Posts Tagged ‘TV’

Will Apple launch a TV set?

September 6th, 2011

Not another Apple TV black box but a real 50″ flat-screen TV, “Designed by Apple in California” – and made in China, like most Apple products. Or made In Korea, if the company concludes a new pact with its best “frenemy”, Samsung, the new king of TV sets, the new Sony.

Rumours of an Apple TV set have been circulating for at least two years. In a May 2010 blogpost, Peter Yared wrote:
“Stylish, high-end TVs is the last consumer electronics frontier for Apple to dominate, and it will make apps as much of a differentiator on TVs as they were on smartphones.”

and:
“The TV is the last frontier in Silicon Valley’s relentless drive to computerise every screen. With the price of fully internet-enabling a screen at below $300, everything that people see and touch is being turned into a computer: mobile phones, billboards, price displays, and with the iPad even magazines, books, and newspapers.”

More recently, Gene Munster, an oft-quoted analyst at the PiperJaffray investment bank, repeated his prediction of an Apple TV set launch in 2012, with Stewart Alsop adding:
“Apple will do to television manufacturers what it did to phone makers with the iPhone …”

The idea is exciting and so obvious it’s got to happen. Imagine a true plug-and-play experience. One set with only two wires: power and the cable TV coax. Turn it on, assert your Apple ID credentials and you’re in business. The programme guide looks good and is easy to navigate; pay channels are just a click and a password away. The TV runs apps, from games to FaceTime and Skype, it “just works” with your other iDevices and also acts as a Wi-Fi base station using the cable provider’s internet service.

But when we turn to the small matter Of implementation, we see a few obstacles.

First, the TV incorporates a set-top box, with storage for the DVR function. It’s feasible: the CableCARD was invented for that very use. The electronics of a set-top box:

Now squeezed onto a card that’s inserted in the back of the TV set:

It’s an attractive idea, but the implementation failed to meet expectations. Although critics accuse cable carriers of being technically incompetent and lazy, I think there’s a more acceptable explanation: Carriers looked at the CableCARD and saw complicated field service calls in their future. A separate, outboard set-top box is easy to diagnose and fix; a card inside the TV set, not so much. It generates a host of hard-to-understand bugs: Is the card working? Is it kind of working but causing the TV to malfunction? Is the TV working but killing the card?… and so on. More calls, more finger pointing, more expensive field techs…

Apple’s product culture, its talent for giving birth to nicely integrated devices could overcome some of these problems, but not the field tech issue. Would this new product force Apple to deploy its own Geek Squad, or do we see ourselves carrying a 50″ Apple TV set back to the store when something goes wrong?

Then there’s the complexity of supporting multiple cable systems. Large carriers, such as Comcast, are known as multiple system operators, MSOs. They’re a patchwork of acquired systems that have never needed to be compatible. This would either restrict the TV set to a small number of carriers, or make the product more complicated and prone to more bugs – and more field tech visits.

And there’s Moore’s Law. In addition to the CableCard, the wonder set contains a little computer running iOS, and enough storage for apps and content that’s not hosted by iCloud. Great …but how long will it last? Not in terms of reliability, that’s not a problem — especially with an SSD replacing the DVR’s conventional hard disk – but in terms of being competitive with newer hardware.

Conventional TVs aren’t really affected by Moore’s Law. As long as the electronics work and the display doesn’t fail – and today’s sets are exceptionally reliable – there’s little pressure to upgrade. Once a family shells out for a nice 1080p set, it’s difficult to sell them the new improved model next year.

We’re willing to upgrade our laptops, smartphones and tablets every year or two because Moore’s Law keeps improving the CPU and other electronics at the rapid rate that made the computer industry’s fortunes. An integrated Apple TV set wouldn’t benefit from better electronics as naturally as an iPhone does … unless, of course, the tiny iOS computer is implemented as an easily accessible plug-in module. This could also solve – or at least mitigate – the field service problem: Bring the module to the store, we’ll diagnose and replace it if needed … or sell you this year’s model.

In one device we might have something like: a CableCard inside an Apple TV 3.0, itself inside a TV set.

