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Communications Facebook Media Social Networks Television

Facebook's Portal TV Video Chat Device Was Mocked -- Now It's Completely Sold Out (cnbc.com) 41

jmcbain writes: When Facebook launched its Portal hardware product line for in-home video communication in 2018, people accused the company of being tonedeaf to the privacy uproar stemming from the Cambridge Analytica controversy. Tech reviewers almost universally dismissed the product, saying "No one should buy the Facebook Portal TV," "Trust Fail," and "Is it really a good idea to pitch people on a Facebook-powered camera and microphone in your home?" However, during this period of shelter-in-place, Facebook's previously-beleaguered product has found an opportunity to shine. CNBC reports that "with people stuck indoors and seeking the best way to stay in touch with family and friends, the Portal TV is completely sold out on Facebook's website and from retailers such as Best Buy." Facebook further mentions that "We're pleased that we can help people connect with family, friends and colleagues during this time."
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Facebook's Portal TV Video Chat Device Was Mocked -- Now It's Completely Sold Out

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  • by Spazmania ( 174582 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @08:48PM (#59872114) Homepage

    I just got my regular Portal device today. One of the features I really appreciated: it comes with a plastic clip designed to cover the camera.

    The virtual pan and zoom is cool. It follows me around the room like a cameraman.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @09:10PM (#59872164) Journal
    Confirmed.
  • Now I'm laughing at people inviting the devil into their homes.

    Facebook has long since had established data dumps to private companies that collated and provided interior photos and layouts of your homes and businesses, now you just gave them a live feed.

    Pathetic

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Accept reality there are two groups of people who use the internet, those who interact with it and those who consume it. Two distinct groups, whose behaviour to modern marketing techniques is quite different, the consumers are specifically targeted for these schemes, they are unquestioning believers of what ever they are told to believe. The other group question everything as they interact with the internet and often push legislation to protect the, well, sheeple because protecting them protects themselves,

      • They feel insulted if you demand that they act like indiviuals. They love passive-thinking and being under the control of some nanny. They find it "simple" and "convenient".

        Clearly, the definition of a swarm drone or body part OF an actual person, fits them much better.

        I'm not saying that in a bad thing per se.
        I mean I find it horrifically stupid and harmful, but if that swarm is more s ccessful than I am, who am I to judge?
        Then again, single-celled lifeforms vastly outnumber us humans in bio-mass, and will

      • The internet is no one-way communication system. It doesn't work like TV where there is a dedicated sender and a dedicated recepient. If you don't care about your ability to send, someone else will.

        And as we can see here, does.

  • Desperate times call for desperate measures. It's not all that surprising.

  • Skype and smart TVs have been around for ages, so why aren't there TVs with built-in video calling already?
    • Skype and smart TVs have been around for ages, so why aren't there TVs with built-in video calling already?

      There was an optional video camera for the Logitech Revue android tv device. I never bought it. (2010/2011)

    • Because I dont want you answering the phone in your boxer shorts and a soiled wifebeater ;-) dont nobody wanna see that

    • Because, well, do you want video calling?

      For the past few weeks, I have been working from home. With video conferencing pretty much replacing personal contact at the office as well as any kind of communication with everyone at the company. Do you know how many of those calls actually included video? Zero. Not a single one. A lot of them, almost all of them actually, included screen sharing and shoving documents and information around, but not a single call included video.

      Why?

      Because nobody wants to see thei

  • by RazorSharp ( 1418697 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @10:12PM (#59872274)

    If it takes a pandemic for a product to become popular, I suspect that once the pandemic is over its popularity will once again plummet and many purchased units will fall into disuse (of course, as long as people leave them hooked up Facebook will still be using them to collect information about you).

    It should also be considered that if this product has been unpopular since 2018, then they probably never really ramped up production and, given the pandemic, are unable to now. So does being sold out at this particular time mean that it's actually popular?

