November 5, 2009

Some TVs Go Directly Online for Streaming Movies
By JOHN R. QUAIN
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/05/technology/personaltech/05basics.html?ref=technology&pagewanted=print


For more than a decade, tech and media companies have wrestled with how 
to deliver digitized movies directly over the Internet to consumers: how 
do you get the copy-protected files from the computer to the big screen 
in the living room?

The early answers didn’t inspire many couch potatoes to get off the 
sofa. You could either plug a laptop computer into your TV set (assuming 
the computer and the television had the right connections) or buy a box, 
called a media extender, for your home theater that received streaming 
files from your computer. Media extenders proved obstreperous and 
confusing: some files wouldn’t play on some extenders, the boxes were 
awkward to set up and movie downloads were painfully slow.

Since then, faster broadband speeds have become more common and 
companies have figured how to stream videos that start in seconds, 
inspiring consumer electronics companies to put Internet connections 
into TVs, Blu-ray disc players and other devices to tap into 
online-movie services from the likes of Netflix and Blockbuster. It’s an 
end run around the limited video-on-demand offerings from cable 
companies and eliminates the need for a separate black box.

“This is huge,” says Dan Schinasi, a marketing manager at Samsung 
Electronics America. “This is what we have been waiting for.” Samsung is 
doubtless enthusiastic, introducing Internet connectivity on 23 
different TVs, starting at $1,600 for a 40-inch LCD model and three 
Blu-ray players priced from $200 to $350. Indeed, the trend is that such 
Internet connections will rapidly become standard. According to research 
analysts at NPD, 12 percent of flat-panel sets sold in September in the 
United States had networking capabilities, up from less than 1 percent a 
year ago. There are now Internet-ready models from LG, Mitsubishi, 
Panasonic, Sharp, Sony and Vizio.

The Samsung TVs, for example, access online movie services like Amazon 
Video On Demand or Blockbuster On Demand using Yahoo’s widgets, small 
icons that appear on the bottom of the screen and which also include 
popular Web services like Flickr, eBay and YouTube.

Blockbuster’s service offers movie rentals from $2.99 to $3.99, with 
purchases costing $7.99 to $19.99. At the moment, Blockbuster’s titles 
can appear in wide screen, but only in standard definition, rather than 
high definition. It took about 25 seconds to start up the Blockbuster 
service, which offered new titles like the Jack Black movie “Year One” 
for purchase at $19.99 and “Unmistaken Child” to rent at $3.99. When you 
choose a movie, the software does a quick check of your set’s connection 
speed and then starts playing your selection in under 10 seconds (easily 
beating cable video-on-demand from Time Warner in my tests). And while 
the cineaste in me wanted to shun anything less than HD, the 
standard-definition version of “Watchmen” was just fine, with instant 
gratification easily trumping any qualms I had about less-than-perfect 
image details.

Amazon Video On Demand was comparable, although it appeared to have a 
larger library of choices. The company claims to have more than 50,000 
titles, with at least 2,000 of those in high definition. “Away We Go” 
was available to rent in HD for $4.99 (a standard-definition rental was 
$3.99). HD rentals were sharper and crisper to my eye, although a free 
stream of an episode of “30 Rock” in HD looked softer than the original 
live HD broadcast.

Other sets also offer Yahoo widgets and streaming movies from the Web. 
Sony offers the Yahoo feature on some sets and plans to offer Netflix 
streaming movies by the end of the year. LG Electronics has models that 
include Yahoo widgets and already include the online-movie services Vudu 
and Netflix. The former has the largest offering of HD movies to rent or 
own online and comes the closest in terms of picture quality and sound 
to true HD (1080p for the techie crowd). Rentals in Vudu’s HDX format 
have sharper picture details and better sound than other offerings, 
although I still find the downloads and streaming versions a little 
darker (and thus less crisp) than HD broadcasts.

Known primarily for its by-mail movie subscription business, Netflix has 
become a digital movie juggernaut by streaming movies to subscribers 
free of charge. The same $8.99 a month you pay for a by-mail 
subscription entitles you to watch as many of the company’s 17,000 
digitized titles as you want, as often as you want, whenever you want. 
Its HD offerings lack the visual clarity of Vudu’s, but Netflix is a 
better value and is available on many different devices in the living 
room — the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 consoles, a stand-alone box from 
Roku, and TiVo machines. So if the Netflix option appeals to you, you 
don’t have to buy a new TV or Blu-ray player to get it.

But choice also means confusion: not all services are available on all 
devices. On some of its flat panels, Panasonic offers its own Internet 
services, which includes Amazon Video On Demand, but not Netflix or 
Blockbuster or Vudu. Samsung offers Blockbuster on its sets, but not 
Netflix. LG offers Netflix on its sets, but not Blockbuster. And even 
when they do offer the same branded service, not all the devices 
necessarily give you the same features.

Netflix subscribers who use the streaming option on the XBox 360, for 
example, will find they can add movies to their queue from the TV screen 
(and they have to pay $50 a year for Microsoft’s Xbox Live Gold 
membership to do so). But if you want to change your streaming movie 
lineup on the LG or Sony sets, you’ll have to go back to your computer.

Buyers will also find that some sets, like those from Panasonic, Samsung 
and Sony, require a wired Ethernet connection for Web access. (Vizio’s 
Internet-ready sets, due out this month, will have built-in Wi-Fi.) 
Samsung dealers offer an optional Wi-Fi adapter (802.11n) for just $80, 
and there are high-speed adapters that just plug into an electrical 
outlet. I connected a set using Belkin’s 200 Mbps $100 Powerline AV 
Starter Kit without entering any codes or doing anything other than 
plugging the adapters in.

But we’re still a long way from being able to order any movie we want to 
watch whenever we want to watch it. Film studios are loath to release 
what they perceive will be blockbuster DVDs for digital distribution, 
for example, until months after release, and there are many more held 
back by copyright issues and concerns about piracy. And even the movies 
you can rent digitally from Blockbuster or Amazon are often subject to 
the dreaded 24-hour window, which means if you don’t finish watching on 
the same day you started viewing it, you’ll have to pay an additional 
charge.

Still, the option of streaming a movie from anywhere — Netflix, Amazon 
or whoever — is a major leap forward. It frees viewers from the yoke of 
the one-store-only approach taken by cable companies and products like 
Apple TV. Ultimately, it’s a liberating experience — if you think of 
never having to get off the couch again to pick a movie as liberating.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

***********************************
* POST TO [email protected] *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to