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On-Demand Webinar |
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| Bridging the Gap in OSD Generators: A New Solution Beyond Fixed-Font and Graphic Controllers |
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Overview: New security and automotive video applications demand on-screen displays (OSDs) with simple implementation and smaller packages that reduce design time and board space. This web seminar discusses the various solutions available in the marketplace: fixed-font OSDs and fully featured graphic controllers. It features information about Maxim's new low-cost, stand-alone OSD device that can better meet your design needs by allowing you to overlay user-defined graphics and characters on live video. This device provides more graphic options than fixed-font devices, but without the cost and board space of full-featured graphic controllers. This web seminar also offers a comparison between Maxim's OSD products and existing solutions.
Presenters:
Bill Laumeister, Principal Member of Technical Staff, SP&C, Maxim Integrated Products
Bill Laumeister has 38 years experience and holds several patents in the video field. He is the inventor of a video communications method called VEIL (video encoded invisible light). It is being considered by the U.S. Congress in the Digital Transition Content Security Act as a possible patch for the "analog hole." Bill is a member of the Advanced Video Products Group at Maxim Integrated Products (SP&C), in which he helps customers with their application challenges.
Steve Edwards, Principal Member of Technical Staff, SP&C, Maxim Integrated Products
Steve Edwards has 22 years experience in design and product marketing of video systems and ICs, and he holds 10 patents. Steve's design experience ranges from industrial video cameras to integrated circuits for consumer electronics and industrial applications. Steve is a member of the Advanced Video Products Group at Maxim Integrated Produces (SP&C), in which he defines and develops leading-edge video ICs.
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| Established in 1983, Maxim Integrated Products designs, develops, and manufactures linear and mixed-signal ICs. Its circuits connect the real world and digital world by detecting, measuring, amplifying, and converting real-world signals, such as temperature, pressure, or sound, into the digital signals necessary for computer processing. Its products are used in a variety of microprocessor-based electronics equipment, including PCs and peripherals, test equipment, handheld devices, wireless communicators, and video displays. Maxim Privacy Policy. |
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