Google Giving Google TV Another Shot 199
MrSeb writes with a piece on Google's renewed push for Google TV adoption. From the article: "In spite of a mediocre launch caused by an overpriced device and low consumer adoption, Mountain View is attempting to breathe life into Google TV in the way of a major marketing push at CES 2012. By announcing partnerships with companies like Marvell and LG, and an effort to cut costs by switching to ARM architecture, Google is hoping to finally achieve the mass adoption it has been hoping for with the service. Is this a case of too little, too late?"
Give it two to the chest and one to the head... (Score:5, Insightful)
Just to make sure... TV is dead, stream me my entertainment on-demand or don't bother making it.
television larger part of waking time than ever (Score:2)
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Don't say cable. I want to stream the channels I want. Not 150 other channels I don't want. I would even pay up to 2 or 3 dollars a month for the channels I do want. And I will watch their damn ads too. I say 2 or 3 dollars because 150 / $65 = $2.30. Rough guess anyways...
Roku cannot do it. Even with pla
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Riker: "TeeVee?"
Data: "It was a form of entertainment that died out sometime in the middle of the 21st century, sir."
-- The Neutral Zone
I like my Google TV because... (Score:2)
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It doesn't have any "watch it while it happens" features, like showing you the SuperBowl in real time?
See, with a name like "TV", I assume that's the major feature. Of course, I own a WDTV, and that's exactly what it doesn't do, but expectations from a name like Google are different than expectations from a name like Western Digital.
But, with all the gadget distraction in my life, and a PC, PS3, and WDTV already hooked up to my 42" "dumb TV," I can't really be bothered to learn what yet another "TV" device
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You do know there area large number of people that really dont care at all about live events or sports in general. Honestly, if it was not for the parties I was invited to and the open bar, I could not care less about the superbowl.
For two reasons. 1, the NFL are nothing but a bunch of scumbags. the claim yearly they lose a lot of money from people STEALING the superbowl by inviting friends over and having a party. Yes, having more than 10 friends over is ILLEGAL as far as the NFL is concerned.
2, Hone
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Which is a bit of reasoning I've never gotten ... if 2 people watch the Superbowl in 5 different houses, or 10 people watch the Superbowl in the same house ... the NFL makes the exact same amount of additional money ... zero. Because I've alre
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2, Honestly all NFL atheletes are a joke compared to College football players. Big fat lazy overpaid idiots. I have no interest in watching a bunch of rich panzies play a game. I would rather watch REAL atheletes at college level.
A lot of people feel this way and more and more join the ranks each year.
I totally agree, but the strange reality is that without pro sports, College sports would wither, maybe not die, but certainly lose the vitality it has as a result of being the gateway to pro sports. I'm not sure there is a good answer, other than to abandon the circus that is pro-football/baseball/basketball/hockey and support something newer and more satisfying, I'm not sure right offhand what that is, but maybe they could look to the world of motorsports for inspiration, it doesn't seem quite as decaden
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2, Honestly all NFL atheletes are a joke compared to College football players. Big fat lazy overpaid idiots. I have no interest in watching a bunch of rich panzies play a game. I would rather watch REAL atheletes at college level.
A lot of people feel this way and more and more join the ranks each year.
I totally agree, but the strange reality is that without pro sports, College sports would wither, maybe not die, but certainly lose the vitality it has as a result of being the gateway to pro sports. I'm not sure there is a good answer, other than to abandon the circus that is pro-football/baseball/basketball/hockey and support something newer and more satisfying, I'm not sure right offhand what that is, but maybe they could look to the world of motorsports for inspiration, it doesn't seem quite as decadent/offensive.
Actually you have that a bit backward, Pro Football (like other sports) was created because there was profit potential *after* collegiate sports gained enough national popularity. The idea that college sports somehow relies on the presence of pro sports also flies in the face of the spirit of the "student-athlete" (not to mention, a huge portion of college athletes never go on to play professionally...) Notably, in the NBA there is actually no real benefit to being a college athlete (ask Lebron James) oth
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I totally agree, but the strange reality is that without pro sports, College sports would wither, maybe not die, but certainly lose the vitality it has as a result of being the gateway to pro sports.
