SEPTEMBER 23, 2009

TV Shapes Up as Web Battleground
Companies Develop Chips, Browsers for New Generation of Sets as Internet 
Looms for Living Room

By JESSICA HODGSON
Wall Street Journal

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125366988207032789.html#mod=WSJ_hps_MIDDLEForthNews


Convergence between the television and the home computer -- a holy grail 
of the digital age -- has largely eluded the industry, but the 
living-room screen is now emerging as a key battleground for software 
and Internet companies.

Improvements to the processors in TV sets are making it feasible to run 
Web applications on a TV without the need for a special set-top box, 
such as those offered by TiVo Inc. or Apple Inc.

While challenges remain, including technical issues and the reluctance 
of parts of the entertainment industry, companies are building chips and 
Web browsers for TVs, and others such as Yahoo Inc. and Adobe Systems 
Inc. are developing Web applications that can be accessed on a new 
generation of TV sets.

"Five years ago people said they didn't want email on their phones, now 
everyone uses data," said Patrick Barry, a senior executive at Yahoo. 
"The television environment is going through the same transition."

Until recently, standard TV sets lacked the processing power for the 
Web, but manufacturers like Sony Corp., Samsung Electronics Co. and 
Vizio Inc. are installing chips that can run more sophisticated 
computing tasks.

Vizio, for example, will have Wi-Fi enabled TV sets with screens 
measuring 42 inches or bigger on the market by November. These models 
will feature Web applications and a remote control with a full keyboard, 
starting at about $1,200.

Research firm iSuppli forecasts that the total number of Web-enabled 
sets will grow to between 88 million and 90 million world-wide by 2013, 
around 40% of the television market. There are around 90 models on the 
market that are Web-enabled, it says.

But there is little consensus about the type of Internet access users 
want on their TVs: Should it be a wide-open browser, like a PC, or more 
narrow Web services that resemble traditional television channels?

"We don't see the browser becoming the primary metaphor," said Anup 
Murarka, a strategist for Adobe Systems Inc. Mr. Murarka said consumers 
favor applications like video and social networking on the television, 
as opposed to text-based pages, and like some preselection of content.

Yahoo has developed Web applications called "widgets" that run in a 
ticker on the TV screen and can be expanded by pressing buttons on a 
remote control. Yahoo's widgets include versions of popular services 
such as Facebook, eBay and Twitter. One of Yahoo's ideas would have 
consumers buy these widgets in a TV storefront.

But others argue that TVs should have full Internet access. Palo Alto, 
Calif.-based Personal Web Systems Inc. is developing a browser 
tailor-made for the television set. Chief Executive Gordon Campbell 
believes consumers will chafe at having restrictions placed on the Web 
content they can get on a television.

Mr. Campbell, a former Intel Corp. executive, said several telecom 
operators are planning trials featuring his company's technology, 
scheduled to run next year, but declined to disclose their identities.

It's not clear whether consumers, long accustomed to the distinction 
between the "lean back" mode of television and the more engaged mode of 
the PC, will welcome the introduction of interactivity into the television.

Yankee Group analyst Carl Howe said TVs are still lacking is a 
compelling user interface for the Internet. "On the mobile phone it 
looked like it was never going to work until Apple's iPhone took off. 
That needs to happen with the TV," he said.

-- 
================================
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

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