DivXNetworks Gives Piracy The Boot
News DivXNetworks said Monday that it has licensed its technology, a video compression format most closely associated with the online piracy of Hollywood movies, to the Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics.
[February 6, 2002, 6:31]
Borland Software Case Study: DivXNetworks, Inc.
White Papers DivXNetworks provides a suite of software tools enabling the distribution of video over broadband IP networks. DivXNetworks deployed Borland for its solution and implemented Borland Together ControlCenter.
[July 11, 2008, 1:02]
DivX Software Delivers Movable Media
News DivXNetworks unveiled a new version of its compression technology that promises to let Internet users shrink video files on the PC to play back on a range of consumer electronics devices. Not only does DivXNetworks make one of the most popular...
[January 31, 2003, 8:17]
DivX Plots Course To Block Pirates
News Video compression provider DivXNetworks has teamed with the Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics to develop a system to protect digital video and audio from copyright violations. Both DivXNetworks and Fraunhofer have been on the other side of...
[April 5, 2002, 10:49]
AMD Athlon 64 Processor And DivX Video Lift Barriers To Home Digital Video Production
White Papers As a freelance graphic artist, Rota - the creator of DivX video software and co-founder of DivXNetworks, Inc.wanted an efficient way to showcase his portfolio of work. That is why Rota and DivXNetworks turned to AMD.
[May 20, 2004, 0:00]
News Schmooze: Of Microsoft And Meta Pads
News Another bastion of the everything-for-free-if-you-have-the-technology Internet seems to be going the way of Napster, with DivXNetworks cutting a deal with the Frankfurter Institute to bring its technology into legitimate applications sometime in...
[February 8, 2002, 12:12]
Start-up Brings PC Movies To TV
News DivX software has been downloaded 70 million times worldwide, according to its creators DivXNetworks. The explosion in the popularity of Internet file-sharing has led to thousands of PC users enjoying downloaded movies.
[November 13, 2002, 10:00]

