Government On Streaming Content"
679:"Selling the Government On Streaming Content"
227:
8:
1404:. Vol. 9, no. 12. 1105 Media. Archived from
657:. Vol. 9, no. 12. 1105 Media. Archived from
107:Help, my article got nominated for deletion!
1341:"Marriage Brings Video Apps Under One Roof"
968:Bunzel, Mark J.; Morris, Sandra K. (1994).
619:"Marriage Brings Video Apps Under One Roof"
407:Bunzel, Mark J.; Morris, Sandra K. (1994).
1507:, which requires "significant coverage in
726:IP Multicasting: Concepts and Applications
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306:IP Multicasting: Concepts and Applications
270:
1018:"Customs will use StarLive for broadcast"
439:"Customs will use StarLive for broadcast"
712:
1075:"StarWorks spreads video across LANs"
897:Multicast Networking and Applications
465:"StarWorks spreads video across LANs"
380:Multicast Networking and Applications
7:
1503:to allow Starlight Networks to pass
848:. Mountain View: Input. 1994. p. V-9
365:. Mountain View: Input. 1994. p. V-9
1286:Chernicoff, David P. (1993-03-01).
587:Chernicoff, David P. (1993-03-01).
1396:Thompson, George A. (1995-12-01).
769:an unprotected local area network.
649:Thompson, George A. (1995-12-01).
24:
1203:. Vol. 13, no. 39. Archived from
1193:Lapolla, Stephanie (1996-09-30).
1142:. Vol. 30, no. 52. Archived from
1005:The book notes on pages 223–224:
537:. Vol. 13, no. 39. Archived from
527:Lapolla, Stephanie (1996-09-30).
507:. Vol. 30, no. 52. Archived from
1499:There is sufficient coverage in
1339:Schwartz, Jeffrey (1998-08-03).
1296:. Vol. 10, no. 8. Archived from
1251:. Vol. 6, no. 34. Archived from
617:Schwartz, Jeffrey (1998-08-03).
597:. Vol. 10, no. 8. Archived from
567:. Vol. 6, no. 34. Archived from
92:Introduction to deletion process
1436:Caulfield, Brian (1998-06-08).
1398:"Battle of the networked stars"
1134:"Bloomberg TV has digital take"
1073:Schroeder, Erica (1992-10-05).
677:Caulfield, Brian (1998-06-08).
651:"Battle of the networked stars"
499:"Bloomberg TV has digital take"
463:Schroeder, Erica (1992-10-05).
18:Knowledge:Articles for deletion
1241:Streeter, April (1992-09-28).
557:Streeter, April (1992-09-28).
1:
1546:needs analysis of Cunard's RS
1526:11:03, 29 November 2019 (UTC)
285:18:11, 25 November 2019 (UTC)
265:17:53, 25 November 2019 (UTC)
1624:15:51, 8 December 2019 (UTC)
1602:19:43, 7 December 2019 (UTC)
1582:20:52, 2 December 2019 (UTC)
1559:19:55, 2 December 2019 (UTC)
1132:Hambeln, Matt (1996-12-23).
956:The book notes on page 120:
936:The book notes on page 119:
922:The book notes on page 118:
497:Hambeln, Matt (1996-12-23).
62:20:40, 9 December 2019 (UTC)
1016:Varon, Elana (1998-08-30).
996:The book notes on page 76:
894:Miller, C. Kenneth (1999).
437:Varon, Elana (1998-08-30).
377:Miller, C. Kenneth (1999).
82:(AfD)? Read these primers!
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1195:"StarWorks is born for NT"
900:. Reading, Massachusetts:
723:Goncalves, Marcus (1999).
529:"StarWorks is born for NT"
383:. Reading, Massachusetts:
303:Goncalves, Marcus (1999).
1633:Please do not modify it.
32:Please do not modify it.
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784:"Online broadcasting"
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338:"Online broadcasting"
80:Articles for deletion
1087:(40). Archived from
477:(40). Archived from
1466:The article notes:
1422:The article notes:
1369:The article notes:
1314:The article notes:
1269:The article notes:
1221:The article notes:
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1105:The article notes:
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978:. pp. 76, 223–224.
974:(2 ed.). New York:
806:The article notes:
714:Sources with quotes
417:. pp. 76, 223–224.
413:(2 ed.). New York:
1544:Relisting comment:
1444:. Vol. 4, no. 21.
867:The report notes:
858:The report notes:
756:Starlight Networks
685:. Vol. 4, no. 21.
116:Starlight Networks
68:Starlight Networks
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97:Guide to deletion
87:How to contribute
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1515:of the subject".
1509:reliable sources
1501:reliable sources
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782:(1998-05-13).
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