Actually you have that a bit backward, Pro Football (like other sports) was created because there was profit potential *after* collegiate sports gained enough national popularity.
I'm not talking about how it got here - all the pro sports were good things when they started, that's why they grew. What I'm observing is that, for me, pro sports jumped the shark well over a decade ago - and, at least in football, the energy, excitement, and money that flows in collegiate play wouldn't be the same without multi-million dollar contracts hanging out there a couple of years in the future for the best of the best.
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You do know there area large number of people that really dont care at all about live events or sports in general. Honestly, if it was not for the parties I was invited to and the open bar, I could not care less about the superbowl.
For two reasons. 1, the NFL are nothing but a bunch of scumbags. the claim yearly they lose a lot of money from people STEALING the superbowl by inviting friends over and having a party. Yes, having more than 10 friends over is ILLEGAL as far as the NFL is concerned.
2, Honestly all NFL atheletes are a joke compared to College football players. Big fat lazy overpaid idiots. I have no interest in watching a bunch of rich panzies play a game. I would rather watch REAL atheletes at college level.
A lot of people feel this way and more and more join the ranks each year.
Yes, gotta hand it to those squeaky clean, all drive and no greed folks at the NCAA! (I think I tore my sarcasm tendon on that one...)
NCAA athletes are by and large beyond reproach, but there are enough bad ones in there to muddy the waters. Add to that the insistence that conferences should have some divine right to monopolize for profit (cough, Big Ten Network) and you are left with something that might be better than the NFL in some ways, but is demonstrably worse in others.
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There is streaming technology for the Super Bowl: an antenna. It's in HD and looks better than over-compressed cable. This same radical streaming technology can be used to watch many other timely TV shows as well, like the Oscars or Monday Night Football.
Re:Give it two to the chest and one to the head... (Score:4, Informative)
Nope, MNF is not available via this radical streaming technology. It is on ESPN which is cable / satellite only. :((
Sports is the key (Score:2)
* - PalletFull is a hundred-dollar-based monetary unit invented by the Bush Administration (like the reasons for the war itself).
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There is streaming technology for the Super Bowl: an antenna. It's in HD and looks better than over-compressed cable. This same radical streaming technology can be used to watch many other timely TV shows as well, like the Oscars or Monday Night Football.
Correction: Sunday Night Football. MNF got moved to ESPN years ago, sadly for this non-cable subscriber. Yeah for PlayOn and ESPN3!!!
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Also, if it's available to stream on the internet, you can view it on GoogleTV.
Source: I own a GoogleTV.
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Why is it that streaming and TV are two mutually exclusive things? Why isn't streaming just the next evolution of TV? Is it not TV if you record a program to watch it later? Is it not TV if it's broadcast on a time-shifted channel? Is it not TV if it's a PPV showing with multiple start times?
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Why is it that streaming and TV are two mutually exclusive things? Why isn't streaming just the next evolution of TV? Is it not TV if you record a program to watch it later? Is it not TV if it's broadcast on a time-shifted channel? Is it not TV if it's a PPV showing with multiple start times?
Why? Money, that's why.
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That doesn't really make sense. Maybe I'm just confused at how Americans view it because in the UK, we've got pretty decent on demand facilities that don't cost any extra.
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yes, but the on demand services are primarily internet based. These 'smart TVs' will allow you to watch those services as easily as you currently watch TV broadcasts.
Add some general internet surfing, apps, streaming media, and PVR capabilities and I think they've finally got there.
The fact that the hardware manufacturers are selling these means it might work out, before you had to be really interested in buying a new device to sit under your TV, and for 99% of the population, they just didn't care. Now the
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Technically ATSC over the air TV is streaming. it's a MPEG2 transport stream.
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> Because with TV you can only blacklist what you do not want to watch.
This hasn't been true for a long time.
Perhaps you should stop living in the 80s.
