Sony chief executive
Howard Stringer highlighted the challenges convergence
poses to his company in his keynote presentation at the
Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
"Content and technology are strange bedfellows," he said. "We are joined
together. Sometimes we misunderstand each other. But isn't that after all the
definition of marriage?"
Stringer challenged the notion that selling hardware and owning content poses
a challenge for the company, which owns record labels and a movie studio in
addition to its consumer electronics business.
The issue was brought to the forefront last December when Sony BMG created a
PR nightmare by using anti-piracy technology on its music
CDs that turned out to pose a significant security risk.
"Sony BMG did not intend to punish the consumer," Stringer said as he
apologised for the debacle.
Highlighting the need to combine technology with content, Sony lined up newly
launched products such as the new Sony Reader, a portable e-book reader.
Dan Brown's
The Da
Vinci Code will be one of the first books to be available on the Reader when
it is launched later this spring.
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