Showing posts with label Intel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intel. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2015

Technology and Social Paradigm Shift ─ Laser Pico Projection to Change the Way We View our World



There is paradigm shift coming and the pico projector market is estimated to reach $9.32 billion by 2020; growing at a CAGR of 39.82% from 2014 to 2020.

[Note: Think of a Paradigm Shift as a change from one way of thinking to another. It's a revolution, a transformation, a sort of metamorphosis. It just does not happen, but rather it is driven by agents of change.]

I’m sure there will be many players in the pico projection "standalone" space... like 3M with LcoS, TI with DLP, and MicroVision with Laser Beam Scanning technologies.

However, no matter how you slice-it or dice-it, MicroVision has, in my opinion, no competition in the laser based “embedded” or “standalone” pico projection space... not TI… and certainly not 3M.

MicroVision has the potential of being the “Top Dog” and the “First Mover” in the global PicoP projection market…

When investing in technology, always look for the “killer app”—yes, the software program, piece of hardware, product improvement or whatever—that makes the product stand out.

Take Internet browsers for example. Now, for a while there it took everyone some time to figure out what exactly an Internet browser was. Today, many of us can’t imagine what life was like before we had Google. These days, if you need information on any topic under the sun, you simply “Google” it! What would we ever do without Google?

When looking to buy the latest tech stock, investors [you] need to scrutinize the product and the unique ability it offers to its users. Google is a great example of a “killer app” that revolutionized the Internet.

What’s MicroVision “Killer App”?

It’s the “Disruptive Technology”; that can bring about massive shifts in “technology paradigm” and “social paradigm”.  What makes MicroVision’s PicoP display engine technology as "Killer App" in simple terms?

1.  Always in-focus image that needs no adjustment when on the move or when moving to change the projected image size… due to inherent feature of laser projection.

2.  Longer projection periods per battery charge… by switching-off the laser light source during periods of dark picture segments.

3.  Cool to the touch and no waste heat generated… due to modulating lasers as light source.

4.  Large projected images [up to 250”] in widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9.

5.  High Definition 720P images at 32 lumen brightness… with pathways to high definition images at 50 lumen or more brightness in 2015.

6.  Dramatic cost reduction [with huge profit margin improvements] as the laser light technology has matured and economies of scale are achieved in 2015.  For example, synthetic green lasers [SGLs] were priced at around $120 each… whereas the diode green lasers [with higher light energy output and efficiency] are currently priced at less than $5 in quantities.

7.  Small physical size that starts out small and gets even smaller from one generation to the next. 

8.  Social Change from the way we share information now to the way it will be shared in the future.

The PicoP display engine can be embedded in hundreds of different products representing a huge market share for entire product line-up. It has the potential of adding billions of new dollars to MicroVision—expanding what I like to call the “halo effect” from the PicoP display engine to the rest of MicroVision product line of applications that are currently under development.

Yes, investing in technology can get complicated. Many advisers compare the stock price to the company’s earnings and cash flow, and then look at earnings growth trends and the company’s debt levels in comparison to its competitors. This is some in-depth analysis for the average investor!

Well, MicroVision has very little earnings and cash flow from current sales; so you have nothing to analyze. Consider yourself in good company: Billionaire Warren Buffet doesn’t invest in technology because he doesn’t understand the fundamentals of the business. That is why he has missed out on billions of dollars in potential profits from the likes of e-bay, Google and Apple. So, if you’re waiting for revenue and current cash flow from your MicroVision investment, there is none for all analytical purposes.

But that will change in the next 2 Qtrs: when the earnings report will show $8 million in licensing fee and $14.5 million in proprietary components order [and future royalties] from SONY… and increasing sales of technology development and licensing from 10 or so Consumer Electronics giants from US, Europe and Asia Pacific region.

When it comes to emerging technology from companies with small capitalization, don’t do what Warren Buffet does. Do your own DD and then take a small position in MicroVision for its emerging technology and huge profit potential in the next 3 to 5 years.

Is MicroVision ready for prime time and worthy of your investment dollars, consider this…

In three to five years from now in 2017, the stock could easily trade in the $100 to $400 range. 

No matter how you slice-it or dice-it, MicroVision has, in my opinion, no competition in the laser based “embedded” pico projection space... not TI… and certainly not 3M.

MicroVision’s PicoP display engine could also lead the “standalone” rat pack [with its Celluon PicoAir projector for example] because of the following...

Small form factor that allows room to add additional built-in functionality. The competition starts-out big and can only get bigger.

Power consumption will always be the differentiating factor. Two to three hours of use between battery charges is always more desirable than the ones that last an hour or less. Extra power pack(s) will make the MicroVision's PicoP projector at par with competition... but there is a high probability that the user will opt for longer run on batteries. How often do you remember scrambling for a power pack when you need one?

“A wide angle view means that MicroVision PicoP projector can show a wider screen at closer distant!” This is a very important differentiation as compared to the “rest” in the market. With MicroVision PicoP projector you get…

“A wider image [60 inch from 5 feet away, for example] from a close distance… the image is brighter and sharper… colors are more vibrant… and the image is always in focus”.

Laser based PicoP projectors will always have projected image in focus… regardless of the distance [from the screen] or mobility of the projector itself. Try focusing a projector [with DLP or LcoS] every time you move [with the projector] or change the distance from the screen to change the size of the image.

MicroVision PicoP projector has better image quality [at 80,000 to 1 contrast ratio] and is sharper [per lumen] as compared to other projectors using “diffused” light sources the competition is using.  The use of diffused light source, like LEDs or lamps, causes the "torch light" effect... meaning the image is brighter in the center with darker outside.

MicroVision’s PicoP projectors can go from 12inch to 250inch image size. None of the competitor has [so far] been able to match what MicroVision is offering. We will soon find out what [else] MicroVision has to offer when Celluon PicoAir [currently at 32 lumen] comes out with 50 lumen and higher brightness.

Celluon’s PicoAir [using MicroVision PicoP display engine] was launched this January and is currently shipping… and is getting raving reviews. Competition, like 3M and TI, have their LED based Pico projectors on the market for over four years… but they are not selling too well… and their prices keep coming down almost every month.

According to the new market research report "Pico Projector Market - Forecasts to 2020", the pico projector market is estimated to reach $9.32 billion by 2020; growing at a CAGR of 39.82% from 2014 to 2020.

However, the laser based PicoP projector market is expected to grow at must faster rate CAGR of 56.95% and take-off in 2014.

Here’s an excerpt from the independent study

“The technology market entails three major types including Digital Light Processing (DLP), Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCOS), and Laser Beam Steering (LBS). Currently, the majority of pico projectors are being developed based on DLP technology, however it has been estimated that in future, pico projectors would be mostly based on laser technology. DLP accounted for a market share of 56.90% in 2014 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 31.53% between 2014 and 2020. Laser Beam Steering (LBS) is expected to grow at a CAGR of 56.95% between 2014 and 2020.”

Competition is good and will help with faster adoption of the Pico projector by the billion plus unit market. To be a huge [financial] success, MicroVision needs only a small percentage of the overall market that finally adopts the technology.

My money is “still” on MicroVision. However, I am keeping an eye on the competition… including TI, 3M and Syndiant.

For an in-depth report on “Opportunity of a Lifetime”, please click here…


Sunday, September 12, 2010

Microvision: Showcase Advances in PC Gaming Technology with Project Tuatara (Part 5)

Here’s the highlight of the news from this morning...

September 2, 2010 at 9:40 AM
By Stephen Totilo
News at Kotaku Web site

With This Gun, Your First-Person Shooters Can Surround You

“In Dallas last month I spotted a big inflatable igloo. It had been erected by a company called Microvision on the exhibition floor at QuakeCon. Inside of it, I discovered, was a man holding this gun.”

Here’s the link to the full article and make sure to watch the video…
http://kotaku.com/5627882/with-this-gun-your-first+person-shooters-can-surround-you

Here’s a very interesting observation…

“The Microvision people were getting QuakeCon attendees to line up for Project Tuatara, an experimental technology designed to be used with any mouse-and-keyboard first-person shooter.”

For this demo, they were using the released PC game Operation Flashpoint. Here is what the video from QuakeCon exhibition looks like…

http://kotaku.com/5627882/with-this-gun-your-first+person-shooters-can-surround-you

[Click the link and watch the video]

It seems to me Microvision is using the new 720P HD PicoP in this first-person shooter gun… which they call as the Controller. No wonder the video is so colorful, bright and crisp. It's much better than what we have seen before.