If you can't whitelist the stuff you want to pull out of the local cable stream, you need to update your tech to something current before trying to declare TV and moving on to the "next thing".
The beauty of the 90s technology is that you can just connect it to the content services that already exist. Your appliance does not need "special content deals" in
The real challenge... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The real challenge... (Score:5, Interesting)
Bingo. Google needs content, and a lot more than they have now. YouTube rentals only fill a very narrow part of the spectrum; they need partnerships with Comcast, Verizon, and other cable operators like Microsoft has for their Xbox 360 media initiative to get access to their streaming libraries. Not to mention the major networks, Hulu, Major League Baseball, Amazon, and a bunch of smaller operators.
Without content their box is just a useless hunk of plastic and silicon. Throwing it in a bunch of TVs won't change the status quo.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
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I think Google's real challenge is with the content owners. If it would 'just work', then I believe the product would sell.
Well Roku has managed it - can't imagine why Google wouldn't be able to do the same thing, with all the money they have.
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Buy, stop service, scrap devices (Score:2)
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I like Google, but I don't feel ready to commit to a service they might drop next year if they decide to, for whatever reason.
netcraft (Score:2)
Root it, Root it, Root it, Root it...
Or (Score:4, Insightful)
Is this me stating my opinion as a question while strongly implying that it's a fact?
In other words, the AppleTV device is coming. (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess this is in response to the supposed Apple TV (as in, the physical device with a screen rather than the little streaming box they currently have) that Apple is allegedly working on, and Google sees the chance for some collateral sales when the inevitable marketing tsunami from Apple arrives.
Nothing wrong with that I think, but it's going to live or die on content. As someone has already pointed out, the TV (and TV peripheral - DVR/online box/streaming device) market is hard to get into so you need a compelling reason for people to want to get your particular device.
Re:In other words, the AppleTV device is coming. (Score:4, Insightful)
Reports of Google's next iteration of GoogleTV and that it would be incorporated into TVs from more manufacturers instead of primarily as a standalone set-top devices (or integrated into other devices like blu-ray players) started before reports about the next generation of AppleTV; I would be hesitant to describe either as a response to the other, and even moreso to pick a direction.
I think the GoogleTV is more Google exploiting the fact that TV prices are dropping and manufacturers are looking for sources of value-added features to sell in higher-priced models, and that GoogleTV-supported streaming sources (including, and especially, YouTube) have acquired a lot more professional content than anything to do with AppleTV's plans.
Re:In other words, the AppleTV device is coming. (Score:5, Informative)
If Apple builds an actual, big-screen TV, it'll probably be $3,000+. Their current 27" monitor is $1,000.
This will not compete with the Google TV box, or TV's with Google TV built-in. It's for a different group of people.
Is the fact that their 27" monitor is $1000 meant to be some sort of "proof" of overpricing?
It's a 2560 x 1440 IPS 27" panel with LED backlight - those are expensive. Dell sells a similar one... and it's also almost $1000 (you can get discounts on it I believe - in fact, I just looked on Dell's site, they've marked it down from $999 with a "$150 instant saving" whatever that is [why not just lower the price?]).
If you think Apple's 27" panel is way overpriced, you clearly haven't looked at the specs.
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> Is the fact that their 27" monitor is $1000 meant to be some sort of "proof" of overpricing?
Yes.
Apple will push the most expensive high margin option available to the exclusion of all else. This will make the Apple product more expensive than anything else.
You won't have a choice or any other options.
Fanboys will make excuses.
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No choice or options? Like not buying a Apple monitor? Because my Mac seems to work fine with any monitor that has a DVI/HDMI/VGA port. Even the $150 ones.
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Wait, so the fact that they sell a 2560 x 1440 27" IPS panel for the same price as Dell and don't offer a cheaper monitor is somehow proof that they overprice things?
Your neckbeard must be chafing with that much Apple hate, to be able to twist the logic so acutely.
If you don't think the 27" panel is worth it, then... buy something else. The monitor port on your Mac is not proprietary (and even on old school Macs with the brief-but-ill-fated ADC, there was a DVI port alongside).
