US NEWS: Monster Cable to go 'no cable'

Andrew Everard Wednesday, May 28, 2008 08:28

Noel.LeeOne of the world's best-known cable companies, Monster Cable, is all set to go wireless. That was the message from company founder and 'Head Monster' Noel Lee (left), speaking at a major consumer electronics/custom installation show held this week in Dubai.

Lee said that the company is working on a wireless audio/video distribution system, due in shops in the States late in the Summer, and confirmed that it will have sufficient bandwidth to send 1080p video wirelessly. That should give it obvious appeal for users of wall-mounted flatscreen TVs.

He joked to his audience at the Hometech show that his recent quote in Time magazine that he wasn't afraid of wireless "was a lie", and told US trade magazine TWICE that developing the Monster wireless system has "been a long road."

The system, to be launched in New York in a couple of weeks, uses an ultra wideband (UWB) solution, and will upconvert lower-resolution video to 1080p. “We believe any wireless system has to be 1080p,” Lee says, “Otherwise the wireless solution will be behind the technology. People expect from Monster that when we come out with something it will be right.”

“We’ll upscale all different sources. There are two HDMI, an S-Video and a composite input. Everything coming out of the box will be 1080p.”

Compression is used, but it's said to be low-level, and while the system uses wireless transmission in-room, doing away with long interconnect runs for example from AV receiver to a projector or screen, room-to-room connections will still use cable.

The reason? Longer distance wireless is just too prone to interference from existing data networks and the like, even though the UWB system should take the signal out of the range of such devices.

Lee says the wireless solution will be available in retail outlets as well as to custom installers, "but it won't be inexpensive. We estimate $600 for one pair of boxes and $200 for each additional room.”

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Comments

Trefor Patten May 28, 2008 11:29

Is this great news, or a chance to have even more electronic interference affecting our health. Will leaky microwave cookers, wireless hi-fi and mobile phone usage mean that we all have cancer in 20 years time?  I currently use Apple's Airport extreme to 'beam' music from my Mac to my Primare music system and I love it.  The convenience is undeniable and the cost of the little white box is considerably less than a decent quality cable would be over that distance. I just sometimes wonder if it is healthy…

mring May 29, 2008 23:06

o yeah the o-so-factual cancer :X

people hear wireless and it's cancer? the power-sockets in your house create 10,000 times more leakage then any wirless device on the market.

now do u have an old CRT? that thing rules as it actually gives of xray :P unlike wifi which gives off nothing but a extremly low voltage radio frequency of 2.4Ghz....

Radio never caused cancer 100 years ago, and why would it now?

Anonymous comments are disabled

About Andrew Everard

Andrew Everard, Audio Editor of Gramophone since November 1999 and What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision's Consulting Editor, read English at Queens' College, Cambridge a very long time ago! He started his journalistic career in 1982 on Haymarket's photographic magazines, and subsequently worked on What Hi-Fi?, High Fidelity, Audiophile and Home Cinema magazines, as well as contributing a monthly column to Japanese title HiVi.