    Perhaps I'm wrong on both accounts and it's just wishful thinking because I hate Facebook. But, hey, I'm an optimist.

    Also, that article reads like a giant advertisement for the device. Especially how he waits until the end to mention any of the privacy concerns and quickly brushes them aside.

    • You are dead on. It was a failed product and they simply sold off what they have. You cant get any units of facebook's other hardware either, VR headsets, and that was just starting to take off.
    • If it takes a pandemic for a product to become popular, I suspect that once the pandemic is over its popularity will once again plummet and many purchased units will fall into disuse (of course, as long as people leave them hooked up Facebook will still be using them to collect information about you).

      It should also be considered that if this product has been unpopular since 2018, then they probably never really ramped up production and, given the pandemic, are unable to now. So does being sold out at this particular time mean that it's actually popular?

      Perhaps I'm wrong on both accounts and it's just wishful thinking because I hate Facebook. But, hey, I'm an optimist.

      Also, that article reads like a giant advertisement for the device. Especially how he waits until the end to mention any of the privacy concerns and quickly brushes them aside.

      Just because something becomes popular in a pandemic doesn't necessarily meant it dies off when the need dies. People get... scarred by these sorts of things and start using times of plenty to just prepare to the next one.

      That said your point about "selling out" potentially indicating more of a lack of stock than a rise in popularity is probably a good point.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2020 @10:14PM (#59872278)

    If you manufacture a total of four devices and manage to get four people to buy them, it doesn't really say much about the appeal of that device.

    • Yep, I was going to post the same thing...

      >"the Portal TV is completely sold out on Facebook's website and from retailers such as Best Buy."

      Maybe because sales were so dismal and demand so low that nobody ever restocked.

    • Or, in this case, they finally ran out of the stock that they’ve had sitting on shelves since 2018. But hey, it’s “sold out”, so it’s a good thing!

  • Can't handle multi-hundred numbers of videos simultaneously like you can with a PC and Camfrog and a shitty Dual-core E7500.

    • "Can't handle multi-hundred numbers of videos simultaneously like you can with a PC"

      Huh? Do you really need to be streaming hundreds of videos simultaneously to do video chat?

      " and Camfrog and a shitty Dual-core E7500."

      You forget this is an APPLIANCE designed to be used by mostly computer illiterate masses. So no, it won't do what your home brewed setup will do.

      This is like comparing a toaster oven to the fancy expensive cooking gear that a master chef would use.

      • Jitsi managed video chat with 128 users without problems, probably a decade ago.

        (The trick is to only handle the compressed streams, and only tell the sender what formats to send out, so the client can arrange them, or the server can merge them into one for all the clients.)

        • ...still this is a very extreme case and more of a tech demo than something that would be used in the real world. I can't even imagine a situation, even in a large teleconferencing session, where over 100 simultaneous streams would be used.

            Your day-to-day car may be able to do 120mph, but when are you even going to find yourself in a situation on public roads where you would need to even come close to that speed? Likely never.

        • ...still this is a very extreme case and more of a tech demo than something that would be used in the real world. I can't even imagine a situation, even in a large teleconferencing session, where over 100 simultaneous streams would be used.

              Your day-to-day car may be able to do 120mph, but when are you ever going to find yourself in a situation on public roads where you would need to come close to that speed? Likely never.

  • the Portal TV is completely sold out on Facebook's website and from retailers such as Best Buy.

    So they sold the whopping 100 (ok, maybe 1000, perhaps 10,000) units that they made.

  • Sounds like this device has basic shape recognition which has been around for decades. It's irritating to hear buzzwords thrown around like this, and it's even more irritating when I have to deal with people who think they will be opening their front door and finding a Terminator on their door step any day now. Believe me, I had to deal with quite a few of them.

  • Just like the media industry used to buy up their own CDs to make them look more popular in the charts.

    We'll find a large hole, filled with them, in a few decades.

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