Here’s the product review by Dana “Dizzy” at the QuakeCon 2010 web site…

“Perhaps the most astounding in its revolutionary graphics and futuristic gaming potential is located at the Project Tuatara booth. What looked like an inflatable black igloo (as I called it to Bowl, who politely skipped over my total gaming ignorance) was actually an oasis of 3-dimensional gaming. Inside the 10-foot dome was the culmination of modern total gaming immersion. Dave Lashmet and Andrew Rosen, the men behind Operation Flashpoint, explained to us their ingenious and revolutionary game control system.”

“The controller is one of several gun models, including an FN F2000 and a TR-21. This controller is linked to a PC as an air mouse. The video feed is sent back to the gun and projected using pico HD lasers from Microvision, the backer of Project Tuatara. The background is then translated to a three-dimensional polar axis that can be projected onto any surface. Dave recommends white walls and a dark room to get the best results, but one benefit of the pico lasers is that they are always in focus.”

"Dave and Andrew have both had extensive experience playing in the last month since this project was initiated, and have been able to play over 20 different games on a series of different backdrops, including one instance when they set up white sheets on hotel room walls. Though they are hosting 3-minute trials of Lost Planet to patient gamers (there is an hour-long line), the controller can be configured to virtually any game in just a few minutes. This controller is incredible because it is a step toward actual 3-dimensional gaming. The control isn’t released yet (this is a privileged promo experience) but they hope to release a total 3-dimensional experience in the coming years, complete with surround sound and not only lateral dimensions, but 3-D glasses to enhance background depth.”

Here’s the link to Dana “Dizzy” product review of Microvision’s prototype FPS gaming gun controller…
http://quakecon.quake-live.tv/2010/08/13/project-tuatara/

Looking back a few months…

In December 2009, Microvision's PicoP Display Engine was at the Heart of Realistic Game Demo at Intel Extreme Masters Tournament

This is what Ian Brown of Microvision said at the Intel sponsored tourney at Edmonton, Alberta…

“The game application takes advantage of our PicoP display engine’s infinite focus,” Brown says. “We believe that Microvision’s technology can be used to create a new level of realism and interactive freedom for gamers. As the worldwide market for video games exceeds $50 billion, we are very excited to partner with Intel to showcase this new advance in gaming technology to the world’s best gamers at Intel Extreme Masters.”

“Intel believes that radical innovations like Microvision’s laser projection engine will continue to drive the gaming industry forward,” said George Woo, Intel Corporation’s Marketing Manager of the Intel Extreme Masters. “We are pleased to demonstrate how Microvision’s technology and the Intel® Core™ i7 processor Extreme Edition can create a new way for gamers to become immersed in the game world.”

Now you can take you gaming experience several notches up with a PicoP projector from Microvision and your gaming experience will never be the same...

“These hardcore gamers soon may be unleashed from their stationary position to enjoy a realistic virtual combat experience with life-sized video images, projected on walls, ceilings and floors, all from a weapon-styled projection game controller they hold in their hands.”

“Game players at the tourney who give the prototype a spin will experience “an immersive, 360-degree feel,” promises Ian Brown, Microvision’s Vice President of Sales and Marketing. “The company’s laser projection engine can show a distortion-free image on nearly any flat or curved surface. Consequently, the game goes along with the gamer and reflects the character’s position in three-dimensional space.”

The worldwide market for video games exceeds $50 billion.

Did I say that before?

Yep, I just wanted to make sure we register that clearly, because that is an additional market, beyond pico projection, that Microvision is addressing in collaboration with Intel... the biggest PC gamer in the world.

Anant Goel

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Microvision: Oppenheimer Initiates Coverage with Report

On December 11th, Oppenheimer initiated coverage of Microvision with a “Perform” rating and also published an analyst’s report. Oppenheimer defines their “Perform” rating as...

“Stock expected to perform in line with S&P 500 within the next 12 – 18 months.”

Here’s the link to the report...
http://f1.grp.yahoofs.com/v1/EESNSzcJ8uD09D9dXZ4dbkj52EazTqVw1puiVQ_2lTWsMdWNb1sanl73dfHwBN5t_2ecNiDX5C-N-OrS2QsH0_KtCCXb/MVIS_OPP_1209.pdf

Oppenheimer Report is Comprehensive and an Excellent Source of Raw Information:
I just went through this 27 page report on Microvision. It is full of facts, figures, assumptions, estimates and projections and is an excellent read. The report is very comprehensive and provides, in detail, the kind of information we have know for a while; but have been looking for validation all these months. The overall tone of this report is very conservative and that is to be expected from a tier one Institutional Broker/Investment Banker.

Oppenheimer Relationship with Microvision:
First, let’s look at Oppenheimer and their relationship with Microvision...

Oppenheimer is one of the Investment Bankers that assisted Microvision with secondary public financing and raised over $31 million dollars just a few days ago. I doubt they would have kept MVIS on their “potential investment candidates list” if they were not certain that MVIS has future potential. Let’s face it... there are hundreds of small cap companies out there that have zero revenues but with huge future potential. Just because Oppenheimer did the secondary funding, for a fee, it does not obligate them to provide analyst coverage... unless they were certain that the clouds [of green lasers] would clear soon and the Sun would shine upon Microvision in the next few months.

Oppenheimer Report is Based on Very Conservative Assumptions, Estimates and Projections:
Over the last few years, most analysts have gone very conservative; when it comes to small cap companies with essentially no revenues and zero income streams to work with. Analyst projections assume varying degrees of errors and look many years ahead into the future to develop their “Valuation and DCF Analysis Model”. Most analysts specialize in certain sectors and over the years they develop sector expertise and also establish working relationships with the management of companies they follow.

Oppenheimer Report is very conservative for basically two reasons...

• Pico projection market did not exist a year ago, but it is growing so rapidly that it has finally attracted analyst coverage. Obviously, it is clear that these two young analysts have no experience or expertise in the pico projection market... because it did not exist until a year ago and it is only now that companies have started to ship product in this emerging market. After reading the report, it is also obvious that Oppenheimer analysts are using their “consumer electronics” business knowledge and expertise to develop assumptions, estimates and projections for the pico projection market. This approach to analysis is not only conservative─ because consumer electronics is a mature industry─ but it is also erroneous; because it wrongly assumes that future pico projection business will model after the consumer electronics business model. This sort of thinking is naive and shows-off the shallowness of Oppenheimer analysis.

• It seems that Oppenheimer Report was developed in vacuum; as it seems to completely ignore any input from other industry experts, as well as, input from the CEO of Microvision and others. In my opinion, any estimate/projection that completely ignores the input from those that are close to pico projection industry are just one man’s opinion as against the other... like Oppenheimer analyst vs. you or me. What good are the estimates and projections that are pulled from the thin air and without any input from industry player and experts?

Microvision investors could be accused of having blind faith in their investment... but thanks to Oppenheimer analysts, now we got another blind leading the blind.

Granted, that the input from Microvision CEO and other industry player could be considered biased. And in case of Microvision, I would even go a step further and say: “Data may not be so reliable considering Alex Tokman’s recent history of waffling the green laser question(s) and the muted SHOWwx product launch.” I can also understand that the pico projection industry is so new that it is hard for the analyst community to start trusting assumptions, estimates and projections provided by others. However, developing an analysis that is based on your own consumer electronics industry background, experience and pre-conceived ideas is no better or worse than that provided by you or by me at the blog: http://www.mirro7.blogspot.com/

Given the choice, and I do have a choice, I would rather stick to my analysis based on my own assumptions, estimates and projections that are more plausible... since I have been following the pico projection industry for over four years. Some of us are invested in Microvision for over ten years. Yes, our assumptions and estimates could be considered as biased because we are so heavily invested in Microvision. However, that is just the point? Our assumptions and estimates form the basis of our DD that has resulted in investing millions of dollars in Microvision stock. We have put-up our hard earned money on the line... like putting our money where our mouth is. Talk is cheap and that’s what Oppenheimer analysts are doing... but are they willing to walk the walk or just talk the talk.

Is Oppenheimer a Double Talk Wall Street Wizard?
Well, you be the judge! I’ll just give you something to think about...

After reading Oppenheimer Report, not many would consider Microvision stock as a growth stock and worthy of speculative investment at this early stage. But only a few days ago, Oppenheimer helped to raise over $31 million dollars for Microvision in a secondary public offering. That’s interesting... don’t you think?

