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Intel's New Set-Top Chip Packs More Punch

March 19, 2012 | Jeff Baumgartner |

Intel Corp. is introducing a media processor called Berryville, aiming to give set-top boxes and video gateways the kind of performance that's typically seen in video-game consoles.

Formally named the CE5300, the chipset is Intel's first media processor built on 32nm technology (its earlier CE4100/Sodaville and CE4200/Groveland processors used 45nm) and a dual-core processor, allowing Intel to more than double performance and beef up a 2-D/3-D graphics engine that can support some advanced gaming and videoconferencing applications.

"Until now, the set-top box has been the most underperforming [device] in the home," says Keith Wehmeyer, Intel's general manager of set-top platforms.

A feature called hyperthreading lets the 5300 support four simultaneous sequences/programs, Wehmeyer says. An H.264 B-picture hardware encoder allows the gateway to stream video to other devices on the home network, such as a tablet or another TV, at a lower bit rate without affecting video quality.

On the cable front, Intel initially plans to integrate the CE5300 with the Puma 5, a Docsis 3.0 chipset acquired from Texas Instruments Inc.. (See Intel Snares TI's Cable Modem Business .)

Wehmeyer says the 5300 is ready for high-volume manufacturing. Intel is demonstrating the chipset at this week's IP&TV World Forum in London.

Why this matters
The 5300 will boost set-top and gateway performance as MSOs migrate video services to IP, launch more graphics-rich applications, and support more apps, including the user interface, in the cloud.

It's a strong indicator that Intel will continue to focus on pay-TV service providers, despite rumors that it may soon compete with them by offering subscription video services that are delivered over-the-top. Some of its bigger pay-TV customers include Liberty Global Inc. (for its Horizon gateway), France's Iliad and Numericable, and Comcast Corp., which is using Intel's earlier-generation processors in the X1 box made by Pace plc.

The new chip also serves as fair warning to fellow set-top chip competitors, such as Broadcom Corp., Entropic Communications Inc. and Sigma Designs Inc., that Intel is not going away anytime soon.

For more

— Jeff Baumgartner, Site Editor, Light Reading Cable



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