Re: [scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

2010-09-03 Thread George Arterberry
I'm going to try it out. I can stream Netflix on my PS3 and will probably get 
the hulutv.com and ween myself off Directtv.





From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thu, September 2, 2010 11:43:06 PM
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

  
I meant to say its NOT worth the $100 if you own a gaming system. 


On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 11:51 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.com wrote:



I don't see that. It's ABC and Fox programs, right? All available online for 
me 
right now. HD if I drop for an HDMI cable, saving me at least $50 bucks and 
the 
rental fees.


On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 7:19 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:

  
I think that Apple's offering is a little too little too late. Even the Wii 
has 
better options. It doesn't have HD output on top of only two tv networks. Its 
worth the $100 if you already own a game system.


On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:34 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.com wrote:



Saw this on G4 yesterday. On the screen crawl, they were asking for viewer 
responses. Very few were even interested in it, most focusing on the iPod 
upgrades. 




On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:

  
Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV
* By Dylan F. Tweney  
* September 1, 2010  |  
* 2:21 pm  |  
* Categories: Home Audio and Video  * 
 Previous | Next 
* 
* 
* 
* 
* 

 Previous | Next  
View all
SAN FRANCISCO — In a sign that its television “hobby” has turned into 
serious 
business, Apple announced an aggressively-priced new set-top box that takes 
aim 
at the heart of the cable TV and DVD rental industries.
The new Apple TV, which will go on sale at the end of September for $100, 
is a 
puny box just 1/4 the size of the previous model. It has an HDMI port, a 
power 
supply built in it, an optical audio port, an Ethernet jack, and built-in 
Wi-Fi.
“It’s silent, cool and tiny,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, showing off the 
diminutive metallic box.
Despite rumors, the product was not re-branded as “iTV.” Jobs did not state 
whether it was running a version of iOS, although the Apple TV’s new 
interface 
includes some very iOS-like touches, such as icons that jiggle when you are 
rearranging them in your Netflix queue.
Apple joins an increasingly crowded and risky scrum of companies trying to 
reinvent television for the internet age. Netflix and Hulu both have been 
offering streaming video playback of movies and TV shows, with some 
success, for 
over a year. Google is working on a set-top box that would blur the line 
between 
TV and internet fare, YouTube is said to be planning mainstream film 
rentals and 
Amazon is rumored to be planning its own Netflix-like video streaming 
service. 
But the real threat are the cable companies and TV networks, which have a 
lock 
on the shows that people want to watch — and so far, there’s been little 
incentive for them to open up their tightly-controlled ecosystems to 
internet 
upstarts.
Apple’s play is for convenience, but it’s not the cross-platform strategy 
needed 
for dominance, wrote Andrew Eisner, a director at online electronics 
retailer 
Retrevo.com.
“A TV OS vacuum exists at the moment and unfortunately for consumers, TV 
manufacturers appear to be filling it with their own proprietary 
offerings,” 
Eisner wrote recently. “Apple needs to gain control of the third screen or 
TV 
screen, after smartphone screens and computer screens, and the TV industry 
needs 
to move away from closed environments and let their connected TVs work with 
all 
the apps and streaming content that consumers are finding so appealing.”

The company will also be providing a feature within iOS 4.2 that customers 
can 
use to share videos wirelessly from their iPhones, iPod Touches or iPads. 
Called 
“AirPlay,” the feature will let customers display a video from their mobile 
device, on an Apple TV-connected TV screen, with a single tap. IOS 4.2 
won’t be 
available until November.
AirPlay “puts iPhones and iPads in the driver’s seat and makes the TV just 
an 
output device for the Apple ecosystem,” said Forrester analyst James 
McQuivey. 
“Expect Apple to gradually push more and more in that direction.”
“But,” McQuivey added, “as of this moment in 2010, Apple has not yet made a 
significant play for control of the TV.”
In an implicit acknowledgment of Apple TV’s poor sales to date, Jobs again 
referred to the product as the company’s “hobby.” He showed the new Apple 
TV at 
a press conference here on Wednesday.
But Jobs was careful to cast the company’s previous product as a learning 
experience, and indicated his intention of throwing more of the company’s 
weight 
behind the upgraded Apple TV.
Apple TV customers will be able to rent first-run HD movies for $5, at the 
same 
time as they’re released on DVD. That’s a substantial improvement from the 
past, 
when

[scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

2010-09-02 Thread Mr. Worf
Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

   - By Dylan F. Tweney
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/author/dtweney/ [image:
   Email Author]  wi...@tweney.com
   - September 1, 2010  |
   - 2:21 pm  |
   - Categories: Home Audio and
Videohttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/category/home-audio-and-video/
   -

 Previous | Next
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
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   - [image: 
mg_7640-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
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View 
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SAN FRANCISCO — In a sign that its television “hobby” has turned into
serious business, Apple announced an aggressively-priced new set-top box
that takes aim at the heart of the cable TV and DVD rental industries.

The new Apple TV, which will go on sale at the end of September for $100, is
a puny box just 1/4 the size of the previous model. It has an HDMI port, a
power supply built in it, an optical audio port, an Ethernet jack, and
built-in Wi-Fi.

“It’s silent, cool and tiny,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, showing off the
diminutive metallic box.

Despite rumors, the product was not re-branded as “iTV.” Jobs did not state
whether it was running a version of iOS, although the Apple TV’s new
interface includes some very iOS-like touches, such as icons that jiggle
when you are rearranging them in your Netflix queue.

Apple joins an increasingly crowded and risky scrum of companies trying to
reinvent television for the internet age. Netflix and Hulu both have been
offering streaming video playback of movies and TV shows, with some success,
for over a year. Google is working on a set-top box that would blur the line
between TV and internet fare, YouTube is said to be planning mainstream film
rentals and Amazon is rumored to be planning its own Netflix-like video
streaming 
servicehttp://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/08/streaming-wars-heat-up-now-amazon-reportedly-is-in-the-hunt/.
But the real threat are the cable companies and TV networks, which have a
lock on the shows that people want to watch — and so far, there’s been
little incentive for them to open up their tightly-controlled ecosystems to
internet upstarts.

Apple’s play is for convenience, but it’s not the cross-platform strategy
needed for dominance, wrote Andrew
Eisnerhttp://www.retrevo.com/content/blog/2010/08/battle-looming-tv-os,
a director at online electronics retailer Retrevo.com.

“A TV OS vacuum exists at the moment and unfortunately for consumers, TV
manufacturers appear to be filling it with their own proprietary offerings,”
Eisner wrote recently. “Apple needs to gain control of the third screen or
TV screen, after smartphone screens and computer screens, and the TV
industry needs to move away from closed environments and let their connected
TVs work with all the apps and streaming content that consumers are finding
so appealing.”

The company will also be providing a feature within iOS 4.2 that customers
can use to share videos wirelessly from their iPhones, iPod Touches or
iPads. Called “AirPlay,” the feature will let customers display a video from
their mobile device, on an Apple TV-connected TV screen, with a single tap.
IOS 4.2 won’t be available until November.

AirPlay “puts iPhones and iPads in the driver’s seat and makes the TV just
an output device for the Apple ecosystem,” said Forrester analyst James
McQuivey. “Expect Apple to gradually push more and more in that direction.”

“But,” McQuivey added, “as of this moment in 2010, Apple has not yet made a
significant play for control of the TV.”

In an implicit acknowledgment of Apple TV’s poor sales to date, Jobs again
referred to the product as the company’s “hobby.” He showed the new Apple TV
at a press conference here on Wednesday.

But Jobs was careful to cast the company’s previous product as a learning
experience, and indicated his intention of throwing more of the company’s
weight behind the upgraded Apple TV.

Apple TV customers will be able to rent first-run HD movies for $5, at the
same time as they’re released on DVD. That’s a substantial improvement from
the past, when there were significant time lags before movies were available
through iTunes.

Customers will also be able to rent HD TV shows from ABC and Fox for $1, a
discount from the previous price of $3. The shows will run without
commercial interruption.