Some of us have been invested in MVIS stock for years and certainly have more firsthand knowledge of Microvision, pico projection technology and its potential consumer demand and adoption rates. We are not only investors but are also consumers that have tremendous interest in pico projection technology and understand the changes it will bring to infotainment, communications, collaboration, networking with friends, family and business associates.

On surface, Oppenheimer Report is ultra conservative and is based on unrealistic assumptions, estimates and projections... and displays total ignorance of the pico projection industry. If you have read my post this far, I’m sure you know the basis for my strong feelings and comments about Oppenheimer on this subject?

I agree that Microvision is no longer in the “Romance Phase” and is currently going through the “Transition Phase”. While a company, like Microvision, is going through the Transition Phase, no analyst is going to stick his neck out to risk a career or loose clients over it. The safest route for them to take is to put out a conservative report for the record... followed by informal communication with their institutional and retail clients.

Is this practice illegal or unethical?

Hell, no... It is done all the time as a standard practice. Over the last 25 years, I have traded over a billion dollars worth of stocks and options... and at one time I had Oppenheimer as my full service broker.

Keep an eye on the MVIS stock action for the next few months; while the company is still in Transition Phase. If the stock keeps moving up by a few cents here and there on very low volume... you have the confirmation that “you have been duped by the Wall Street Wizards again.”

Sooner or later, perhaps in the next four to six months, the company Microvision will get through the Transition Phase and start dealing with the reality of its fate that depends so much on the green lasers. Once the green laser issue is resolved, the company will enter the “Reality Phase” and will then start dealing with another set of issues.

These issues, like sales revenue and margins, are much easier to quantify and that’s when these analysts are expected to come-up with some realistic projections.

Oppenheimer Report Uses Erroneous Methodology for Pico Projection Market:
Pico projection market did not exist a year ago, but it is growing so rapidly that it is now starting to get analyst coverage. Obviously, it is clear that these two young analysts have no experience or expertise in the pico projection market... because it did not exist until a year ago and it is only now that companies have started to ship product in this emerging market. Oppenheimer analysts are using their “consumer electronics” business knowledge and expertise to develop assumptions, estimates and projections for the pico projection market. That is the fundamental flaw in their analysis and valuation methodology; which is modeled after an “accessory product in mature consumer electronics industry”. No wonder the assumptions, estimates and projections in their model are so absurdly conservative and have colossal margin of error... by their own admission.

The “Facts and Figures” quoted in the report are─ what they are, and I don’t have much argument with that. However, I don’t necessarily agree with many of their assumptions, estimates and projections... because they are not relevant to the pico projection industry.

My post may consists of several parts due to the very complex nature of Microvision being an investment opportunity of a lifetime with an emerging technology that will bring about a paradigm shift in the way we gather information, entertain, communicate, collaborate, and network with friends; family; and business associates. I don’t think Oppenheimer analysts have the full grasp over how the pico projection technology will evolve and the changes it is about to bring in our lives. Because, if these folks really understood the true impact and the rate of adoption of pico projection technology, they would have used more realistic numbers in their estimates and forecasts!

It is interesting that Oppenheimer analysts clearly admit the “colossal margin of error” in their assumptions, estimates and projections. It is, therefore, in my opinion, the so called facts and figures are subject to not only interpretation; but also have a monumental margin of error.

Here’s a direct quote from the report on page7...

“We take these estimates with a hefty pinch of salt, knowing that any prediction about the long-term growth trajectory of a newly emerging technology involves a colossal margin of error. That being said, the 2009 pico projector unit and growth figures provide a couple of simple but encouraging insights into the pico projector market: First, that it is already sizable and is becoming more sizeable (with retail sales approaching $43 million), and second, that it is growing very fast.”

In my opinion, their statement of “colossal margin of error” pretty much sums-it-up as the overall basis for the development of their “Exhibit 8: Summary Model”. I don’t have to read any further beyond past page 16, and waste my time evaluating their “Valuation” and “DCF Analysis”... for the simple reason; it is based on colossal margin of error.

The focus of my analysis and multi-part post will cover material only up to “Exhibit 8: Summary Model” on page 16.

Just look at Exhibit 8: Summary Model...

I honestly tell you, my ten year old son “Alan” could do a better job in coming up with more realistic estimates and projection for the picop market growth and adoption rates than these Oppenheimer analysts.

Recently, I helped Alan with his 4th grade school project report on “Cool Gadgets of Our Time”. He had 28 kids, from his class of 28, interested in buying a pico projector. To me that means huge market, exponential market growth with 100% adoption rates.

Let me be very clear...

I’m not suggesting that we use such extreme numbers like Alan’s as the basis for Oppenheimer Report by any means... but it does make the point when you look at their Summary Model projection of 875,000 SHOWwx units sold in year 2016.  How is that possible?  There are over 3.2 billion cell phone users and over 1 billion laptop owners in the world.  That's less than 0.02% adoption rate in an existing market in year 2016. Are they telling me that by 2016, only about 875,000 would buy a Microvision SHOWwx... and that’s including the high definition SHOWwx model that will be even brighter than it is today?

What are these guys [analysts] from Oppenheimer smoking?

After getting feedback from Alan on his class report, I felt guilty about giving this kid only $15 a week for his lunch money. Alan writes well, and with his analytical and presentation skills he could easily make a few hundred grand at Oppenheimer?

Having said that lets move on to the next absurdity...

Oppenheimer analyst estimates for ASP [average sale price] from FY 2010 thru FY 2016 are absurd; considering the fact that pico projection is not only a product [as in stand alone accessory unit] but it will also open-up new applications for the host, when embedded, that never existed before. Pico projectors, as standalone accessory, will drive new sales in the non-existent pico projector market and sell more of the host [and service contracts] when embedded to offer additional pico projection functionality. That’s the way most all of us expect the market for pico projection to develop... and not the other way around where the host decides “if and when” to offer embedded pico projectors. Do you really think the pico projection market is going to sit on its ass [et] and wait for the host to get-off its ass [et] to let the market have the opportunity to embrace and experience all that pico projection has to offer.

Oppenheimer Report is Shallow and Lacks Vision...

There are several paradigm shift(s) in progress and gaining momentum. Each one of these paradigm shift converges or embraces high quality pico projection in one form or the other. If you have the vision, you will see what I’m seeing already taking place...

• Wide screen HD Multi-media infotainment for one or many... in various settings; like living room, bedroom, boardroom, outdoors, and hotel room, airports, and cars and so on.

Research has shown that users prefer video communication over other forms of communication [text, sound, smell, touch] and video will continue to be the preferred means of all human communications. Research has also shown that users prefer wide screen, high definition, 2D/3D video with fast refresh [without motion blur] and always in focus images for all forms of video [static, streaming, and broadcast] communications.

• Planned one-on-one or one-to-many mobile infotainment, communications, collaboration, and networking. Mass adoption of Netbook computers, smartphones, and mobile TVs around the globe.

Users prefer mobility: The entire world [users and service providers] is getting into the instant gratification mode and going mobile in all forms of communications and entertainment across the globe.

• Impromptu one-on-one or one-to-many mobile infotainment, communications, collaboration and networking.

• Technological convergence is the tendency for different technological systems to evolve towards performing similar tasks. Today, we are surrounded by a multi-level convergent media world where all modes of communication and information are continually reforming to adapt to the enduring demands of technologies, “changing the way we create, consume, entertain, learn and interact with each other”.

Convergence in this instance is defined as the interlinking of computing and other information technologies, media content and communication networks that have arisen as the result of the evolution and ubiquity of the Internet as well as the activities, products and services that have emerged in the digital media space.

• Flexible resource utilization and sharing... like one mobile TV/projector to replace many television sets in millions of households around the globe.

• Augmented reality and its applications will become common place, bridging the gap between the physical world and the digital world... and it will continue to be one of the main thrusts of new technology developments.

“How do you define real? If you’re talking about what you can feel, smell, taste and see, then real is simply those neuroelectric signals interpreted by your brain. However, that reality just got augmented as in “augmented reality”, when the live view of the physical real-world environment whose elements are merged with (or augmented by) virtual computer-generated imagary... creating a mixed reality. The augmentation is conventionally in real time and with the help of advanced AR technology (e.g. adding computer vision and object recognition) the information about the surrounding real world of the user becomes interactive and digitally usable.