So, explain to me how "I don't
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Strangely, Dell and Samsung both have 2560x1440 27" displays for the exact same list price, but without many of the features that make the LED Thunderbolt Display such a great display (built in power cable if you're using it with a MacBook, built in thunderbolt to USB and gigabit ethernet bridge, aluminum enclosure rather than plastic, built-in 720p camera, built-in speakers that aren't terrible)
What were you saying again?
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...that fanboys would make excuses?
If it were up to Apple Fanboys, BMW would be the only option regardless of how much money you make, how much money you want to spend, whether or not BMW is infact crap, or whether or not you buy into the brand hype.
So you have one and only one set of tradeoffs.
At least Dell and Samsung products are interchangeable.
Needs PVR Ability (Score:4, Insightful)
None of these devices, Google TV or Apple TV, are going to take off unless they offer a simple and effect way for a customer to record a show. This can either be Over The Air or Over The Cable. People WANT this feature because it is ingrained into their thinking.
The ability to On Demand order and watch a show over Broadband still needs widespread adoption and availability. See other posts here about "content."
Without easy PVR functionality, then these devices are just extra devices duplicating my already includes services in my big old stupid DVR/Cable box.
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The reason for Netflix popularity (with the recent mess-up excluded) Is with its streaming for $10.00 a month you get a lot of options and they are/were updated frequently, which is a lot cheaper then buying DVD's of those TV shows you liked, and you don't feel bad after watching them not going back to them for a few years.
But unfortunately the media providers are still wary of this medium and want to over charge for this.
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See, my PVR functionality is my DVR/Cable box, so I don't need my additional device to do that for me. I guess, being able to record shows off the 'net sounds good, but with bandwidth caps and the like, I don't do such things over my internet connection.
For me, being able to stream my entire media collection that I already have (including the Digital Copy of
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Yup. I'd agree with your comments. But you're clearly a trendsetter.
Most people still think in terms of "setting the VCR" however, IMO.
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I dropped cable for streaming + antenna 2 years ago and though that I would miss DVR. As it turns out, I don't miss it at all. If I want to see a show that was previously broadcast, I find a way to stream it online. In the rare case when it isn't available, I have been surprised at how easy I find it to wait for the DVDs (as I did with Walking Dead), or just not care to watch it ever. The simple fact is that I have access to so much high quality entertainment that I can watch on my own schedule, that I don'
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The simpler solution is to buy a Tivo.
Re:Needs PVR Ability (Score:4, Interesting)
The simpler solution is to buy a Tivo.
Yes, it is simpler, but Tivo requires a subscription. That disqualifies it, in my book.
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You aren't most people.
Once you've gotten to the point that you're willing to build your own appliance, you're in the same territory as people willing to put Linux on that homemade appliance.
The field is still wide open (Score:5, Informative)
Set top boxes (or pucks, as they're becoming) are still an open field. Nobody has managed to create one without screwing some portion of the consumer market, or getting screwed by content providers, or both.
I've had a Roku box and an AppleTV, along with a not-quite-the-same Popcorn Hour and a HTPC. What I've decided is that these things, when combined with a TV, are a lot like tablets. They're great for consumption, but the key is having applications which cater to various niche markets. To me, that means two things. You have to offer a framework for the content providers to make money, and you need to give application developers the chance to expand the usefulness and content options available.
I gave up on the old Popcorn Hour a long time ago. The HTPC is nice, but I don't have the time to "manage" they system regularly and keep up with patches and bugfixes in add-ons. It works as a media player with the real remote control. I've tried the online streaming and it works, but the content is woefully limited. The Roku had some major launch issues with their v2, and I gave up after a month of poor streaming and difficult-to-manage navigation. The AppleTV is the easiest to use, but is a tough sell with their pay-for-everything-all-over-again model. I've jailbroken the ATV2 and use PLEX to stream my library for now. It's stable enough that the family is using it, and knows to just let it reboot when the application crashes (which it does frequently, as it's not a supported client).