Netflix customers will also be able to stream video from Netflix via Apple
TV, and can also use the device to browse 

Re: [scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

2010-09-02 Thread Martin Baxter
Saw this on G4 yesterday. On the screen crawl, they were asking for viewer
responses. Very few were even interested in it, most focusing on the iPod
upgrades.

On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:



 Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

- By Dylan F. Tweney http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/author/dtweney/ 
 [image:
Email Author]  wi...@tweney.com
- September 1, 2010  |
- 2:21 pm  |
- Categories: Home Audio and 
 Videohttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/category/home-audio-and-video/
-

   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 [image: mg_7862]

- [image: 
 mg_7862]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=126
- [image: 
 mg_7640-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
- [image: 
 mg_7651-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=123
- [image: 
 mg_7665]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=124
- [image: 
 mg_7678]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=125


   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 View 
 allhttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=125viewall=true

 SAN FRANCISCO — In a sign that its television “hobby” has turned into
 serious business, Apple announced an aggressively-priced new set-top box
 that takes aim at the heart of the cable TV and DVD rental industries.

 The new Apple TV, which will go on sale at the end of September for $100,
 is a puny box just 1/4 the size of the previous model. It has an HDMI port,
 a power supply built in it, an optical audio port, an Ethernet jack, and
 built-in Wi-Fi.

 “It’s silent, cool and tiny,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, showing off the
 diminutive metallic box.

 Despite rumors, the product was not re-branded as “iTV.” Jobs did not state
 whether it was running a version of iOS, although the Apple TV’s new
 interface includes some very iOS-like touches, such as icons that jiggle
 when you are rearranging them in your Netflix queue.

 Apple joins an increasingly crowded and risky scrum of companies trying to
 reinvent television for the internet age. Netflix and Hulu both have been
 offering streaming video playback of movies and TV shows, with some success,
 for over a year. Google is working on a set-top box that would blur the line
 between TV and internet fare, YouTube is said to be planning mainstream film
 rentals and Amazon is rumored to be planning its own Netflix-like video
 streaming 
 servicehttp://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/08/streaming-wars-heat-up-now-amazon-reportedly-is-in-the-hunt/.
 But the real threat are the cable companies and TV networks, which have a
 lock on the shows that people want to watch — and so far, there’s been
 little incentive for them to open up their tightly-controlled ecosystems to
 internet upstarts.

 Apple’s play is for convenience, but it’s not the cross-platform strategy
 needed for dominance, wrote Andrew 
 Eisnerhttp://www.retrevo.com/content/blog/2010/08/battle-looming-tv-os,
 a director at online electronics retailer Retrevo.com.

 “A TV OS vacuum exists at the moment and unfortunately for consumers, TV
 manufacturers appear to be filling it with their own proprietary offerings,”
 Eisner wrote recently. “Apple needs to gain control of the third screen or
 TV screen, after smartphone screens and computer screens, and the TV
 industry needs to move away from closed environments and let their connected
 TVs work with all the apps and streaming content that consumers are finding
 so appealing.”

 The company will also be providing a feature within iOS 4.2 that customers
 can use to share videos wirelessly from their iPhones, iPod Touches or
 iPads. Called “AirPlay,” the feature will let customers display a video from
 their mobile device, on an Apple TV-connected TV screen, with a single tap.
 IOS 4.2 won’t be available until November.

 AirPlay “puts iPhones and iPads in the driver’s seat and makes the TV just
 an output device for the Apple ecosystem,” said Forrester analyst James
 McQuivey. “Expect Apple to gradually push more and more in that direction.”

 “But,” McQuivey added, “as of this moment in 2010, Apple has not yet made a
 significant play for control of the TV.”

 In an implicit acknowledgment of Apple TV’s poor sales to date, Jobs again
 referred to the product as the company’s “hobby.” He showed the new Apple TV
 at a press conference here on Wednesday.

 But Jobs was careful to cast the company’s previous product as a learning
 experience, and indicated his intention of throwing more of the company’s
 weight behind the upgraded Apple TV.

