Touting what he called "seamless computing," Gates said in his keynote speech that Microsoft wants "to make it easy to have the same information on the devices you have at work and the devices you have at home."
Gates also previewed new products based on the new technology for attendees at CES, an increasingly important venue for Microsoft and other technology giants to tout their consumer strategies.
Dubbed Windows Media Center Extender, the technology will allow TVs and other devices to display content from PCs equipped with Windows Media Center software.
Media Center is a version of the PC operating system tweaked for handling digital media and entertainment tasks. The software, only available preinstalled on new PCs configured for entertainment tasks, allows consumers to use a remote control to navigate music files, digital photos and other media stored on the PC. Despite support from most major PC makers, sales have been slow to take off, due partly to the high cost of most Media Center PCs.
Devices such as handheld video players and set-top boxes built on Media Center Extender technology will tap into a home network to serve as a bridge between a PC and other devices. The first such products, set for release late this year, will be television set-top boxes that display photos, video clips and other media files stored on a central PC.
Microsoft also plans to create a kit that will allow its Xbox video game to perform similar functions. The additional feature, which comes on the heels of a karaoke add-on for the Xbox, fulfills long-held expectations that Microsoft would attempt to bridge the Xbox and PCs and ranks as a major step in the trend of game consoles acting as convergence devices that can handle a variety of digital media tasks.
Gates also provided deeper looks at a number of consumer technologies announced previously, including several items from last year's CES. "Smart watches" based on Smart Personal Objects Technology were the hit of last year's CES and are now ready for your wrist.
Gates demonstrated SPOT-based watches from Fossil and Suunto, all set to go on sale this week, and showed how they retrieve weather forecasts, calendar appointments and other data from MSN Direct, a new wireless data service run as part of Microsoft's Internet services arm.
Gates also unveiled MSN Premium, a new version of the Internet service aimed at people with high-speed broadband connections. The service will focus on streaming video and other media content, such as recaps of NBC's "The Tonight Show." Host Jay Leno was on-hand to promote the service.
"Bill and I go way back because we introduced Windows 95 together," Leno said. "Who would have guess back then this computer thing would catch on."
Also making a return appearance from last year's CES was the Portable Media Center (formerly named Media2Go), Microsoft's design for a small portable device that plays movies, music and other digital content. Creative Technology plans to have the first Portable Media Center device on the market in the second quarter of this year, with other manufacturers entering shortly thereafter.
Gates also showed the new version 1.5 of TV Foundation, Microsoft's software for cable TV operators, to offer advanced services such as video on demand. The update includes enhanced support for high-definition TV display and revamped programming guides.












Microsoft PC-TV is dead in the water, and here's why.
All of the major Japanese TV manufacturers have collectively decided to base their future intelligent TV designs around Linux. Where, Sony, Matsushita (NEC, Panasonic), Toshiba, Hitachi, IBM, Philips Electronics, Samsung and Sharp. & Co. go, the world will follow
http://www.eetimes.com/sys/news/OEG20021218S0019
Good try Bill, but when you move beyond your desktop monopoly, you are treading in deep water which you don't own and in which there are bigger sharks than you.