That's a very longwinded way of getting to applications. The iFoo and Android platforms are successful because they offer a huge array of content and content sources, all supported by their own separate dev teams. I don't have to wait for Google or Apple to create a Hulu+ client - the Hulu guys will do that. If it sucks, I won't buy their service. Same for Netflix, or Pandora, or any other service.
I expect that if, and I say if, Apple opens the doors to applications on the ATV, the market doors will close very, very quickly on everyone else. They're the only box that has the silky-smooth, easy to use interface that makes it easy for a non-techie to use. Even when things go wrong, it like a weeble - the screen blinks black, and two seconds later you're back at the home menu, like nothing every happened. That's comforting to the average Joe or Jane, and it's easy to get the family to understand (i.e. - a reset requires zero interaction and nearly zero time). If it weren't for the (nearly) iTunes-only content model, it would be an absolute winner.
So yes, there's an opportunity here - but it does require not fucking it up. And tech companies have proven that, on the whole, that's the one thing they're really good at. Your move, Google.
Re:The field is still wide open (Score:5, Interesting)
"They're the only box that has the silky-smooth, easy to use interface that makes it easy for a non-techie to use."
I dont know I never use it unless I needed to reboot the Atv box to get bac kto the XBMC install on it.
The latest XBMC makes the apple TV interface look like a complete turd. having a 2tb NAS full of bluRay and DVD rips delivers an experience at home that apple on their own refuse to give me.
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I'm glad you got XBMC to work. I got it to work, but not being a linux guy was pretty baffled by the options to install the various packages. It also had issues with streaming when I was playing with it, and the interface sucks. Every try and scroll/page through 400+ movies? Yeah, try that with plex and it's a whole different world, with very little setup required, plus it has supported clients for iOS devices. XMBC can do more, but Plex does what I need it to without requiring that I mess with the internal
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You must have tried it years ago.
Installing options are point, click, drool.
And the media manager works just fine scrolling through 65,535 movies. search and sorting by genre,name,actor,director, lighting guy, electrician, and catering are all easily possible.
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It was probably 8 months ago. Hulu never installed, I couldn't find netflix, and most of the packages had non-descriptive names and clicking on them to install did nothing. Again, it was an early ATV client. As for scrolling, It would have taken the better part of 10 minutes to get from beginning to end of my movie list with the remote. It didn't see to cache the entire list locally. Plex takes about 15 seconds.
Actually, one of the problems was the all-inclusive interface. Sure, you could get to everything
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I should add - the graphics in XMBC are cool, but I'm one of those guys who has a black desktop with no wallpaper. To me they don't add appreciably to the day to day experience, though they make for nice eye candy when friends see it for the first time.
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> but not being a linux guy was pretty baffled by the options to install the various packages
apt-get install xbmc
> and the interface sucks. Every try and scroll/page through 400+ movies
Which Plex solves how exactly?
Plex is essentially an XBMC for. However Plex manages this problem was likely already solved in the original (XBMC).
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This is irrelevant to the UI issues that were originally complained about.
XBMC can be self contained. So can Plex for that matter. ARM appliances need a "media server" mainly to deal with stuff they cannot decode.
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To be fair to the grandparent, they did say that ATV is the only "box" that delivers a good interface. XBMC is awesome, but lets be honest, only a techie is going to install and maintain that software on dedicated hardware. To make money on these TV gadgets, the products are going to need to appeal to the very large market segment that is willing to spend money on a smartphone but does not have the desire to root or mod the software.
Re:The field is still wide open (Score:4, Interesting)
ONly a techie does the initial jailbreak. My grandma maintains the XBMC install on hers just fine. It's self updating.
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It all depends. Do you have any non-iTunes media? Do you EVER want to have any non-iTunes media?
If so, then a crappy old discarded machine just isn't going to cut it. You need something that can transcode stuff so that the ATV can play it.
Besides. Plex stomps all over iTunes when it comes that metadata and cover art stuff. iTunes doesn't help you with that one bit.
