Showing posts with label AppleTV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AppleTV. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

XBMC makes the new AppleTV Awesome

Ben Drabaugh at Engadget tells us about a second generation AppleTV that showed up at Engadget with XBMC pre-installed on a jailbroken AppleTV.  The Engadget video below shows off what a non-crippled AppleTV can do with an awesome XBMC UI powering it.

Want to try this out on your lonely 2Gen AppleTV now?  Head over to xbmc.org for instructions.  XBMC working nicely on a little $99 “extender” sounds pretty good to me… how about you?  So you don’t have an AppleTV?  How about a Apple iPad or iPhone?  Yep, that works also as long as your iDevice is jailbroken according to this how-to on xbmc.org.

I have to admit.  This really makes me want to jailbreak that iPad of mine…



Wednesday, September 22, 2010

To the Point – Roku Updates Media Streaming Boxes

New Roku Lineup

Roku tipped their hand that a new media streamer hardware lineup was on the way with their price drops and a choice FCC leak recently.  Today Roku officially announced the new, slightly updated lineup for all to see.

Roku’s new Hardware includes:

  • Roku HD at $60 with 720p, Wi-Fi + Ethernet connectivity and HDMI
  • Roku XD at $80 that adds 1080p full HD video playback, instant replay button and Wireless N to the feature-set
  • Roku XD/S for $100 that adds dual-band wireless, component video & optical outputs and a USB port.

If it were me and I was simply looking for a good UI for my Netflix streaming, that Roku HD would fit the bill honestly.  Neither the XD or XD/S look like they will be competitive in the realm of streaming from your home collection like the WDTV Live Plus and SageTV HD300 are.  And seriously, how many 1080p online streaming videos have you seen lately?  Yeah, me neither.  Anyway, here’s a few interesting articles on the web from today that cover these new Roku’s:

ZatzNotFunny! covers the new hardware and I mostly agree with his buying advice:

“Anyone who currently owns a Roku, other than the SD model, really has no reason to upgrade at this time.”

“However if you’re primarily interested in economical and diverse local media playback (USB or LAN) that also happens to have some online streaming capabilities, the WDTV Live Plus is a better solution.”

Engadget has a good review of the Roku XD/S.  They generally like Roku as a whole and have some guarded praise of the more expensive XD/S:

“There's still some work to be done and more content partnerships to strike -- add in Hulu support and it's game over, guys -- but the Roku XDS is definitely worth a look if you need a streamer, and the oh-so-cheap Roku HD is probably worth a look even if you don't.”

Finally, NewTeeVee has a video showing the new hardware off along with a run-through of the changes from the now-older hardware.  They also go on with another video claiming that 12 percent of Roku customers cut the cord.  I guess that’s possible, but if you care at all about picture quality, content selection and LiveTV events such as sporting events or “gasp” realityTV you’ll still need at least over the air – and probably cable if you want the sports.  I say the same thing when talking about the AppleTV…

What do you think?  Is the Roku for you?  Or are you looking for something with more of a multiple personality like a Blu-ray Player, TV or more powerful media player/extender to handle your online media content streaming?

Check out the official Roku info at their website

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

AppleTV – The new Blockbuster Box

I had an article about the new AppleTV ready to publish last week after Steve Jobs “event” but I held back.  I decided I needed to ponder my opinion over the long weekend before clicking publish.  I think the AppleTV is a device meant for a particular purpose – one that won’t work for many of the hardcore HTPC types like myself – might actually still serve many consumers needs.

AppleTV

The New AppleTV – What’s New?

The AppleTV in its old form was pretty much a locked-down toy that couldn’t do much.  Case in point – many AppleTV owners inserted the Boxee HTPC interface to get more of what they wanted.  The new AppleTV introduced last week is a much smaller and more importantly cheaper set top box.  It’s main goal in life is to be the “Blockbuster” movie rental box you never knew you needed.  I say that because the main mode of media delivery from Apple is to rent movies and TV shows to you via their AppleTV box.  It will be sort of a Video-On-Demand box like you get with a cable set-top-box where you can get a hopefully-richer catalog of movies and TV shows to rent from.  Movie rentals would run $4.99 and TV episodes would run $.99.  I personally would end up exceeding my monthly cable rental fees pretty quickly with a model like this, but I guess light TV watchers might see the benefit of the rental model.  One problem Apple is having with the content side of things is that ABC & Fox hadn’t signed up to deliver their TV shows in the iTunes store – that will likely be worked out, but obviously a sign of battles between the new content delivery system versus the old.

Netflix Streaming Build In

Another new feature is that Netflix Streaming is built-in to the new AppleTV.  This alone makes the device much more useful – something comparable to the popular Roku box.  The feature sounds pretty good and will help the buyer of an AppleTV justify their purchase, but from the looks of it, Netflix streaming will be in a good number of hardware devices by the end of this year and I expect to see it in many, many more next year.