 Apple TV customers will be able to rent first-run HD movies for $5, at the
 same time as they’re released on DVD. That’s a substantial improvement from
 the past, when there were significant time lags before 

Re: [scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

2010-09-02 Thread Mr. Worf
I think that Apple's offering is a little too little too late. Even the Wii
has better options. It doesn't have HD output on top of only two tv
networks. Its worth the $100 if you already own a game system.

On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:34 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Saw this on G4 yesterday. On the screen crawl, they were asking for viewer
 responses. Very few were even interested in it, most focusing on the iPod
 upgrades.


 On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:



 Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

- By Dylan F. Tweney http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/author/dtweney/ 
 [image:
Email Author]  wi...@tweney.com
- September 1, 2010  |
- 2:21 pm  |
- Categories: Home Audio and 
 Videohttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/category/home-audio-and-video/
-

   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 [image: mg_7862]

- [image: 
 mg_7862]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=126
- [image: 
 mg_7640-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
- [image: 
 mg_7651-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=123
- [image: 
 mg_7665]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=124
- [image: 
 mg_7678]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=125


   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 View 
 allhttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=125viewall=true

 SAN FRANCISCO — In a sign that its television “hobby” has turned into
 serious business, Apple announced an aggressively-priced new set-top box
 that takes aim at the heart of the cable TV and DVD rental industries.

 The new Apple TV, which will go on sale at the end of September for $100,
 is a puny box just 1/4 the size of the previous model. It has an HDMI port,
 a power supply built in it, an optical audio port, an Ethernet jack, and
 built-in Wi-Fi.

 “It’s silent, cool and tiny,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, showing off the
 diminutive metallic box.

 Despite rumors, the product was not re-branded as “iTV.” Jobs did not
 state whether it was running a version of iOS, although the Apple TV’s new
 interface includes some very iOS-like touches, such as icons that jiggle
 when you are rearranging them in your Netflix queue.

 Apple joins an increasingly crowded and risky scrum of companies trying to
 reinvent television for the internet age. Netflix and Hulu both have been
 offering streaming video playback of movies and TV shows, with some success,
 for over a year. Google is working on a set-top box that would blur the line
 between TV and internet fare, YouTube is said to be planning mainstream film
 rentals and Amazon is rumored to be planning its own Netflix-like video
 streaming 
 servicehttp://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/08/streaming-wars-heat-up-now-amazon-reportedly-is-in-the-hunt/.
 But the real threat are the cable companies and TV networks, which have a
 lock on the shows that people want to watch — and so far, there’s been
 little incentive for them to open up their tightly-controlled ecosystems to
 internet upstarts.

 Apple’s play is for convenience, but it’s not the cross-platform strategy
 needed for dominance, wrote Andrew 
 Eisnerhttp://www.retrevo.com/content/blog/2010/08/battle-looming-tv-os,
 a director at online electronics retailer Retrevo.com.

 “A TV OS vacuum exists at the moment and unfortunately for consumers, TV
 manufacturers appear to be filling it with their own proprietary offerings,”
 Eisner wrote recently. “Apple needs to gain control of the third screen or
 TV screen, after smartphone screens and computer screens, and the TV
 industry needs to move away from closed environments and let their connected
 TVs work with all the apps and streaming content that consumers are finding
 so appealing.”

 The company will also be providing a feature within iOS 4.2 that customers
 can use to share videos wirelessly from their iPhones, iPod Touches or
 iPads. Called “AirPlay,” the feature will let customers display a video from
 their mobile device, on an Apple TV-connected TV screen, with a single tap.
 IOS 4.2 won’t be available until November.

 AirPlay “puts iPhones and iPads in the driver’s seat and makes the TV just
 an output device for the Apple ecosystem,” said Forrester analyst James
 McQuivey. “Expect Apple to gradually push more and more in that direction.”

 “But,” McQuivey added, “as of this moment in 2010, Apple has not yet made
 a significant play for control of the TV.”

 In an implicit acknowledgment of Apple TV’s poor sales to date, Jobs again
 referred to the product as the company’s “hobby.” He showed the new Apple TV
 at a press conference here on Wednesday.