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I expect that if, and I say if, Apple opens the doors to applications on the ATV, the market doors will close very, very quickly on everyone else.
I just got an Apple TV about a week ago, and haven't had a chance to check into it, but it seems that there are a number of apps already supported via "AirPlay" on the unit: http://theapple.tv/apps/ [theapple.tv]
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You have to offer a framework for the content providers to make money ...
Google is afraid of defining the market, and Apple isn't. Neither strategy has overcome. Cable was defined by the technology, and the business changes (pay TV, channels that are bundled/premium/rebroadcast, etc..) were forced on the industry because of what the technology would allow.
The next major change (Internet TV) will be a software change, and software doesn't enforce any particular business arrangements. So what Google needs to do is create a system that both allows the content providers to make mo
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Just setup PlayOn to play through a net connected BR player to have access to all the web video. Very cheap and you get all the online content without the recording/converting/storage issues. You can play Discs, watch Netflix, Vudu, etc as well as live tv. This has been our cable-less solution for over a year now and the price is right.
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I tried it, and it was essentially unusable a couple of months ago. And when I say unusable, I mean that none of the common codecs could be streamed, and you got a crash, a "can't play this content", or an infinite wait for streaming to start. It may have changed, but I also found all the mandatory icons/portals and the advertising on the home page to be somewhat intrusive. I don't really want a $50ppv ultimate fighting championship link as the default first click on the kids TV in the playroom.
Android (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been seeing a lot of Android-based mediatanks and mediaplayers lately, complete with TV guides, dedicated apps and, ofcourse, access to the entire Android market.
What's the benefit of GoogleTV over these Android-based alternative?
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Google TV is simpler and runs on cheaper hardware. Presumably updates will be more frequent and consistent. You can get the TV with full Android also - I think Lenovo offers it. Or you can do it with an HDMI dongle.
My TVs are all minimally smart already (Netflix at least), so the dongle or STB is the way for me. Fortunately the dongles are very cheap - like $79. Personally I would prefer the Android version, as the marketplace is an amazing value add.
I've got one arriving Wednesday (Score:4, Interesting)
Over the holidays, I got a chance to give Google TV a serious tryout at my parents' house. They bought the Sony Blu Ray player with Google TV built in.
I liked it so much that I ordered one for my living room. It arrives tomorrow.
The Netflix/Amazon/web integration works very well and there's even an app store. I'm planning to use it for all my TV viewing and getting rid of cable.
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Netflix integration is great (It has declined a bit since, its latest version is not as intuitive as it was originally), and the capability of flash, allows you to
As long as the "back end" is open, (Score:2)
so that it works with the likes of Ubuntu TV [slashdot.org], Boxee, and maybe even Miro [getmiro.com] so we don't have even MORE competing standards I'll be happy with it. Having LG on-board is the best thing I've read about this, hardware manufacturers are often one of the most important steps, and my LG Blu-ray player is the coolest thing in my living room. Even if the Blu-ray drive quit working that player would still be the central part of my entertainment setup considering all the online and UPNP support built in. LG is the rig
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LG already has a "smart TV" platform box as well as TV's. I just wonder if LG is going to skip their crap software and put GoogleTV on it instead.
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You basically just backed up what I said.
Try convincing an average 65 year old they need to buy an X-Box, oh, I'm sure a few will be on board but the very fact the thing is known for playing video games will chase them off. LG builds their own "platform" and have been doing it for a while making the boxes you mentioned redundant, even the video game ones for the purposes we're discussing. LG builds their content players into their devices. Currently I'm still using an non-HD 36" Mitsubishi Dimatron, it's
Nope, it's dead. (Score:2)
If it's not $99.00 and they get rid of the crappy HDMI passthrough that was an epic fail. IT's dead before it hits the shelves.
They also need to make it so I can change the browser ID string so that I can bypass checks on sites like NBC.com and ABC.com and watch their streaming on the TV.