Wi-Fi & HDMI Included

Connectivity for the AppleTV includes built-in Wi-Fi or wired ethernet to get to the internet.  And TVs can be connected through the included HDMI port.  A unique AppleTV feature Jobs mentioned was that iOS devices could be used to to control the AppleTV – sort of a way to begin watching a show on the iPad or iPhone and “push” it to the AppleTV to continue watching.

Price Dropped to $99

The biggest improvement mentioned in my opinion was the price drop from $229 for the older AppleTV to $99 for the new improved version.

AppleTV Back

AppleTV – The TV/Movie Rental Box for Non-Geeks

I don’t see the AppleTV as a device most HTPC enthusiasts would appreciate.  It lacks 1080p HD, no Blu-ray, has no bitstreaming of audio, no tuner capability, locked down content, rental only and the list goes on and on.  But I do see the casual gadget buyer picking one up as a “cool” way to get Netflix and Movies to their TV.  These will be the people who don’t understand what else is available or honestly don’t care.  They just want to plug it in and it works.  The AppleTV won’t be quite that easly, but it certainly will be a step in that direction and it’s from a brand name that the casual consumer will know and probably trust.  That’s the target audience for the AppleTV.   Apple could sell these things for $49 or less and still make money off of them.  Because the rental & licensing model is built to bring in monthly profits – not a one-time sales profit on the device itself.

The AppleTV is ready to pre-order now and should be available in approximately three weeks from now.  It’s obvious that Apple sees this as a niche device still – just look below at their Apple.com page and you notice the AppleTV is relegated to the bottom-left of the page

AppleTV Apple Page

I’m curious – will any GeekTonic readers by purchasing an AppleTV for themselves or family?

Google TV Set to arrive This Fall

GoogleTV Logo

Just to be sure we don’t forget about them, Google’s CEO reminded everyone at the IFA show in Germany that Google TV would begin in the U.S. this Fall with international service beginning next year.  He went on to say the company would begin working with content providers for movie & TV content but didn’t expect to get into the content production business themselves – not a surprise.

I’m curious and semi-interested in the GoogleTV concept, but I don’t expect it to be too great unless they get their way with the FCC and their proposed “AllVid” video interface.  The content makers in Hollywood are none to excited about Googles request to the FCC so we’ll have to wait and see how that plays out.

If you’re still scratching your head about what this GoogleTV concept really is, check out the video below:

 

I would be very interested in GoogleTV if we saw an android placeshifter from SageTV or one of the other popular HTPC DVR programs – then you could basically get the HTPC DVR powerful features built into the TV. Blu-ray player or GoogleTV box without needing tuners built in to the GoogleTV device itself.

Google TV is expected to be included in the following devices:

  • Set-top box from Logitech
  • Blu-ray player from Sony
  • Sony TV

I think Apple still sees their AppleTV (obviously a somewhat different product from GoogleTV) very much a hobby, but they know they can’t afford to leave things alone with Google getting into the space.  Should be interesting to see how all of these interfaces and the boxes that go with them fare in the next few years.

via Reuters

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Roku Drops Prices $69 for HD and $99 for HD-XR

Roku HD-XR Player

Roku is responding to competition from Sony and possibly others (rumors of Apple TV and Netflix Streaming are leaking out tonight) with a decent price drop on their popular streamer boxes:

The Roku SD Player is now $59 (was $79)

The Roku HD Player is now $69 (was $99)

and the Roku HD-XR Player is now $99 (was $129)

Add to this the fact that the Roku HD-XR is due to receive 1080p streaming support later this year and you have an interesting story.  I expect the competition to get really tough for those focusing on Netflix streaming as this will become a very common thing in hardware that does much more – especially if it does turn out to be a feature in the rumored AppleTV upgrades.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

AppleTV Rumors – iTV and 720P?

appletv

Engadget has a rumor post up today (I’ll consider it a rumor until official) about the much talked about new version of AppleTV expected this Fall.

Good News:

  • The new version of AppleTV seems to be more and more likely.
  • Supposedly will be priced at $99 which isn’t too bad of a price
  • There would likely be an App store in this scenario since it will basically be a little, iPhone 4 without the phone or screen…

Bad News:

  • The insides supposedly will be iPhone 4 like:  A4 CPU, 16GB of flash storage
  • Supposedly can only handle up to 720p video – not 1080i or 1080p video!  I personally can’t believe they would do this but that’s what Engadget is saying.
  • Apple will be officially changing the name of the device to iTV…

Take this information with a grain of salt.  It’s just a leak and we never know about these things for sure until Apple tells us.  I personally can’t believe they would try to pull this one off as the new AppleTV, but I guess you never know…

Check out the story at Engadget

Monday, November 09, 2009

AppleTV Users Take Note – Update or Lose Your Media

AppleTV

Apple really screwed up on this one.  There appears to be a major issue with the AppleTV software version 3.0 that can potentially cause your media to disappear after a while.  If you have AppleTV software version 3.0, you should restart your AppleTV and upgrade to version 3.0.1.

Apple is saying the symptom of the issue caused by version 3.0 is:

“You are using Apple TV software version 3.0 and all of your movies, TV shows, and songs appear to be missing,”

Wow… via Tuaw