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Last Updated: Aug 9th, 2007 - 13:22:15 |
| Consumer electronics companies are vying to find the most user-friendly
way to stream Internet content to the TV. The prize: 162 million
broadband-enabled televisions in 2011. |
Only a few months ago, we reported on a group of companies that were trying to bring Internet content to consumers’ televisions. The potential market is enormous: According to research
firm The Diffusion Group, the number of broadband-enabled
televisions will reach 162 million by 2011. So it isn't surprising that this year's Consumer Electronics Show, held in Las Vegas in January, featured a new crop of entrants to this race, as well as new announcements from companies that had previously staked out claims.
Sony Electronics made a splash with its Bravia Internet
Video Link, which it announced at CES. Its Internet video-ready televisions can
receive streaming broadband video, including high-definition content, via a
small optional module easily attached and concealed behind the TV.
This
feature will allow most of its new televisions to access free Internet video
content from providers such as AOL, Yahoo!, and Grouper, as well as from
related companies Sony Pictures Entertainment and Sony BMG Music. Sony
Electronics and AOL announced at the show that the companies will work together
to make content from AOL Video available through Bravia. Using the TV’s remote
control and optional module, consumers can access the Internet and navigate
through menus to browse and play videos from AOL Video. Bravia wasn’t Sony’s only CES announcement. The company is
also introducing a high-definition living room PC with integrated Blu-ray Disc
technology. In addition to watching high-definition movies on disk and recording,
storing, and playing back personal content on high-capacity BD media, users can browse the Web with a wireless remote and keyboard,
all from the comfort of their sofa.
Cultivating Couch Potatoes Other
companies at the Consumer Electronics Show also showcased their visions for bringing Internet video content to
TVs:
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| HP's MediaSmart TV |
Hewlett-Packard’s
MediaSmart TVs merge the PC and the TV with the ability to wirelessly stream
digital photos, music, and videos from a PC onto an HP high-definition LCD
display. The latest models feature 1080p performance and the new HP
Entertainment Services Portal, which provides access to a variety of online
services with the click of a remote. Services include Snapfish for photo
sharing, Real Networks’ Rhapsody for music and CinemaNow, whose progressive
download technology allows consumers to begin watching movies before the
download is complete.
- Netgear
announced a collaboration with BitTorrent to promote video downloads streamed
to high-definition televisions through the new Netgear Digital Entertainer HD
(EVA8000) media receiver. The Digital Entertainer HD is a set-top box that
connects to a home-theater system to stream digital media from computers,
network storage, and USB media players. It discovers, organizes, and plays
high-definition movies, TV shows, music files, and personal photos as well as
Internet-based video, news feeds, weather reports, and radio programs.
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| Sling Media's SlingCatcher |
Sling
Media, which became known for devices that transmitted content from
television to the PC, announced a new product called SlingCatcher that works in
reverse, delivering content to the television. Bundled with every SlingCatcher
are two applications: SlingProjector, which wirelessly projects any Web site or
digital audio/video format from a PC to the TV, and SlingPlayer, which sends
content between televisions. SlingCatcher is based on the PC2TV chip from Quartics, which has also been bundled
into products from Addlogix, DM Technology and others.
- SanDisk
is betting that consumers will find it easier to carry a memory stick from the
PC to the TV than to set up a new device between them. Its USBTV will let consumers
transport downloaded digital content from a personal computer with a small
flash memory-enabled media player and then plug-and-play it directly on nearly any
TV.
- Akimbo
Systems announced that its collection of video-on-demand titles will be
available to subscribers of AT&T Homezone, a new video and Internet
entertainment service launched in 2006 by AT&T Inc. Integrating Akimbo
content into the Internet-connected set-top box will let consumers download and
watch thousands of programs and movies on TV using the Homezone remote control.
The company also announced that it is working with Yahoo! to bring Internet
video directly to the TV via the Akimbo Service. Akimbo subscribers will be
able to browse video updated regularly from the Yahoo! Video service, access
titles for free, and watch them on TV.
- TVNGO’s
middleware application enables Internet overlay on TV broadcasting. Using a
remote control, the viewer can shift between broadcast channels and Internet
content, and even blend Internet and broadcast content in a single frame.
- DIRECTVannounced
that its DIRECTV Plus HD DVR has been verified to work with Intel Viiv
technology. Customers with a DIRECTV Plus HD DVR can send pictures and music from
Intel Viiv PCs to their television sets.
- RealNetworksannounced the integration of its Rhapsody digital music service with TiVo's DVR service.
TiVo subscribers will be able to stream Rhapsody’s 3 million-plus songs to any
broadband-connected TiVo box in their house, as well as access their personal music
libraries. Any song they flag using their TiVo remote will also be available in
their personal Rhapsody library when they access it from a PC.
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| The Apple TV |
One important PC-to-TV product
didn’t appear at CES at all. During the same week, Apple showcased its much-anticipated Apple TV at MacWorld Expo in San Francisco. Originally
introduced in September as iTV, the new Apple TV lets consumers watch content
from Apple’s iTunes store on a television. Though its choice of content is
limited, its choice of connections is very wide, including USB 2, Ethernet,
HDMI, component video, optical audio and three popular wireless standards – 802.11b,
802.11g and 802.11n. Apple TV comes with an IR remote control.
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