• Peak Oil and Carbon Footprint phenomenon prompting renewed efforts to conserve energy around the globe. Low energy footprint of a pico projector will be a desirable alternative... without sacrificing HD widescreen viewing experience.

• The eventual death of multiple TVs per household and the replacement for energy guzzling LCD and Plasma TVs around the globe. Energy for food coming back to take precedent over energy for entertainment in the next five to ten years.

In addition to the above paradigm shifts, there are two mega business trends that are underway that could directly or indirectly effect on how the pico projectors come to the market and these trends would certainly impact picop adoption rates...

Free Product for Service Contract: Productization, or the ability to package a solution or process into a saleable product, was once the Holy Grail of businesses. Design a better mousetrap and the world would beat a path to your door. But more and more businesses today are realizing that it is better to offer pest control as a perpetual paid service instead of selling a mousetrap as a one-time transaction. Lock the customers into predictable and legal contracts which become more profitable over the life cycle of the product.

Almost all mobile phone carriers offer a free phone in exchange for a service contract that legally binds the subscriber for two or three year service. Razor companies like Gillette offer free Razors in the hopes of selling you the blades for the rest of your life. More and more companies are adopting this business model... if and when their product lends itself to a perpetual service contact.

As this business model grows in popularity, innovative financial models will evolve, as these companies will need to make upfront capital investments and recover it from customers over many years.  This business model will embrace PicoP projection like glove to hand and could be the game changer for the first adopter.  Partnering with Microvision will be more like the partnership of champions... rather than Microvison looking for a strong OEM champion for its technology.  Its not about technology... its about consumer experience and perception of quality and value.

Vertical Integration Growth Model: For years, the big multi-national corporations that operated in multiple industries weren’t supposed to be a good idea. Stock market investors valued these companies at less than the sum of their various business divisions, for reasons ranging from lack of deep expertise across businesses, less transparency in disclosing financial numbers and extra layers of management required to steer an unwieldy ship. GE offers a real life example of the pitfalls of running too many businesses. But as GE hacks off businesses not core to what it considers its strengths — Genpact, television network NBC Universal, GE Plastics — a bunch of other new global companies are trying to become the new multi-national conglomerates.

Google, for example is now making its own servers and solar panels, acquiring content from authors and media companies, creating operating systems and programming languages and digitizing satellite and space maps for consumers. The list of businesses owned by the Indian company Tata group (India’s largest IT services company, luxury hotels, DTH television services, steel manufacturing, water purification, automobiles) would put even GE to shame. Apple, originally just a computer maker, today makes all types of consumer electronic devices, runs the world’s most successful music app (iTunes) and mobile phone application services (iPhone App Store).

Oppenheimer analysts may not realize this, but HD pico projection market in 2011 will be huge. And it will impact so many industries in so many different ways around the world; that Microvision could be the target of an acquisition by one of the multi-nationals with a vision.  We can throw a few tickets in the hat to speculate, shall we...
  • Microsoft
  • Apple
  • Cisco
  • 3M
Oppenheimer analysts lack vision in their report, or the report is just too shallow and lacks depth.

Oppenheimer Report has Colossal Margin of Error:
If you are weak at heart, and are willing to pay much higher price for MVIS, then wait for confirmation [or affirmation] by the Wall Street Wizards... in this case Oppenheimer.

If you feel comfortable and don’t mind volatility... pay some premium over the current prices and buy May 2010 Calls at 2.50 or 5 strikes.

No body said it was going to be a “cakewalk” investing in Microvision stock... especially with Oppenheimer lurking in the background.

Now, if it makes you feel any better, the Microvision story hasn’t changed... it still remains the opportunity of a lifetime. Here’s why...

• Virtually everything that needs validation has been validated and is ready to go. World’s first laser pico projector SHOWwx is in production─ even if in small quantities and some big name OEM customers have placed orders. Microvision has some big name partners that feel the laser PicoP technology and its future potential is worth their time, effort and investment to further the cause.

• The main issue currently is the green laser supply. But that will change soon... as Osram goes on-line with cheaper and simpler to manufacture SHG green laser. By mid 2010, the green laser production quantities will not be an issue and in all probability Corning will be out with its G-2000 enhanced green lasers with a time line for ramp-up to production.

After reading the Oppenheimer report, I went into the bathroom to look at my face in the mirror... just to make sure it turned red with anger and not turning blue from a heart attack. After counting to fifty and running some facts and figure in my head, I remembered that I had made a mental note to read top of page 7 again.

And that’s exactly what I did...

On top of page 7 in the Oppenheimer Report it says...

“We take these estimates with a hefty pinch of salt, knowing that any prediction about the long-term growth trajectory of a newly emerging technology involves a colossal margin of error. That being said, the 2009 pico projector unit and growth figures provide a couple of simple but encouraging insights into the pico projector market: First, that it is already sizable and is becoming more sizeable (with retail sales approaching $43 million), and second, that it is growing very fast.”

In hindsight, I wish I had paid more attention to this very paragraph and read rest of the report for entertainment purpose only and not get all worked-up and almost get a heart attack.

I don’t necessarily agree with many of their assumptions, estimates and projections; and I fully intend on discussing them in my blog.  Oppenheimer analysts clearly admit the colossal margin of error in their estimates and projections... and therefore their so called facts and figures are subject to not only interpretation... but also have a monumental margin of error.

There two observations that I would make from reading these comments about “colossal margin of error” from the Oppenheimer Report...

• Oppenheimer analysts seem to be taking a dig at Alex Tokman, Microvision CEO, and also trying to send a message by publishing such deflated projections since Alex avoided discussing the quantities of SHOWwx in any detail during the 3rd Qtr conference call. These analysts contradict and ignore AT in a couple of areas... like the initial embedded pico display engine quantities runs to be in the 1M to 5M range, guidance on profitability to come 2 Qtrs. after embedded picop launch, and embedded picop launch to come 9 to 12 months after SHOWwx launch.

Many analysts will take a very conservative posture when initiating coverage on a small cap company like Microvision. This approach gives them time to get comfortable with the management; learn the business and market opportunity; and save some ammunition for future upgrades when the next catalyst comes along. This strategy keeps them gainfully employed and in such a scenario, when they do upgrade, it will be more meaningful.

• I also think this blurb regarding Oppenheimer analyst projections from the report is very telling...

"We take these estimates with a hefty pinch of salt, knowing that any prediction about the long-term growth trajectory of a newly emerging technology involves a colossal margin of error.”

Don’t you find it interesting; the analyst statement about “colossal margin of error?”

To me it looks like they are saying...

“Take our projections with a pinch of salt because our estimates could be off by a "colossal" margin.”

Yep, you are right... I said with a smile.

Oppenheimer Makes Mockery of Companies in the Pico Projection Market:
There are may be 50 to 100 companies involved in the pico projection market. These companies have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in capital expenditures, R&D and operating costs based on their own estimates and projections over the last few years.

In the Oppenheimer Report, the estimates and projections for the picop market size and adoption rates are summarized in Exhibit 8: Summary Model. In the year 2016, they are projecting the entire SA market for 8.75 million units at $75 ASP each and the embedded market for 250 million units at $15 ASP each. I have no questions about the market size and Microvision’s market share numbers. What baffles me, however, are the unit price projections for high definition SHOWwx and embedded pico projectors... all the way from FY 2010 thru FY 2016. Projecting $75 ASP for a high definition SHOWwx and $15 ASP for a high definition embedded unit in FY 2016 is absurd... and reflects how ignorant and naive these two analysts at Oppenheimer really are.

Speak to any of the key players in the pico projection industry and you will find out first hand that these guys at Oppenheimer are pulling numbers from thin air and comparing the pico projection market [for pricing purposes] to the touch screen market for smartphones. In addition to the absurd ASP pricing model their projection methodology is also questioning the use case for embedded pico projector. By doing so, Oppenheimer is questioning the business case model of ALL the companies involved in pico projection business.

There are close to 100 companies in this space...

• MEMS mirror, DLP and LcoS panel makers
• LED and Laser light makers
• ASIC and other semiconductor makers
• Makers of beam combiners, lens makers, light engine makers etc.

How would you rate the probability that ALL these companies are wrong with their estimates and made their investments in vacuum; and that Oppenheimer analysts are right?

Not right!!!

But don’t get me wrong, we will see a lot of these companies go away in the next 2-3 years as the market will most likely consolidate... with leaders jostling for top position.

