The first product, the Digital Audio Workstation Nucleus (DAWN),[2][3] was an editing device for dialog replacement and effects/ADR Foley.
One of the features that set Doremi's DAWN apart is its ability to play 8 high quality audio tracks from a single hard disk.
The product built a faithful following owing to its friendly user interface which emulates existing paper based workflow.
Doremi decided that rather than change customer habits, it will design a tapeless disk recorder which will emulate as close as possible existing VCRs in use.
The success of the experiment convinced the studio that the technology was now readily available to migrate movie playback from 35mm film to digital.
Universal Studios gave Doremi and Fotokem the authorization to master the upcoming movie Serenity in digital and have it ready by opening day.
Doremi saw a moral obligation to innovate in this field and come up with products that the exhibitors would buy, not to avoid lawsuits, but to increase the captive audience.
[6] In 2009, Doremi introduced the first 4K integrated media block for TI's series-2 projectors, over 2 years ahead of its closest competitor.
[7] It is fitted into the cup-holder of theater seats and taps into the Wi-Fi network to display encrypted closed captions.