Free
Message: REASON DM FOUND AVID TECHNOLOGY AS INFRINGER

Sep 20, 2008 07:46PM

Sep 20, 2008 07:51PM

Sep 20, 2008 08:01PM

Sep 20, 2008 08:17PM
1
Sep 20, 2008 08:23PM

Sep 20, 2008 08:43PM

REASON DM FOUND AVID TECHNOLOGY AS INFRINGER

posted on Sep 21, 2008 07:47PM

Avid Technology acquires M-Audio

by Peter Cohen, MacCentral

Aug 13, 2004 12:00 am

Avid Technology Inc. on Friday announced plans to acquire Midiman Inc., doing business as M-Audio. The deal is valued at US$80 million in cash plus two million shares of Avid common stock and the assumption of all outstanding M-Audio stock options, worth approximately another 325,000 shares of Avid stock.

Avid Technology Inc. is best known for their development and manufacture of video editing hardware and software, but the company also owns Digidesign, a maker of professional digital audio production systems used in music, broadcast, multimedia and film, and SoftImage, a developer of professional-grade 3D animation, 2D cel animation, compositing and special effects software. M-Audio manufactures audio hardware and develops audio software for professional and consumer markets in both the Mac and PC space.

Avid indicated that M-Audio will become a business unit of Digidesign, where it will continue to market its line of peripherals, sound cards, keyboard controllers and other products alongside Digidesign's own. Avid President and CEO David Krall said that the acquisition will help his company bolster its investment in the home studio market segment, which he called "the fastest growing portion of our audio business, where we achieved roughly 40 percent year-over-year growth in Q2 of 2004."

















M

M-Audio Microtrack



-Audio Microtrack

















The MicroTrack is one of the older models of affordable flash-based recorders, announced back in August of 2005, when I first started this podcast. It is about the size of a cellphone and weighs about the same. It can record WAV audio files at 16 or 24-bit resolution and at 44.1, 48, 88.2, or 96 kHz sampling rates. MP3 files can be recorded anywhere from 96 to 320 kbps. Files are stored on a removable Compact Flash card, which ships with the unit. Files can then be copied to a Mac or PC via USB, when you plug it into your computer with the included cable.

The USB cable can also plug into the included AC plug, doubling as a power cable allowing you to charge the unit or run it when its built-in battery runs low. The battery itself is built into the unit and is not removable.


Sep 21, 2008 09:47PM

Sep 21, 2008 09:52PM
11
Sep 21, 2008 10:21PM
Share
New Message
Please login to post a reply