With regard to carriers, there’s no need to disintermediate them, no need for Apple to seduce them into giving up content sales the way Jobs did with AT&T. Carriers ought to welcome an Apple TV set as a way to increase their ARPU, but for this to happen much work remains. Try getting a human on the phone when you want to add a channel to your current Comcast bundle. At home, you’re connected through a secure device with a known MAC address, so why can’t you simply point to a channel and click-to-add? This and other bone-headed commercial practices – such as refusing to suspend your billing when you’re between houses – reveals a depth of customer-hostile culture that an Apple or a Google would find intolerable, but might have trouble changing.

I mention Google because they’re in the TV/internet/apps integration game as well. The first Google TV wasn’t a success, to say the least. My friends at Logitech lost tens of millions of dollars – and a CEO – with the first iteration. And Sony’s Google TV implementation didn’t fly either.

But the concept remains valid. And now that Google owns Motorola, a company with known expertise in set-top boxes and CableCards, we can expect a next-generation Google TV and, quite likely, a Samsung TV set with an integrated Google TV running Android apps and competing with the putative Apple TV.

I used to think product size, carriers and the rapid obsolescence of the integrated computer made an Apple TV set an impossible dream. I’m not so sure any more.

JLG@mondaynote.com

PS: To help think about this some more, a great counter-example: the Bose Videowave TV set. I use and like other Bose products but, with this one, what are thinking? $5,000, no cable box integration, a separate console box for the “integrated” set. See the setup and owner’s guides for more details.

Source:http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2011/sep/05/apple-television

Where Is Internet TV Heading In 2011?

January 1st, 2011

2010 has been a big year, in fact the biggest yet for internet tv. Amongst all the launches, new developments and other shenanigans, the year has ended with some winners and some losers. Many that have had major blips would never have been predicted in a million years, yes i am talking about you Google TV. On the flip side, some companies getting a stronger foothold were surprising too, for example the Roku set-top box.

So to see where we are heading in 2011, we need a recap of 2010. The year was dominated by hardware that let viewers access online content on the big screen tv. The reasoning being that most viewers do not want complicated computers and loading software to watch tv, they want to press a button on the remote and watch tv shows and movies on demand.

One of the biggest players in internet tv hardware were led by Steve Jobs with the revamped Apple TV product. With a low $99 pricepoint and access to the massive iTunes library guaranteeing it’s success. The downside is of course that users are stuck with iTunes and the closed architecture means no other companies can get in unless approved by Apple. This domination puts many people off, but also would endear Apple to content providers.

Internet connected television Most big name tv manufacturers launched television sets that were internet connected from the box. Allowing viewers to access web content on the big screen tv. Services such as Youtube, Netflix and social networking were on offer from Sony, Samsung amongst others.

Other set top box creators are booming with hardware that basically adds Netflix, Amazon and other services straight to the tv set. Roku, have seen a doubling of sales this year, and D-link with their Boxee, launched a revamped product that was cheaper than Google TV and available Internationally.

Clampdown on online Piracy

Many websites were shut down in 2010 in a rash of takedowns by the Government. Many sites that are re-broadcasting content are in the middle of legal battles with the tv networks. Amongst them are FilmOn, Ivi TV and TVCatchup. All these companies are pleading innocence, but will they be able to win a battle with the tv companies?

Tablet Computers and Mobile Devices

Tablets really took off in 2010. dominated by Apple’s iPad. Many copycat tablets are being released including probably best of the bunch, the Samsung Tab which is a real rival to iPad running off the Android OS. It has been commented by many that the iPad was built for watching TV and it’s owners more likely to cut the cord.

TV On Demand

Netflix has had a great year, wrapping up new content deals on a regular basis, Hulu has had a tougher time and been criticised for their subscription service. But they are now making money and have a great online platform.

Losers in 2010

Google promised to seamlessly marry the tv with a web browser, but a high price point and negative reviews were followed by the TV networks blocking online tv streaming to the Google enabled TV set. It has got to the point where Google are asking manufacturers to hold off releasing Google TV hardware until it updates the software.