Global TV or any other TV. (Score:4, Insightful)
How to regain your lost potential (Score:2)
Here's the way I see it. If I can download my content apps: Hulu Plus, Netflix, Amazon On-Demand, Pandora, etc from the Marketplace and get TV screen sized content from the Android Marketplace I'm buying.
Now if Google TV acts as a content organizer ACROSS these apps and marketplaces, then Google TV provides something I can't get from any other set top box - Integration. I want the couch friendly schedule, but I don't want to jump between apps to view my content. If the price is right, you'll blow compet
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I think with these changes, they finally seem to be working on the right track.
Maybe Google will eventually strike gold (Score:2)
Perseverance really is key to success. Google tried Buzz, Waves and now, with Google+, it seems the social networking (and related) initiatives have brought some benefits.
Microsoft also didn't give up with the XBox, and is finally doing OK.
I'm rooting for them (Score:4, Informative)
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I want the PC stuff, but I don't want the PC user experience. I don't want a keyboard, I want a remote - preferably one remote for the whole operation. I don't want to have to navigate to a page, sift through web cruft, just to get to the video. I don't want to have to shut down or switch from a browser to a media player to a media streaming application (unBox/Netflix/Hulu+) except by flipping to a "home" menu and selecting the app. Actually, I take that back - I really don't want to have to switch at all,
Content problem (Score:2)
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There is actually an option on the Logitech Revue to change the user agent, but doing that breaks the custom UI interfaces for youtube, dailymotion, etc. I have not tried this but I'm seriously considering it.
We got the Revue and a digital antenna last fall after deciding that we didn't want to pay $120/month (at the time we cancelled) for cable services that kept getting less "service" for more money every month. (it was $85/mo when we subscribed 4 years earlier,and we didn't change anything in our subsc
SmartTV Are "The Next Thing" (Score:4, Informative)
As An Owner Of A Sony Google TV it worked out surprisingly well. Especially after the last major update which added the interface to Android Marketplace.
I had initially got the thing because I needed a "medium" sized HDTV and the current specials made it a reasonable buy. I've seen "Internet on TV" so my expectations where really low. I have several things that play Netflix. I have several things that do DLNA. I have plenty of devices that have web browsers in them (although very few entertainment/living room devices do that). This TV has all of them it. What ended up happening is that it combined some of the disaparate components into the TV itself. Its about as close to a HTPC as anything consumer electronic thing I have without actually being a HTPC. But it still has gaps. I would claim that my Sony Google TV would be a little weird as a family room HDTV but its a great bedroom or office TV mostly because you don't need a bunch of little boxes to go with it.
After being happy with my Google TV, I see the next step as a full blown "Smart TV" like "Smart Phones" that revolutionized cell phones. The software components are all there but it needs better and tighter integration. Especially with a home internet connection, your TV should be leveraging the search and information it has to some intelegent things out of the box.
Things to improve with Google TV:
- Boxee style "Show Me Later". There is a way with Boxee to put a link on your browser to "tag" things you find on the Internet to watch on your box later. What I do with Google TV is remember where it is and browse to it.
- Subtitle support. If a video stream has subtitle text encoded it should display it. Mutliple devices do it multiple ways where this seems to be something that could be better supported in the display instead of the player.
- Agressively scrape information but depricate non-display friendly information. I don't think reading email on TV is a good idea but a Smart TV should recognize emails from your mother and father from their European vacation with pictures and a Youtube video where those videos and pictures are great to view on a TV.
- Google has a nice calendar feature, lets start using it. I'm not suggesting that one should be mixing their professional meetings and appointment data with when "Survivor" is on but a Smart TV should to track both events. The goal here is to get the TV and PVR and other devices to recognize the same calendar and do some smart things with the information. Recognizing you have favorite programs or a video streams but have a conflicting appointment should make the devices save or promote features.
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"Anyone who thinks I'm going to 'discard' my TV just to buy a GoogleTV (or an Apple or Ubuntu TV for that matter) is fooling themselves. Okay, sure, if I was so inclined I could sell my 'old' TV on craigslist, but you know what, even that's more than I want to do."
