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Why Media Center Needs an Alliance and an Installer Channel

Microsoft, Intel, AMD, HP, Lifeware, Niveus and Crestron explain how the Media Center Integrator Alliance can ultimately help Media Center thrive among the masses.


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MCIA board members(*) and company representatives: Macgill Lynde, AMD; Seale Moorer*, Lifeware; Bret Fitzgerald, Lifeware; Brian Paper*, Niveus; Vincent Bruno, Crestron; Jeff Singer, Crestron; Kevin Collins*, Microsoft; Greg Schlechter*, Intel; Missing: Ameer Karim*, HP

Consolidating those lessons can reduce installation burdens dramatically: "Little things, like knowing what to say to the tech-support people at the cable company," says Moorer, "and when to ask for a supervisor."

MCIA chairman Kevin Collins, director of Microsoft's custom installation channel for the Connected TV business, says the group will create white papers that address some of the most pressing Media Center challenges like CableCard installation.

He refers to CableCard headaches suffered by Gordon Van Zuiden, whose company Cybermanor won the recent Windows Media Center Ultimate Install Contest. Cybermanor spent hours getting a multi-CableCard installation to work in that job.

With MCIA's guidance, "You might be able to take that down from five or six hours to just one hour," says Collins. "That would pay for your membership!"

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But MCIA can provide more than tech tips.

For example, says Collins, "Maybe we could provide tools from ATI [maker of CableCard solutions, and an AMD subsidiary] and Microsoft that could give you the signal strength of the CableCard so you can diagnose problems."

Not that that will happen necessarily, but the possibility is there – and it wouldn't be there if it were only Lifeware and Niveus pounding on ATI's door.

As part of MCIA, says Moorer, "We have the ability to say to ATI, 'We are depending on you to work this out with CableLabs,' and they can say, 'We're depending on you to make this more affordable.'"

(By the way, wouldn't it be nice to get CableLabs into MCIA? They are, after all, a big reason for CableCard issues. "They are aware of it [MCIA]," says Moorer. "They know they want this ecosystem to live. It would be great to have them participate.")

Where does Crestron fit in?


Crestron is the lone MCIA founder that is not building Media Center products right now.

There is still a place for them in the organization, however.

"The reason we brought Crestron on," says Collins, "is not because we're looking for them to 'do' Media Center but because they have all of the controls, whether they make Media Center products or not."

He adds, "Whatever the solution is, we want good hardware partners to bring it all together."

Crestron spokesperson Jeff Singer says the company is already heavily involved in Media Center.

"Our dealers are distributing Media Center content," he says. "They look to us for education, support and best practices."

MCIA board member Fred Bargetzi, VP of technology for Crestron, says, "Some of the most interesting uses of our touchscreens and control software involve the integration of Media Center applications."

He points to one integration company, Paragon Technology Group, Aspen, Colo., that was featured in a recent issue of CE Pro for its Media Center/Crestron interfaces.

"This is just one example of how you can achieve tremendous functionality when you combine something as powerful as Media Center with our extensive control capabilities," Bargetzi says. "Through MCIA, we want to participate in the evolution of Media Center to provide our dealers with new opportunities."

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Paragon's integration of Crestron with Media Center allows "Pete" to access his own Media Center movie list from a Crestron touchpanel.

Getting Microsoft's Attention


True, the big objective with MCIA is to grab the attention of CE pros to achieve a trickle-down effect to the mass market.

But the initiative has another important "audience" and that is Microsoft itself.

"The consortium brings more awareness, not just to companies like Lifeware and Niveus, but within Microsoft," says Collins.

Since the beginning of Media Center, he and a handful of Microsoftees have worked almost single-handedly to serve home systems integrators and to bring the channel to the attention of their colleagues.

It's been a tough sell.

But the MCIA mandate, says Collins, has come from on high within Microsoft, and support will only expand as more participants come on board.

He notes in particular that Crestron's involvement in MCIA – even though the company is not currently making Media Center products, per se – is significant. It shows "a lot more breadth" of solutions for the Media Center ecosystem," says Collins. "It raises a lot of interest within Microsoft."

What Next with MCIA?


MCIA currently is recruiting new members at all levels, and is particularly eager to attract integrators to the cause.

"We really are looking for feedback from integrators," Collins says. "The more integrators we attract, it will help us refine the system so it continues to improve."

Soon, the consortium will start assembling working groups to address education, marketing, technology and other areas deemed important.

For more information visit www.mediacenterintegrator.org.

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Article Topics

News · Associations · Media Center · Associations · Media Center · All topics

About the Author

Julie Jacobson, Editor-at-large, CE Pro
Julie Jacobson is co-founder of EH Publishing and currently spends most of her time writing for CE Pro, mostly in the areas of home automation, networked A/V and the business of home systems integration. She majored in Economics at the University of Michigan, earned an MBA from the University of Texas at Austin, and has never taken a journalism class in her life. Julie is a washed-up Ultimate Frisbee player with the scars to prove it. Follow her on Twitter @juliejacobson.

2 Comments (displayed in order by date/time)

Posted by Don Calley  on  09/19  at  11:12 AM

Well, it seems you were a bit too polite to give the obvious answer to your question, “Why Media Center Needs an Alliance”. Many of us are in this industry because we love it. Some are in it solely for the money. The fact is that none of us are here just to help MS sell more software at our expense. This MS consortium is here to give credibility to a unprofitable platform so they can sell millions at Best Buy. The next step will probably be MS subsidized installers to show how “popular and liked” the product is, to gain the confidence of the warehouse stores.
If they had actually looked at the real problems that the CI industry runs into and developed solutions that helped us bring technology into the home, there would need to be some much advertizing and this “alliance”. Whatever solutions MS and their alliance create will be for the benefit of MS first, warehouse retailers next. Their objective ends with all of us getting jobs at Best Buy or Wal-Mart, and stifling the creative spark of innovation that CEDIA has brought to the industry. As a founder member of CEDIA, my hope is that that spark is not lost for the sake of a greedy corporation.

Posted by Ray.Casey  on  12/17  at  02:55 PM

OMG Sour grapes and a total lack of foresight.  Unprofitable?  Hello… do you make money for the manufacturer or yourself, meaning on product or on services.  If you are in the former category, well then I understand you anger and frustration, but you have to start selling value added services.  the same thing that happened in the 90’s to mini computer manufacturers AND POS (point of sale) of sale register manufacturers(non PC based mind you) will happen in A/V.  Just stop fighting it and make the change.  Join the alliance and learn how to navigate the transition from legacy CE/Cedia to future PC-Software/Media Center Alliance.  If you do not change (the latest theme these days), then you will not survive the industry renaissance…  Just like Mini computers and non PC Cash Registers (POS) are all gone…

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