Yahoo were one of the earliest adopters of the internet tv concept but seemed to lose their way with the Yahoo! widget concept. The idea of tv sets running Yahoo software has been superceeded by the apps setup on most connected tv’s. Howeverhere are over 70 models that support it from makers such as Samsung, Sony, LG, Vizio and Toshiba. They recently agreed a deal with Europes largest TV manufacturer Vestel, to distribute Yahoo powered tv sets into Europe.

Meanwhile, Netflix has been gathering up its own hoard of TV content to continue and expand its offering. It’s run into some roadblocks from certain Hollywood studios, but is still seeing more success than stumbling.

Internet TV the future

Online tv streaming is firmly established and will continue to grow, albeit behind paywalls and possibly hardware restricted (If Apple gets their way). Apple TV will continue to grow its user base, already this year they managed to shift one million Apple TV boxes.

Viewers time will increasingly be taken up by online activities. Netflix and Hulu will continue to ‘slug it out’ and one will end up on top.

Google will get their Google TV act together and with updated software will probably tie up deals with tv networks allowing for pay tv streaming on the system. They will also roll out the hardware on the International stage. There will also be lots more Android powered devices all capable of streaming tv and movies.

The TV Networks will finally sort out an online strategy. Currently blocking any streaming to the big screen, they will

Expect to see lots more tv on lots more devices, and expect to see shows when you want. Expect to discuss what your watching with friends and the worldwide community via social networking. Expect to be able to call up any details about the show or movie your watching in a seamless experience of tv watching and web browsing. Expect internet and the tv to finally merge as one in 2011.

Source:-http://www.worldtvpc.com/blog/internet-tv-heading-2011/

Veebeam HD Connects PC or Laptop to TV at 1080p

November 21st, 2010

New to the fray of set-top streaming devices is the Veebeam HD ($139), touted as the easiest, most affordable way to wirelessly stream anything from a laptop computer–Mac or PC–to the HDTV. Netflix, Hulu, BBC iPlayer, YouTube and so on: Apparently, if our computer can play it, Veebeam can deliver it to the home theater, wirelessly, at up to 1080p and with no pesky DRM to spoil our fun.

This seems to be a more agnostic approach than other streaming hardware, supporting the latest paid and unpaid entertainment choices. Missed last night’s Grey’s Anatomy but don’t want to watch it on the computer? Click on over to ABC.com and stream it for free, from the Internet to the computer and then on to the TV. Have a Netflix streaming subscription but not a supported TV or set-top box? Now we do. Have a hard drive full of movies and music, in different file formats? Set them free.

There are two ways to use the Veebeam HD. The default “Screencasting” mode simply puts the desktop screen onto the TV screen, to do with as we will, controlled by the laptop’s keyboard and mouse/trackpad in our hands while we watch. “Video Play-To” mode by comparison offers superior video quality for the playback of downloaded files, in addition to the ability to multitask, including web-surfing during movie-watching.

One of the secrets to Veebeam HD’s robust performance is its Wireless USB technology, an alternative to Wi-Fi that offers a secure point-to-point connection from the computer to the set-top box. Bandwidth is reportedly superior to Wi-Fi, and over short distances it is prone to less interference, but the host laptop with the Wireless USB antenna dongle attached (and Veebeam HD Software installed) must be in the same room as the TV.

Exclusive to the HD model (the SD alternative is $40 less) are a digital optical audio output in addition to the HDMI connector, and a pair of USB ports to hook up future webcams and hard disk drives. The Veebeam HD and SD are available now.

Source:http://www.bigpicturebigsound.com/Veebeam-HD-Streams-It-All-at-Up-to-1080p-for-139.shtml