Oppenheimer Report is Grossly Wrong in their Estimates and Projection for ASPs:
First, I want you to do a side-by-side image comparison – SHOWwx vs. the Competition

That is one thing so far, what’s been missing is the side-by-side comparison of SHOWwx with what the competition has to offer?

Well, here it is finally... and ironically the source is Oppenheimer from their analyst report on Microvision...
http://myfotospace.my.funpic.de/Comparison-of-PicoP.png

When I looked at the image size and quality, my first reaction was...

• Pico projector from 3M, using LcoS technology, aroused the feelings that you would have towards a “sick dog” that needs to be put to sleep and put out of its misery. Half baked product like that gives bad name to pico projection technology. 3M is a multi-billion dollar company and I expected somewhat higher quality watermark than what you see. Rushing a product to the market before it’s time is not only bad judgment but poor marketing strategy... end of story.

• Pico projector from TI, using DLP technology, is decent and would be acceptable image quality for the right price. If TI/DLP had no competition from Microvision’s SHOWwx, then they would do just fine... like a dog that could hunt. There would still be issues of long throw ratio, limited image size, low resolution and need to re-focus every time there was a change in Image size or projector location.

• Pico projector from Microvision, using laser MEMS scanning technology, speaks for itself. It needs no words and all I’m going to say: “A picture speaks a thousand words”. To quote what Oppenheimer said in their report...

“The PicoP image has better color rendering; doesn’t require focusing; and is larger, sharper, and more uniform from center to edge.”

Microvision’s laser Pico projection technology is far superior to others out there, and has a bright future; once the green laser bottleneck issue is behind us.

When you look at the 3M/LCoS and TI/DLP pico projector images, you have to wonder that they do need a strong OEM champion for their technology. Without one, they may be left out as the stranded puppy that no one wants to own.

One the other hand, SHOWwx image size and quality, coming from such a tiny projector, arouses the sense of awe and will attract many OEMs that would want to be champions alongside of Microvision.

It’s not just about technology; it’s about what technology would eventually do for consumers... people like you and me. If Microvision SHOWwx technology arouses the sense of awe to-day, just wait another year and you will be delighted with the HD resolution of the image and the brightness of the light source.

While Microvision is all tangled-up with green laser supply issues, the two competitors can, and will, hog the feed at the trough. However, their party may not last too long... because sooner or later, the green lasers will be plentiful; and Microvision hound dog will have its muzzle removed and let go to hunt, to bully and to claim its rightful place at the head of the trough.

Now let’s talk about Oppenheimer estimates and projections for SHOWwx and embedded picop ASPs. In all honesty, if I was looking at just the 3M pico projection images, I would agree with Oppenheimer analysts wholeheartedly.

But, such is not the case.

Microvision’s laser based pico projector SHOWwx and the embedded display engine is in a class of its own.

If you were paying attention and listening to Alex Tokman, CEO of Microvision, you will remember him saying...

“Microvision Wants to be a Major Player in the Imaging Market Place”

He continued by saying...

“Laser steering projector is the bread and butter of Microvision for the foreseeable future and we are going to focus on the embedded PicoP to make the company profitable.” [Believed to be the words of Alex Tokman]

“Microvision is positioning itself thru patents and IP to be a major player in the image community. He (Alex) said: “Microvision is not going to be a small component provider that can be marginalized by bigger players.”

Alex sees the company as an INTEL type company. He is going to make the company a player in the image industry. That explains the “Image by PicoP” as the slogan chosen for the world’s first laser based PicoP projector SHOWwx.

Please read my post on…
Yes Virginia: “It’s Intel Inside… but Image by PicoP.”

Here’s the link…
http://mirro7.blogspot.com/2009/09/yes-virginia-its-intel-inside-but-image.html

Alex mentioned a few things as to why he believes the product [PicoP display engine] is going to be successful…

• Uniqueness: nobody has lasers… nobody is doing what we are doing.
• Thin Form Factor: nobody has our size and nobody can do HD images without getting bigger.
• Longer Battery life: up to 2 hours currently vs. 45 minutes for the competition.
• Infinite focus: nobody else has it.
• Larger screen experience: from 12” to 150” diagonal under certain ambient light conditions.
• Superior small font readability: we are the only one that has 8 pt readable font.
• Uniformity of brightness: Images are uniformly bright from edge to edge, unlike some other competitors.
• No rainbow effect.
• Twice the color gamut (range) of NTSC
• WVGA resolution with sharper image detail... and future Pathway to high definition and brighter laser lights.

Currently, the competition comes from two major players, TI with its DLP technology and 3M with its LcoS technology. The competition sells its second generation Pico projector for about $295 and the quality of the image from their projectors looks like the picture on the left side. Microvision’s PicoP projector SHOWwx, on the other hand, projects its image better than the one on the right side.

http://myfotospace.my.funpic.de/Comparison-of-PicoP.png

If $295 was assumed as the average price for the baseline model and functionality [in-line with what the competition is asking], then Microvision could [and should] charge $495 for not only the better quality and vivid images but also some very interesting and differentiating features…

• Always-in-focus on any projected surface [projecting on curved surfaces or from an angel on flat surfaces]
• Short throw ratio 1:1 [bigger picture from short distance]
• Stunningly colorful, bright, vivid and detailed images [200% NTSC]
• Large images size [from 20” to 200” diagonal ]
• Higher image resolution (848×480) with HD pathway in future models
• Unmatched small font readability [size 8 font]
• Wide aspect ratio 16:9 [for wide screen experience]
• Fast refresh [60 Hz] to prevent motion blur when watching sports or action videos and movies
• High contrast ratio 5000:1
• Easy and simple plug and play. Single connector for TV-out [composite], VGA [RGB] and 3.5mm stereo jack─ audio pass through
• Low power and longer battery life. Movie capable battery life when fully charged. Charges via Micro-USB
• Extended warranty service… why not with all that MEMS reliability and exceeding drop test performance
• Ready for in-bed watching videos and movies on the ceiling
• All cables and leather case included
• Trade-in offer [worth $100 in exchange value] for any future PicoP projector purchase.

All these features are inherent in the laser based PicoP projector SHOWwx and the pico display engine; and they don’t really cost anything extra but they allow you to monetize the superior product functionality that Microvision offers.

There is no reason for Microvision to give it away for free…

Oppenheimer analyst estimates and projections assume pico projection business to model like the consumer electronics business model [much like the touch screen accessory for the smartphones] and that is grossly wrong. It’s not going to happen that way... no matter how Oppenheimer analysts qualify their half baked numbers by stating “Colossal Margin of Error” on page 7 of the report.

If someone wants to believe Oppenheimer analyst estimates and projections for ASPs, then let them...

Because buying SA at $75 or embedded at $15 is not going to happen... now or later.

If it does happen, then in all probability the buyer is buying some Chinese crap... only cheaper.

In closing, I highly recommend that you read Oppenheimer Report from page to page.

When you are done reading... file it under “Entertainment” and wait for the next upgrade... because that Report will be more meaning full than this half baked cookie dough.

Anant Goel
http://www.wealthbyoptions.com/

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Microvision: Partners with Intel to Showcase Advances in PC Gaming Technology (Part 4)

Looks like Ben Averch is back in Seattle after spending the last week in Edmonton, the second coldest city on Earth (Siberia being the first).

This is what he had to say...

“It was a thrill to be able to demonstrate our new gaming technology for the very first time to hundreds of gamers as well as many just plain curious folks. Two MVIS reps (myself and weapon master Andrew Rosen) + about 800 demos over 3 days = exhaustion! But, I’m happy to say that the response we got was tremendous, the Intel folks were terrific, and a lot of fun was had by all (as you can see from the picture!).”

Here’s the link to the picture in question...
http://www.microvision.com/displayground/?p=1291#respond

What’s more ineresting are the reviews...

Microvision’s Super Gun
December 15, 2009 by Adam R.

This past Friday it was my job to play press monkey for the Intel sponsored ESL North American Championship, and ironically, the most exciting story didn’t seem to be the gaming itself, but the tech demo from Microvision which just so happened to be making it’s worldwide debut to the public.

What Microvision specializes in, firstly, is portable video projectors. What separates Microvision’s own SHOW WX against other models, is that it uses laser lights, allowing for the most vivid colour and contrast available thus far in the pico projector market. The SHOW WX projects in a widescreen format with a resolution of 848×480 with a 60Hz refresh rate. While it isn’t a perfect solution for replacing your home HD TV, it very well could be in the years to come.

