The company has unveiled its own new industrial-strength enterprise media server, the Helix Server Unlimited, for wired and wireless devices.One day after one of its biggest competitors, Macromedia Inc.,
announced its second-generation heavy-duty streaming media server, RealNetworks Inc. Wednesday unveiled its own new industrial-strength enterprise media server, the Helix Server Unlimited, for wired and wireless devices.
This latest version of the Helix server enables RealNetworks' enterprise customers the ability to deliver high-end 3rd Generation Partners Project (3GPP) content to a variety of multimedia-enabled mobile devices and handsets, the company said.
Helix Server Unlimited is Seattle, Wash.-based RealNetworks' version of the open source Helix server, a universal delivery engine that packetizes and transmits any media type to any device over a network in real time.
The 3GPP is a collaboration agreement among international data standards bodies established in December 1998. Content created under the 3GPP standardgenerally large file formats such as high-end video and audiois commonly transmitted in Europe and Asia but is relatively unknown in the United States.
The Helix Server Unlimited is the only multi-format, cross-platform enterprise streaming server on the market to deliver RealAudio, RealVideo, Windows Media, QuickTime, Mpeg-4 and 3GPP from a single server infrastructure, the company said. The server fits within existing operating system environments and supports Windows, Solaris, Linux and Unix-based operating systems for streaming.
New features include support for SNMP v3 and next-generation protocols such as IP v6, as well as improved firewall support and Helix Rate Adaptation for better utilization of network resources, RealNetworks said.
Industry analysts say the overall market for high-end streaming audio and video is expanding exponentially.
Mobile content on the handset mostly has been focused on delivery of entertainment, but for the enterprise market such as corporations, higher education institutions and government agencies, it is becoming a valuable training and educational tool, according to Research Director Richard Doherty, of Seaford, N.Y.-based Envisioneering.
"There just aren't enough classrooms for all the training that needs to be done at the enterprise and government levels," Doherty said. "For example, what do you do for the guy out at JFK [airport] who's suddenly having trouble connecting the fuel hose on the 747, even though he's been trained to do it? You can send it [new information via video] to a device right in his hands using this technology."
Read the full story on eWEEK.com: RealNetworks Unveils Streaming Media Server