Thanksgiving Day deals Astar LTV-2001 20-Inch Flat-Panel LCD TV

November 14th, 2010

• 20-inch LCD TV that doubles as PC monitor; measures 27 x 19 x 8 inches (W x H x D) with stand
• Capable of 480p enhanced definition (ED) TV playback; extra-wide 160-degree viewing angle
• 800 x 600 pixel resolution, 16 ms response time, 450 cd/m2 brightness rating, and 500:1 contrast ratio
• Includes 2 component inputs, two composite inputs, 1 S-video input, 1 VGA input, and PC audio output
• Pair of side-mounted stereo speakers (3 watts x 2); includes table stand and wall-mounting hardware; 1-year warranty
Astar 20″ LCD TV and PC Panel Includes: Table Stand, Universal Remote Control, 2 x AAA Batteries, AC Adaptor, Instruction Manual, Quick Start GuideMultitask in your home office with the 20-inch Astar LTV-2001 LCD flat panel TV, which can also double as a PC monitor. The LTV-2001 features sleekly modern lines and a table stand, and it also includes wall-mounting hardware. It offers vibrantly colorful imagery from both the built-in, 181-channel NTSC TV tuner and computer sources, and great sound f

List Price: $ 499.99

Source:http://www.vipnewsroom.com/thanksgiving-day-deals-astar-ltv-2001-20-inch-flat-panel-lcd-tv/011462

Don’t waste your money; watch TV on the computer

October 22nd, 2010

Have you ever realized that you are paying high cost for 100 American channels? Would you rather watch a station from other countries and not pay a fee for doing so? Do you want watch Things like real Espanola soccer, But don’t know how?

Your first two questions can be answered with a big YES. The answer of the third question is Pc Television software. What is this? There is probability that you might have heard this. There are 100,000 very satisfied consumers, to date. But the number is increasing and soon and pretty sure, every household in America is bound to have a Satellite TV for PC Software.

More than seven years of extensive research has reached to this point and developed perhaps one of the best inventions in the IT industry, A Satellite TV for PC. By using this computer software program you could legally watch the 3600 channels of the 78 countries.

You name it, we have it.

All these channels would be accessible on your PC or laptop. The payment you need to make is not $99.95 rather it is reduces to $49.95. Avail the discount by ordering now. For this you don’t need to worry about the different hardware equipments like satellite dish or even a spyware. Does the question about the monthly charges come in your mind? No, of course not! It requires only payment once with no recurring bills. This is for real. Just download the software and in as short as 5 minutes, you can browse channels from Jamaica, Philippines and a lot more.

By this all types of the channels like movies channels, sports, music, news, weather, politics, religious, kids, shopping, premium channels like Food Network, National Geographic etc could be enjoyed easily without paying monthly bill. Other than that, restricted channels can now be viewed. Channels that cannot penetrate in the United States are now available on your very own computer. And most attractive part is the existence of that software in your laptop.

Even if you go abroad, you can view your 3600 stations. Impressive! You neither have to wait nor have to pay shipping cost. You would be instructed about how to download it and how to use it. It’s so simple. Get Watch the TV on computer software and start loving TV Again.

Source:http://www.pressmap.de/don%E2%80%99t-waste-your-money-watch-tv-computer-367720

Google TV launch hardware looks to be expensive, clunky

October 8th, 2010

Details about the compatible hardware for Google TV’s launch in the next couple of weeks have begun to spill out. Logitech is now accepting preorders for its Revue set-top box, while Sony is expected to launch a line of Google TV-powered Bravia HDTVs sometime this month. What we have seen of the hardware and its pricing so far may not entice many early adopters.

The Logitech Revue is a small set-top box that runs the Android-powered Google TV software. Though it comes with a trackpad-equipped wireless keyboard necessary for Web browsing, the unit sells for $300—far more than the Roku XD|S and Apple TV, which sell for just $99 each. Logitech is also touting additional accessories, including a much smaller Mini Controller as well as a 720p HD webcam that can enable video calling right from the TV.

Logitech is also thankfully offering iPhone and Android apps to let you use your smartphone as a controller. While including the wireless keyboard may make for a better out-of-the-box experience for those that lack a smartphone, it may have been wiser to cut the price and give consumers the option to choose a controller that best suits their needs. (It’s not clear, but it seems like devices such as a Bluetooth keyboard, mouse, or trackpad should be compatible

Sony is also launching Internet-connected Bravia HDTVs. While official details aren’t yet available, Sony Insider turned up model numbers and prices for the purported new displays. They will come in 24″, 32″, 40″, and 46″ sizes, but are expected to cost between $1,000-2,000. Sony is also expected to release a set-top box at some point, though the company may instead build Google TV compatibility into upcoming Blu-ray player models (and offers similar, Google TV-type functionality in some current players). No word on pricing or expected release of these devices has yet been revealed.