A pico projector is exciting, especially if you happen to be a gadget nut, but the reason Microvision is causing a buzz in the tech market right now is because of their recent teamwork with Intel.

This is a gaming website, and as such, your first instinct should have been “How well does this play games?” Well, I can honestly tell you that it is nothing like you imagined. Because of the money and technology afforded to them by their partnership with Intel, Microvision is attempting to take PC gaming to the next level by possibly creating a platform to rival Microsoft’s own interactive gaming environment, with Project Natal.

Running on a superpowered Intel i7 PC, was Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising, developed and published by Codemasters. The interesting thing though, was that the demonstrator was not playing with a keyboard, nor a joypad. He was using a big, heavy gun, outfitted internally with accelerometers and other various do-dad’s one would expect to find in an iPod Touch or iPhone, plus one of their SHOW WX devices mounted where the targeting reticule would normally be positioned.

What the demo showed us was future-tech that Microvision and Intel are trying frantically to bring home to the consumer: the ultimate in gaming interactivity.

If you moved the gun left, your character could move his head left in the same fashion he would if controlled by a mouse or analog stick; the key difference being that the screen you were facing would also move, of course, because of the projector strapped on to it. So as your gun moves, so does the projection, as well as the camera angle/field of view in-game. While difficult to describe positively in written word, it isn’t as annoying as it sounds, and if anything, if several tweaks are made to the service, could easily be the most realistic way to play games from here on out.

What Microvision is trying to accomplish, is an entirely immersive experience. Through the use of, and the PR person stressed, superior software to what is available in Nintendo Wii and in the iPhone, gamers will be able to command total control via a highly precise natural evolution in hardware. While the iPhone’s accelerometer software suffers from a slow processor and a cramped living compartment, Microvision’s prototype hardware is concealed in a large, life-sized assault rifle powered by what you would find in your average high-end gaming computer. That is a large boost of power compared to what either of the nearest competitors are able to do so far.

You’ll want to play games standing up. Crouching and jumping were, as of this demo, mapped to buttons, but ideally, you’d assume Microvision would want to map them to motions involved with the accelerometers. You duck in real life, the character you’re playing as does the same thing.

For walking back and fourth there were two highly responsive buttons placed below the rifle’s barrel. While this placement seemed satisfactory, the rep admitted that they were trying to improve this attribute somehow.

Official Microvision Video [Link]

The device was currently wired to the PC running the game, but it was suggested that wireless was going to be a feature added later.

For all intents and purposes, I think the PC gaming world has every right to be excited about this device and the future capabilities it may bring to the fold. While obviously marketed to a hardcore and niche market, let’s face it; that is exactly what PC gaming is all about these days. I am excited about what Project Natal might end up bringing to the table for first person shooters, but honestly, this tech demo left me drooling.

*****
Here’s the link to Critical Gamer’s review...
http://www.criticalgamer.co.uk/2009/12/15/microvisions-super-gun/

What got me excited was the refrence to Microsoft “Project Natel” in the comments made by the Critical Gamer’s Review...

“…Microvision is attempting to take PC gaming to the next level by possibly creating a platform to rival Microsoft’s own interactive gaming environment, with Project Natal.”

My first reaction was: “Why create a platform to rival Microsoft... join them to make Project Natal a true hands free control and interactivity reality by incorporating the laser scanner/projection features of the Microvision’s PicoP display engine.”

Here’s some information on Project Natel...

Project Natal is the code name for a "controller-free gaming and entertainment experience" by Microsoft for the Xbox 360 video game platform. Based on an add-on periheral for the Xbox 360 console, Project Natal enables users to control and interact with the Xbox 360 without the need to touch a game controller through a natural user interface using gestures, spoken commands or presented objects and images. The project is aimed at broadening the Xbox 360's audience beyond its typically harcore base. Project Natal was first announced on June 1, 2009. Microsoft said that over a thousand software development kits began shipping to game developers that same day.

Though Microsoft has not officially announced any price or release date projections for Project Natal, it is expected to be released in late 2010. Project Natal will reportedly also serve as the basis for a "new" Xbox 360.

In closing I must re-state the comments from Critical Gamer’s review...

“For all intents and purposes, I think the PC gaming world has every right to be excited about this device and the future capabilities it may bring to the fold. While obviously marketed to a hardcore and niche market, let’s face it; that is exactly what PC gaming is all about these days. I am excited about what Project Natal might end up bringing to the table for first person shooters, but honestly, this tech demo left me drooling.”

Here’s the napkin bud... drooling not allowed while reading this post!

Anant Goel
http://www.wealthbyoptions.com/

Monday, December 14, 2009

Microvision: Partners with Intel to Showcase Advances in PC Gaming Technology (Part 3)

This is what Ben Averch of Microvision said in his post at Microvision blog The Displayland....

“As you can see from the video above, Microvision has designed a unique handheld first-person shooter projection game controller prototype that uses the PicoP display engine to project images on any surface. Using the infinite focus capability of the PicoP display engine, combined with a motion sensing module, it’s now possible to play video games on multiple surfaces, all while tracking your character’s point of view in 3D space.”

Here’s the link...
http://www.microvision.com/displayground/?p=1277#more-1277

First of all, it is important to note that the worldwide market for video games exceeds $50 billion and Microvision is addressing, to start with, the first-person shooter game sub-genre.

There are several video game genres (vague categories) based on their gameplay interaction rather than visual or narrative differences. A video game genre is defined by a set of gameplay challenges. They are classified independent of their setting or game-world content. For example, an action game is still an action game, regardless of whether it takes place in a fantasy world or outer space.

Here’s a list of video game genres...
1. Action Games
2. Action-adventure Games
3. Aventure Games
4. Role-playing Games
5. Simulation Games
6. Sports Games
7. Strategy Games
8. 3D Interactive Projection Games?????

A shooter game [an Action Game genre] focuses primarily on combat involving projectile weapons, such as guns and missiles. They can be divided into first-person and third-person shooters, depending on the camera perspective.

First-person shooter (FPS) is a video game genre which centers the gameplay around gun - and projectile weapon- based combat through the first person persoective; i.e., the player experiences the action through the eyes of a protagonist [the player]. Generally speaking, the first-person shooter shares common traits with other shooter games, which in turn fall under the heading Action Games.

From the Action Game genre's inception, advanced 3D or pseudo-3D graphics elements have challenged hardware development. But that may change soon, with the arrival of always-in-focus pico “projection game controller” from Microvision.

Ben goes-on further to say...

“At Intel Extreme Masters, we’ll be putting this prototype projection game controller into the hands of some of the world’s best gamers, playing the ultra-realistic combat simulation PC game “Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising”. We think the PicoP gaming application is an exciting new way to take first-person shooter games to the next level of interactivity and immersion, and it will be great to hear first hand what championship-level gamers think about it.”

Like most shooter games, first person shooters involve an avatar [alter ego], one or more ranged weapon, and a varying number of enemies. Because they take place in a 3D environment, these games tend to be somewhat more realistic than 2D shooter games, and have more accurate representations of gravity, lighting, sound and collisions. First person shooters played on personal computers are most often controlled with a combination of a keyboard and mouse. This system is often considered superior to that found in console games, which frequently use two analog sticks, one used for running and sidestepping, the other for looking and aiming. It is common to display the character's hands and weaponry in the main view, with a head up disply showing health, ammunition and location details. Often, it is possible to overlay a map of the surrounding area.

But all that is about to change; with the introduction of Microvision’s projection game controller...

Here’s the news...

Microvision Demo’s Projection Game Controller

http://www.techgadgets.in/gaming/2009/12/microvision-demos-projection-game-controller/
[Link may not work]

At the end of the article, it says...

“The projector game controller may unleash a new genre of gaming”

Keep an eye on the history books; Microvision is on its way to write the next few pages of the future. Here’s the link to The History of Computer Games...

http://www.statemaster.com/encyclopedia/History-of-computer-games#The_2000s

In closing, I must re-state...

“Microvision’s weapon-styled projection game controller will offer gamers an insight of a new technology that projects a follow-you-anywhere video image upto 200-inch via a handheld game controller.”

Interestingly, you don’t need green lasers to produce the first generation of “projection game controllers”.

Ready, set, go... let the games begin!

Anant Goel
http://www.wealthbyoptions.com/

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Microvision: Partners with Intel to Showcase Advances in PC Gaming Technology

Here’s the highlight of the news from this morning...