 But Jobs was careful to cast the company’s previous product as a learning
 experience, and indicated his 

Re: [scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

2010-09-02 Thread Martin Baxter
I don't see that. It's ABC and Fox programs, right? All available online for
me right now. HD if I drop for an HDMI cable, saving me at least $50 bucks
and the rental fees.

On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 7:19 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:



 I think that Apple's offering is a little too little too late. Even the Wii
 has better options. It doesn't have HD output on top of only two tv
 networks. Its worth the $100 if you already own a game system.

 On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:34 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Saw this on G4 yesterday. On the screen crawl, they were asking for viewer
 responses. Very few were even interested in it, most focusing on the iPod
 upgrades.


 On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:



 Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

- By Dylan F. Tweney http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/author/dtweney/
 [image: Email Author]  wi...@tweney.com
- September 1, 2010  |
- 2:21 pm  |
- Categories: Home Audio and 
 Videohttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/category/home-audio-and-video/
-

   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 [image: mg_7862]

- [image: 
 mg_7862]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=126
- [image: 
 mg_7640-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
- [image: 
 mg_7651-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=123
- [image: 
 mg_7665]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=124
- [image: 
 mg_7678]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=125


   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 View 
 allhttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=125viewall=true

 SAN FRANCISCO — In a sign that its television “hobby” has turned into
 serious business, Apple announced an aggressively-priced new set-top box
 that takes aim at the heart of the cable TV and DVD rental industries.

 The new Apple TV, which will go on sale at the end of September for $100,
 is a puny box just 1/4 the size of the previous model. It has an HDMI port,
 a power supply built in it, an optical audio port, an Ethernet jack, and
 built-in Wi-Fi.

 “It’s silent, cool and tiny,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, showing off the
 diminutive metallic box.

 Despite rumors, the product was not re-branded as “iTV.” Jobs did not
 state whether it was running a version of iOS, although the Apple TV’s new
 interface includes some very iOS-like touches, such as icons that jiggle
 when you are rearranging them in your Netflix queue.

 Apple joins an increasingly crowded and risky scrum of companies trying
 to reinvent television for the internet age. Netflix and Hulu both have been
 offering streaming video playback of movies and TV shows, with some success,
 for over a year. Google is working on a set-top box that would blur the line
 between TV and internet fare, YouTube is said to be planning mainstream film
 rentals and Amazon is rumored to be planning its own Netflix-like video
 streaming 
 servicehttp://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/08/streaming-wars-heat-up-now-amazon-reportedly-is-in-the-hunt/.
 But the real threat are the cable companies and TV networks, which have a
 lock on the shows that people want to watch — and so far, there’s been
 little incentive for them to open up their tightly-controlled ecosystems to
 internet upstarts.

 Apple’s play is for convenience, but it’s not the cross-platform strategy
 needed for dominance, wrote Andrew 
 Eisnerhttp://www.retrevo.com/content/blog/2010/08/battle-looming-tv-os,
 a director at online electronics retailer Retrevo.com.

 “A TV OS vacuum exists at the moment and unfortunately for consumers, TV
 manufacturers appear to be filling it with their own proprietary offerings,”
 Eisner wrote recently. “Apple needs to gain control of the third screen or
 TV screen, after smartphone screens and computer screens, and the TV
 industry needs to move away from closed environments and let their connected
 TVs work with all the apps and streaming content that consumers are finding
 so appealing.”

 The company will also be providing a feature within iOS 4.2 that
 customers can use to share videos wirelessly from their iPhones, iPod
 Touches or iPads. Called “AirPlay,” the feature will let customers display a
 video from their mobile device, on an Apple TV-connected TV screen, with a
 single tap. IOS 4.2 won’t be available until November.

 AirPlay “puts iPhones and iPads in the driver’s seat and makes the TV
 just an output device for the Apple ecosystem,” said Forrester analyst James
 McQuivey. “Expect Apple to gradually push more and more in that direction.”

 “But,” McQuivey added, “as of this moment in 2010, Apple has not yet made
 a significant play for control of the TV.”