Aside from the relatively high prices, the controller Sony designed may not garner many fans. A clip of the commercial for Sony’s new TVs appeared on ABC’s Nightline on Wednesday, revealing the remote controller ostensibly included with these Bravia models. The oversized remote with a tiny QWERTY keyboard looks like a huge, bulky mess, and the design has been widely panned.

While Google TV looks very promising from a usability perspective, high prices and clunky controllers may not appeal to a wide audience. The on-screen keyboards for devices like the Roku may not be great, but they do work with very simple remotes. And while search is a big part of Google TV’s design, it may have been wiser to include a simple remote and offer keyboard options for those that need or want it. With the streaming set-top box market competition already putting downward pressure on prices, these expensive options could hamper early adoption.

Source:-http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news/2010/10/google-tv-launch-hardware-to-be-expensive-clunky.ars

Teardown finds iPad guts inside Apple TV

October 6th, 2010

“The first Apple TV was built like a net top computer. The architecture was basically a stripped down, small-form-factor desktop PC,” said Andrew Rassweiler, director, principal analyst and teardown services manager for iSuppli (El Segundo, Calif.). “The second generation Apple TV is more like an iPad or iPod Touch with no display. The Apple TV’s A4 processor core, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth chip and power management chip are the same building blocks used in the, iPad, iPhone 4 and iPod Touch.”

Rassweiler described the commonality of elements and features among the Apple TV, iPad, iPhone 4 and iPod touch as “striking.”

The new Apple TV carries a bill of materials (BOM) of 61.98, including additional items boxed with the product, based on a preliminary estimate from iSuppli (El Segundo, Calif.). When the manufacturing costs are added in, the second-generation Apple TV’s production cost rises to $63.95, the firm said. The product is sold directly by Apple for $99.

The second-generation Apple TV’s price of about 35 percent above the BOM stands in stark contrast to the first generation of the product, which appeared to be a near give-away or subsidized product for Apple, sold at prices that weren’t much more than the underlying hardware costs, iSuppli said.

Even with the margin improvement, the second-generation Apple TV is at the bottom end of the hardware margin spectrum for Apple products, iSuppli said. The most recent generation of iPod nano is at the opposite end of the margin range, and is one of Apple’s most profitable hardware items, in percentage terms, according to iSuppli.

ISuppli’s teardown found that, like so many other recent Apple products, South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. is the marquee component supplier for the Apple TV. Samsung manufactures the Apple-labeled A4 applications processor in the Apple TV, along with the product’s mobile DDR SDRAM, according to iSuppli. These components dominate the applications processor subsystem, which is the most expensive section of the Apple TV, with at a cost of $16.55—or 26.7 percent of the product’s BOM, iSuppli said.

ISuppli’s Apple TV teardown also found Panasonic Corp. and Broadcom Corp. inside the product’s Wi-Fi/Bluetooth module. In the power supply module, the teardown revealed Analogix Semiconductor Inc.’s ANX9836 HDMI transmitter and Digital Audio Interface device as well as components from Dialog Semiconductor plc, Texas Instruments Inc., Delta Electronics and SMSC Corp., the firm said.

Inside the Apple TV’s memory section, iSuppli found 8Gbytes of multi-level cell NAND flash. In the specific Apple TV torn down by iSuppli, Toshiba Corp. was the supplier of this memory, although Apple always employs qualified alternative sources for such commodity parts, according to iSuppli.

There is also an empty slot on the Apple TV’s printed circuit board that suggests Apple can at least double the NAND flash capacity if desired, iSuppli said. Apple appears to have forgone this option in order to maintain the $99 key price point, according to the firm.

Other component suppliers in the Apple TV include Dialog Semiconductor plc in the power management subsystem, Texas Instruments Inc. with a 16-bit microcontroller, Delta Electronics with an Ethernet filter and SMSC with an Ethernet transceiver.

Source:http://eetimes.eu/en/teardown-finds-ipad-guts-inside-apple-tv.html?cmp_id=7&news_id=222903998&vID=209

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