“The game application takes advantage of our PicoP display engine’s infinite focus,” Brown says. “We believe that Microvision’s technology can be used to create a new level of realism and interactive freedom for gamers. As the worldwide market for video games exceeds $50 billion, we are very excited to partner with Intel to showcase this new advance in gaming technology to the world’s best gamers at Intel Extreme Masters.”

“Intel believes that radical innovations like Microvision’s laser projection engine will continue to drive the gaming industry forward,” said George Woo, Intel Corporation’s Marketing Manager of the Intel Extreme Masters. “We are pleased to demonstrate how Microvision’s technology and the Intel® Core™ i7 processor Extreme Edition can create a new way for gamers to become immersed in the game world.”

Here’s the full news and the link...

Microvision's PicoP Display Engine at Heart of Realistic Game Demo at Intel Extreme Masters Tournament
Press Release

Source: Microvision, Inc.
On 9:01 am EST, Thursday December 10, 2009

EDMONTON, Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Players of first-person shooter computer games traditionally play while seated with a keyboard, mouse, and fixed monitor.

However, these hardcore gamers soon may be unleashed from their stationary position to enjoy a realistic virtual combat experience with life-sized video images, projected on walls, ceilings and floors, all from a weapon-styled projection game controller they hold in their hands.

Among the first consumers to try a prototype of such a product will be the players and spectators attending the Intel® Extreme Masters PC gaming tournament in Edmonton, Alberta on Friday, Dec. 11 through Sunday, Dec. 13. Intel Corp., sponsor of the event, has invited laser display technology supplier Microvision, Inc. (NASDAQ: MVIS - News), of Redmond, Wash., to give gamers a first look at a new technology that projects a follow-you-anywhere video image – up to 200 inches across – from a handheld game controller.

Game players at the tourney who give the prototype a spin will experience “an immersive, 360-degree feel,” promises Ian Brown, Microvision’s Vice President of Sales and Marketing. “The company’s laser projection engine can show a distortion-free image on nearly any flat or curved surface. Consequently, the game goes along with the gamer and reflects the character’s position in three-dimensional space.”

It’s no coincidence that Microvision also happens to be a main mover behind the emerging consumer-electronics product category known as “pico projectors.” In September, the company started shipping its first SHOWWX™ laser pico projectors – based on its PicoP® display engine – to customers in the Asia Pacific region and Europe. But the game tournament demo in Canada will show off the versatility of Microvision’s PicoP display engine beyond the streaming movies, music videos, camera-phone snapshots and business presentations which are the media most likely to be shown with pico projectors.

“The game application takes advantage of our PicoP display engine’s infinite focus,” Brown says. “We believe that Microvision’s technology can be used to create a new level of realism and interactive freedom for gamers. As the worldwide market for video games exceeds $50 billion, we are very excited to partner with Intel to showcase this new advance in gaming technology to the world’s best gamers at Intel Extreme Masters.”

“Intel believes that radical innovations like Microvision’s laser projection engine will continue to drive the gaming industry forward,” said George Woo, Intel Corporation’s Marketing Manager of the Intel Extreme Masters. “We are pleased to demonstrate how Microvision’s technology and the Intel® Core™ i7 processor Extreme Edition can create a new way for gamers to become immersed in the game world.”

Continues...
*****
Here’s the link...
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Microvisions-PicoP-Display-bw-4103685549.html?x=0&.v=1

Intel Extreme Masters Tournament is sponsored by Intel as part of their marketing campaign and are held around the world.

Nine Live Events on Three Continents

Whether you’re a pro gamer or you just want to see top clans in action, the best─ and often the only ─ opportunity to do so is to visit one of the growing numbers of competitive games events around the world. Intel sponsors top clans and events to help raise the bar of competitive gaming.

Here’s the link to Intel Events...
http://game-on.intel.com/eng/events/masters/default.aspx

Long before blogs were around, PC gamers had developed their own 'community' and for those of you who enjoy PC gaming - you can relate to this experience!

I’m sure most of you started your PC gaming experience way back in the early '80s... using an old Apple ][+ with 48k of RAM, and perhaps still remember freaking out your parents when you started upgrading by pulling chips and installing joysticks, adding a memory board (woo-hoo up to 64k!), and writing some BASIC programs making all sorts of noises and graphics on the computer.

After getting frustrated with clunky 300 baud modem you upgraded to a 1200 baud modem which really opened things up into a whole different realm... Bulletin Board Systems (BBS)! Computer users were on these systems - communicating, sharing, distributing and overall - forming an online community! Remember Compuserve? Prodigy? AOL? So what has changed?

First and foremost, your "gaming rig" is now MUCH more potent at delivering the experience─ via multi-core Intel Core 2 Quad Processor, Intel Solid-State Harddrive, awesome graphics card, and a large 24-inch monitor to present it all to you over a fast broadband Internet connection.

Now you can take you gaming experience several notches up with a PicoP projector from Microvision and your gaming experience will never be the same...

“These hardcore gamers soon may be unleashed from their stationary position to enjoy a realistic virtual combat experience with life-sized video images, projected on walls, ceilings and floors, all from a weapon-styled projection game controller they hold in their hands.”

“Game players at the tourney who give the prototype a spin will experience “an immersive, 360-degree feel,” promises Ian Brown, Microvision’s Vice President of Sales and Marketing. “The company’s laser projection engine can show a distortion-free image on nearly any flat or curved surface. Consequently, the game goes along with the gamer and reflects the character’s position in three-dimensional space.”

The worldwide market for video games exceeds $50 billion.

Did I say that before?

Yep, I just wanted to make sure we register that clearly, because that is an additional market, beyond pico projection, that Microvision is addressing in collaboration with Intel... the biggest PC gamer in the world.

Anant Goel
http://www.wealthbyoptions.com/

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Microvision: Protect Your Intellectual Property Part 3

I hope you read part 1 and part 2 on the subject of “Microvision: Protect Your Intellectual Property”. If not, here’s the link to those two posts…

http://mirro7.blogspot.com/2009_09_01_archive.html

Part 3 is all about communicating the observations that some folks [besides me] have made over the last few months and most recently at the Annual Stockholders Meeting [ASM] on September 15th.

Microvision Wants to be Major Player in the Imaging Market Place:

“Laser steering projector is the bread and butter of Microvision for the foreseeable future and we are going to focus on the embedded PicoP to make the company profitable.” … Believed to be the words of Alex Tokman, CEO of Microvision, at the Annual Shareholders Meeting!

“Microvision is positioning itself thru patents and IP to be a major player in the image community. He (Alex) said: “Microvision is not going to be a small component provider that can be marginalized by bigger players.”

Alex sees Microvision as an INTEL type company. He is going to make the company a major player in the image industry. That may very well explain the “Image by PicoP” as the slogan chosen for the world’s first laser based PicoP projector SHOWwx. Please read my post on…

Yes Virginia: “It’s Intel Inside… but Image by PicoP.”
Here’s the link…

http://mirro7.blogspot.com/2009/09/yes-virginia-its-intel-inside-but-image.html

In my humble opinion, Alex Tokman is set on a course to turn Microvision not only like an Intel… but also Qualcomm at the same time.

Here’s why…

First, the observations we have made over the last few months…

“The slides on patents and IP at the ASM were probably the most interesting of all the slides in the presentation.  We have seen earlier versions of these back in May 2009.  These slides showed a marked increase in patent filings by the company after Alex Tokman took over as CEO.  However, now there also seems to be a renewed and significant emphasis on bigger picture kinds of claims regarding things like applications.  Most all of the early patents were about hardware and how you make the hardware work... and it is those patents that got Microvision on the IEEE Spectrum and Wall Street Journal [The Patent Board] list.”

So, why this emphasis on “bigger picture” kinds of claims including things like “applications”?

I think the answer lies in the CEO’s head and from time to time is reflected in his actions and statements.  I won’t be surprised to see more patents coming out of Microvision that also cover services and applications… besides the PicoP display engine hardware. It is possible that in the future, Microvision business model may resemble, in some ways, that of Qualcomm.  Qualcomm business model consists of “chip sales” along with the sale of “Intellectual Property Rights” for innovative Applications and Services to the wireless companies.
• Alex Tokman sees Microvision as an Intel type company

• We will [not] get marginalized by bigger OEM players that we may some day call customers
• Choice of marketing slogan like: “Image by PicoP”
• Bigger picture claims that include “applications” of PicoP in their hardware type patent applications
• Early development of PicoP Evaluation Kit [PEK]
• Aggressive marketing [and sales] of PEK for a broader applications Value Added Resellers.
Eventually, in my opinion, Microvision may not only be selling PicoP display engines and associated components… but also selling “Intellectual Property Rights” to innovative Applications and Services built around their PicoP display technology.  That’s one sure way of [not] getting marginalized by bigger OEM players that it may some day call customers… like Apple, Motorola, Sony, Nokia and so on.