 In an implicit acknowledgment of Apple TV’s poor 

Re: [scifinoir2] Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

2010-09-02 Thread Mr. Worf
I meant to say its NOT worth the $100 if you own a gaming system.

On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 11:51 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 I don't see that. It's ABC and Fox programs, right? All available online
 for me right now. HD if I drop for an HDMI cable, saving me at least $50
 bucks and the rental fees.

 On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 7:19 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:



 I think that Apple's offering is a little too little too late. Even the
 Wii has better options. It doesn't have HD output on top of only two tv
 networks. Its worth the $100 if you already own a game system.

 On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:34 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Saw this on G4 yesterday. On the screen crawl, they were asking for
 viewer responses. Very few were even interested in it, most focusing on the
 iPod upgrades.


 On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:



 Apple Takes Aim at Cable With Tiny New Apple TV

- By Dylan F. Tweneyhttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/author/dtweney/
 [image: Email Author]  wi...@tweney.com
- September 1, 2010  |
- 2:21 pm  |
- Categories: Home Audio and 
 Videohttp://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/category/home-audio-and-video/
-

   Previous | Next 
 http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
 [image: mg_7862]

- [image: 
 mg_7862]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=126
- [image: 
 mg_7640-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=122
- [image: 
 mg_7651-copy]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=123
- [image: 
 mg_7665]http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/09/apple-tv-introduction/?pid=124
- [image: 
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 SAN FRANCISCO — In a sign that its television “hobby” has turned into
 serious business, Apple announced an aggressively-priced new set-top box
 that takes aim at the heart of the cable TV and DVD rental industries.

 The new Apple TV, which will go on sale at the end of September for
 $100, is a puny box just 1/4 the size of the previous model. It has an HDMI
 port, a power supply built in it, an optical audio port, an Ethernet jack,
 and built-in Wi-Fi.

 “It’s silent, cool and tiny,” said Apple CEO Steve Jobs, showing off the
 diminutive metallic box.

 Despite rumors, the product was not re-branded as “iTV.” Jobs did not
 state whether it was running a version of iOS, although the Apple TV’s new
 interface includes some very iOS-like touches, such as icons that jiggle
 when you are rearranging them in your Netflix queue.

 Apple joins an increasingly crowded and risky scrum of companies trying
 to reinvent television for the internet age. Netflix and Hulu both have 
 been
 offering streaming video playback of movies and TV shows, with some 
 success,
 for over a year. Google is working on a set-top box that would blur the 
 line
 between TV and internet fare, YouTube is said to be planning mainstream 
 film
 rentals and Amazon is rumored to be planning its own Netflix-like video
 streaming 
 servicehttp://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/08/streaming-wars-heat-up-now-amazon-reportedly-is-in-the-hunt/.
 But the real threat are the cable companies and TV networks, which have a
 lock on the shows that people want to watch — and so far, there’s been
 little incentive for them to open up their tightly-controlled ecosystems to
 internet upstarts.

 Apple’s play is for convenience, but it’s not the cross-platform
 strategy needed for dominance, wrote Andrew 
 Eisnerhttp://www.retrevo.com/content/blog/2010/08/battle-looming-tv-os,
 a director at online electronics retailer Retrevo.com.

 “A TV OS vacuum exists at the moment and unfortunately for consumers, TV
 manufacturers appear to be filling it with their own proprietary 
 offerings,”
 Eisner wrote recently. “Apple needs to gain control of the third screen or
 TV screen, after smartphone screens and computer screens, and the TV
 industry needs to move away from closed environments and let their 
 connected
 TVs work with all the apps and streaming content that consumers are finding
 so appealing.”

 The company will also be providing a feature within iOS 4.2 that
 customers can use to share videos wirelessly from their iPhones, iPod
 Touches or iPads. Called “AirPlay,” the feature will let customers display 
 a
 video from their mobile device, on an Apple TV-connected TV screen, with a
 single tap. IOS 4.2 won’t be available until November.

 AirPlay “puts iPhones and iPads in the driver’s seat and makes the TV
 just an output device for the Apple ecosystem,” said Forrester analyst 
 James
 McQuivey. “Expect Apple to gradually push more and more in that direction.”