I understand that you're not very interested in Google TV, but if you're interested enough to post a comment on it, you should be interested enough to spend ten seconds finding out that it's available primarily via STBs, as well as being built int
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Windows Media Center had many great feature, even today it still provides feature that no other device has, like the ability to use as a DVR, and Digitial Tuner capabilities.
You mean like MythTV, SageTV, ReplayTV, Tivo, and every cable provided DVR box I've seen.
,
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Windows Media Center had many great feature, even today it still provides feature that no other device has, like the ability to use as a DVR, and Digitial Tuner capabilities.
You mean like MythTV, SageTV, ReplayTV, Tivo, and every cable provided DVR box I've seen.
I get frustrated with most of the crap coming out of Microsoft. I tend to use Linux/Apple/Android/anything else if I can. But, with Media Center, it's one of those things they've managed to do a good job with.
Good luck getting any content from a cable provider with MythTV, SageTV, etc. If all you want is OTA local channels, they are fine. But if you want to tune in anything else you'll need a tuner box with another tuner, and none of that will be in HD. CableCard and Media Center works well. Don't eve
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> Good luck getting any content from a cable provider with MythTV
Been recording HD cable with MythTV for longer than PC CableCard tuners have been widely available.
CableCard is a DRM format with all of the fun and limitations that come with that. It's usefulness mainly depends on your particular cable operator. They can be accommodating enough that you can tune all of your channels even in MythTV or they could make it difficult to even use a Tivo.
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Tuner boxes in your area don't have component out, do they?
They do everywhere else. Sucks to be you.
What good would that do, even if they were activated for HD? Even if you can find a component capture card, you won't get better than 480i resolution, and you're also still stuck with analog sound.
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Will it finally support remote tuners? (or does it do that now?) One thing I love about my sage setup (and about Mythtv, before that) was that I could have one server in my basement with a few tuners and all the noisy drives, and then have a silent, tiny box sitting next to my TV with just power, ethernet and HDMI out, and an IR remote. I just pick a channel to watch and it figures out an available tuner to use (truthfully, I usually just pick a show to record, and never watch live tv nor even think about "
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Mostly yes, and it's been that way for years. Just plop an XBOX in front of the TV and leave the PC in another room. Although I don't know if you can stream live TV to it, but I would never do that anyway.
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What constitutes "integration" exactly?
Having a built in app that comes preloaded isn't really "integration".
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The problem with tablet interfaces is that they are inconvenient, or very limited, or require lots of custom programming. They do (almost) exist, but are for high end setups and generally require you to be in the vilified 1% to afford them, or devotion of a good chunk of money, programming knowledge, and LOTS of spare time.
What I want is iOS (or android, I suspect, but iOS is simpler) on my TV. A page or three of icons that lead to entertainment portals, all accessible with the common, everyday infrared re
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Crap. "Too late?" is a stupid question.
Of course it's not. This is a brand new market. All google (or any other player) has to do is sell a product that people want to buy, and make available content that people want to access.
The same is true in the tablet and smartphone space. There are uncounted millions of people who have not bought a smartphone, and who can probably be convinced to do so. So no matter what the market shares look like today, it can all change in a [relative] blink if a new competitor
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It's cheap, low power, and inferior performance.
Typically ARM based video players can't just play what you happen to have lying around. Things need to be translated into a format basic enough for the hardware to handle. This can be done permanently on a per file basis (Handbrake) or in real time as needed (AirVideo,Plex).
You don't want a USB port on the front of your AppleTV/Roku because it would choke on your home movies.
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Nope, that's the definition of a scientist [xkcd.com].
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How did Apple TV fail? While the original Apple TV failed (overly priced and lacking features), Apple TV 2 has had strong sales. As a component to stream iTunes content to your TV and access web services, its excellent. Recently Apple enabled iTunes Match content on Apple TV, meaning I can stream music directly from "the cloud" instead of from my iTunes server. More content services are being offered, and I think Apple is secretly going to enable gaming on Apple TV in the not to distant future consider it