I have known about Alex Tokman for many years before he came to Microvision. However, the news about Alexander Tokman coming on board as the new President and COO of Microvision caught my attention, and subsequent interest in Microvision, as I have known of him from his days at GE. What Tokman did at GE was quite remarkable.

“Alexander Tokman joined Microvision in July 2005 as a President and COO.  Tokman was responsible for managing Microvision’s operations, including sales, marketing, research and development, and supply chain. He was named President and CEO in January 2006. Tokman, a 10+ year GE executive, joined Microvision from GE Healthcare, where most recently he served as General Manager of Global Molecular Imaging & Radiopharmacy—a self-contained, global multi-technology business unit. Over the past five years at GE Tokman defined, developed, and successfully commercialized several new technology businesses including PET/CT, which added $500M+ of organic top line growth to the company within the first three years of its commercial introduction.”

Having said that, and knowing what little I know about Alex Tokman, I can confidently say that he has the vision to see the huge potential Microvision’s PicoP display engine [laser-scanning 1 MEMS] technology offers as the leader of the pack.

That’s right, leader of the pack!!!

Here’s why…

“…in view of the limitations and image quality issues associated with current Pico display technologies being offered or being pursued by others.”

TI is stuck with DLP technology, 3M is pushing Color Filter LcoS technology, Syndiant is working with light panels on LcoS technology, Expaly is working with laser based LcoS technology, Micron Displaytech is working with FLCOS technology, bTendo [2006 start-up] is working with laser-scanning 2MEMS technology , and Maradin [2007 start-up] is working with laser-scanning 1 MEMS technology.

The only two Pico display technologies on the market to-day are: DLP by TI and LcoS by 3M… the rest of the rat pack are still “working” on their R&D.  While there are some interim Pico projectors based on technology such as color filter LCOS [ 3M technology] and DLP [TI technology] that were in a position to get to market earlier… but they have major drawbacks in fulfilling the size, power, image quality, resolution and always in focus requirements of the market, particularly for embedded devices. We are already seeing color filter LcoS products being designed out in favor of field sequential LcoS and many former “DLP-only design houses” also have field sequential LcoS designs underway.

Syndiant [2004 start-up] talks “big game”, at their website, about light modulating panels that use Field Sequential LcoS [FSLCOS] to provide a very high resolution display that will be always be in focus when RGB lasers are used as the light source.  Currently, however, they use, so they claim, LEDs as the light source. It is interesting to note that Syndiant Pico projectors are not on sale yet and we haven’t seen any of their projector demos at any of the trade shows thus far. 

"In summary, if we are to believe everything that we read at Syndiant’s website, then all the competition, including Microvision, should pack-it-in… because Syndiant’s technology is so much superior and costs so much cheaper."

However, before we recommend that competition to Syndiant, including Microvision, should pack-it-in and move-on to some other un-charted technology frontier… we should look at the Intellectual Property of Syndiant that they should have, really, to protect such a valuable technology.  Our patent search found the following…

• Syndiant: No Patents found

However, Syndiant claims, at their website, to have four (4) patents.   In reality, it seems they may have only one patent issued in four different countries... the United States, United Kingdom, Hong Kong and Australia.

“Syndiant has achieved four patents in the United States, United Kingdom, Hong Kong and Australia relating to the digital backplane and various methods, systems and devices for controlling a digital backplane, light modulating elements and spatial light modulators. Syndiant has a number of other patents pending.”

Here’s the link…
http://www.syndiant.com/tech_faqs.html

• Microvision (1 MEMS): 557 Patents (among those are a massive amount of World Patents and European Patents).  Patent search shows 557 patents [World Patents] for Microvision. That number is rather too high… may be due to other “Microvision” named companies that got wrapped-in the search. The latest number of issued patents is like 115 plus many more on file.

• Maradin (1 MEMS): 2 Patents (World Patents included)

• bTendo (2 MEMS): 2 Patents (World Patents included)

• Micron Displaytech (FLCOS): 144 Patents (World Patents included)

• Explay (LCOS): 29 Patents (World Patents included)

• 3M (LCOS): Very large number among hundreds of Patents

• Texas Instruments (DLP): Very large number among hundreds of Patents

• Light Blue Optics (Holographic Laser Projection): 59 Patents (World Patents included). They're using Micron/Displaytech FLCOS technology.

Now you be the judge!  All that wonderfull Syndiant technology with everything "superior" and basically "no" patents?

In any case, Pico projector for mobile devices will be a huge market.  All Microvision needs, to become a huge financial success is a small percentage of the overall market adoption rate.  In my humble opinion, Alex Tokman is set on a course to turn Microvision not like an Intel… but also Qualcomm at the same time.

Here’s another reason why…

Microvision has been at it for over 14 years and has spent close to $250 million dollars to-date on Research and Development of its single MEMS laser-scanning PicoP technology in one form or the other.  Along the way, I am sure, it has explored the dual MEMS and multitude of different combinations that come to mind. Some of these alternative technologies, I’m sure deserved ample lab time before being put on the back-burner… while others were explored and discarded without even making it to the lab.

Alex Tokman mentioned a few things as to why he believes that Microvision’s PicoP display engine is going to be successful…

• Uniqueness: nobody has lasers… nobody is doing what we are doing.

• Thin Form Factor: nobody has our size and nobody can do HD images without getting bigger.

• Longer Battery life: up to 2 hours currently vs. 45 minutes for the competition.

• Infinite focus: nobody else has it.

• Larger screen experience: from 12” to 150” diagonal under certain ambient light conditions.

• Superior small font readability: we are the only one that has 8 pt readable fonts.

• Uniformity of brightness: Images are uniformly bright from edge to edge, unlike some other competitors.

• No rainbow effect and virtually no speckle.

• Twice the color gamut (range) of NTSC

• WVGA resolution with sharper image detail and fast refresh rate

Corning and Osram [the two supply chain partners] are not only improving the laser light technology, but performance and price as well.  The next generation of Green Laser [Corning GL-2000] and Microvision PicoP display engine will bear this out.

“With the enormous size of the future Pico projector market [in terms of units & dollars] the financial rewards will certainly attract deep pocketed competitors that will infringe [and engage in unscrupulous deeds] to test your resolve, create distraction, put financial burden of litigation… all in the hopes of extracting a cheap, if not free, licensing agreement from Microvision.”

With that in mind, the questions to ask are…

• How well Microvision is prepared and how it plans to fend-off infringement to its Intellectual Property in the future… for the sake of its future?

• How serious Microvision is in not only selling PicoP display engines and associated components… but also selling “Intellectual Property Rights” to innovative Applications and Services built around their PicoP display technology?

• How strongly Microvision CEO believes in his own statement about [not] getting marginalized by bigger OEM players that it may some day call customers… like Apple, Motorola, Sony, Nokia and so on.

The availability and quality of green lasers will be crucial not only to the viability of Microvision’s PicoP display technology… but also to its financial success as a growth company.  The most recent news about green lasers only reinforces my belief that Microvision will be a huge financial success…

Japan's QD Laser has developed a compact green laser that could energize the market for high-definition micro projectors.
Martyn Williams, IDG News Service
Saturday, October 10, 2009 06:00 PM PDT

Here’s the link to the news article…

http://www.pcworld.com/article/173455/green_laser_developed_for_microprojectors.html

What’s so significant about this news is…

“QD Laser is planning mass production next year and the laser should cost around US$10, said Mitsuru Sugawara, the company's president and CEO, during an interview at Ceatec. That will make it significantly cheaper than the only other competitor on the market, a micro green laser from Corning, according to Sugawara.”

Famous Paul Masson once said: “We will sell no wine before its time.”

This slogan applies very well to Microvision’s lauch of the world’s first laser PicoP projector SHOWwx on September 15th, 2009.

And the good thing is: “It only gets better with time.”

Anant Goel

http://www.wealthbyoptions.com/