Western Digital’s TV Live Hub Is the Anti-Apple TV

If you’ve ever complained about a certain set-top box’s dearth of local storage or support of exotic media files, you now have a clear alternative. Western Digital’s TV Live Hub doesn’t actually have much to do with live TV, but it will store and stream the stuffing out of whatever you’ve been keeping on your computer.

You want local storage for your movies, music, pictures and TV shows? How does 1 TB sound? Western Digital makes some of the biggest and best hard drives around, and this one packs a wallop. And for $200, the TV Live Hub only costs $70 more than WD’s entry-level 1-TB external hard drive, the MyBook.

You want support for every file format you’ve ever dreamed about and video all the way up to 1080p? Here’s the list:

Video – AVI (Xvid, AVC, MPEG1/2/4), MPG/MPEG, VOB, MKV (h.264, x.264, AVC, MPEG1/2/4, VC-1), TS/TP/M2T (MPEG1/2/4, AVC, VC-1), MP4/MOV (MPEG4, h.264), M2TS, WMV9
Photo – JPEG, GIF, TIF/TIFF, BMP, PNG
Audio – MP3, WAV/PCM/LPCM, WMA, AAC, FLAC, MKA, AIF/AIFF, OGG, Dolby Digital, DTS
Playlist – PLS, M3U, WPL
Subtitle – SRT, ASS, SSA, SUB, SMI

I don’t even know what some of those are, but OMG, I am furious at any device that doesn’t support all of them now.

Wait — so far, it sounds like I’m just connecting a big-ass net-connected hard drive to my TV. Can it do anything cool with that internet connection?

Sure. The Live Hub is a fully-fledged media server, WD claims. Once it’s on your network, you can stream its content to pretty much any device with a screen on your network: net-connected TVs, Blu-ray players, Xbox 360, PS3 — even iOS or Android devices using third-party applications. It can also share and sync media folders with PCs or Macs.

And the network isn’t just local: You can also stream content from Netflix, Pandora, Flickr and YouTube, and upload content to Facebook.

The open question here — which I can’t really speak to without getting a chance to try it out — is the quality of the user interface. Unlike Apple or Google, Western Digital isn’t really a software company.

Wired recently reviewed the previous version, the Western Digital TV Live Plus, and found it was riddled with problems: Videos often played without their audio tracks, file-format support was not nearly as complete as the above spec list suggests, and video quality was hit-or-miss.

What it does offer is a different — and I think compelling — model for how you configure your hardware throughout your home network, how you store and share content that ultimately will be displayed primarily on the biggest screen in your house.

Here are the positions each player’s taken on the board so far:

  • TiVo wants to record live TV.
  • Google wants to help you find it and give you apps for it.
  • Apple wants to rent you streaming TV and movies and bounce it between your other Apple devices.
  • WD wants to give you a big hard drive and share it around the house.
  • Everybody wants to let you stream Netflix.
  • Meanwhile, Microsoft wants to do most of those things and play videogames, too.

On the one hand, both Apple and WD are avoiding TiVo’s and Google’s attempts to bring software to bear on live TV. On the other hand, their approaches couldn’t be more different.

Apple’s world is all cloud: a box with a tiny footprint that makes as little noise as possible, offering lightweight, streaming rentals that disappear. If you’re storing a library of data, you’re doing it somewhere else.

WD’s approach might seem more conservative, because it’s still about building and storing a digital library of files in lots of different formats. But you could say it’s actually much more radical.

It suggests that your entertainment media won’t be pumped into your house through a box or live on the computer you use to make spreadsheets. The digital hub isn’t your PC, and it definitely isn’t a server somewhere sitting lonely in your office or basement.

The digital hub is your television — the one screen in your house that always stays in one place. And now, your television can talk to every other screen that comes into your house.

WD TV Live Hub Media Center [WD Press Release]

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Netflix Officially A Streaming Video Company With DVDs On the Side

While everyone was focused on Apple ditching software discs with its forthcoming App Store for Mac, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings was busy digging a grave for optical media. Steve Jobs just threw a shovel full of dirt on top.

“Three years ago we were a DVD-by-mail company that offered some streaming,” Hastings told reporters and investors Wednesday. “We are now a streaming company, which also offers DVD-by-mail.”

Software discs haven’t actually mattered for a long time now. The real innovation of Apple’s App Store for software sales isn’t online distribution. It isn’t even creating a central marketplace. It’s putting that marketplace in a client right on the desktop. For Apple, it’s having that client not be iTunes, an already overstuffed monster well overdue for dismemberment and redistribution.

The real front in the battle over optical media remains video — with Netflix, Apple, Hulu, TiVo, Xbox Live and others on the side of the cloud, and Blu-ray, 3D televisions and most game consoles on the side of the disc. Microsoft is the only company that is nearly everywhere pursuing both approaches equally all at once.

Netflix has been able to become a streaming video company by partnering with nearly everyone who makes a net-connected box or screen, from TVs and set-top boxes to tablets and smartphones.

Reportedly, Netflix accounts for more than 20 percent of US downstream internet traffic in peak times, with the heaviest traffic falling between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m — traditional television prime time.

That’s only likely to rise as Netflix streaming becomes available on a greater number of less expensive devices attached to television sets. And it’s a good reminder that while software discs vs downloads is a battle that’s virtually over, streaming media over the internet vs streaming media over cable or broadcast has in some sense only just truly begun.

In Canada, Netflix already offers a streaming-only video plan, with regular or Blu-ray DVDs as an extra, optional feature. Its CEO’s comments suggest the US will likely be next.

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Apple TV hacked to run weather app

Well, that didn’t take long. Greenpois0n jailbroke the new Apple TV just yesterday, and PwnageTool 4.1 this afternoon, and we’ve already got what appears to be the first custom software successfully running on the device. As you can see, it’s a simple weather app, designed by a tiny software firm called nitoTV, but it’s a harbinger of things to come when developers get cracking on the Apple TV in earnest. See a picture of nitoTV’s custom launcher after the break, while your subconscious frantically tries to figure out what the four cities in the above pic could possibly have in common.

Continue reading Apple TV hacked to run weather app

Apple TV hacked to run weather app originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 22:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple TV now jailbreakable with PwnageTool 4.1

You still won’t be able to do much beyond the command line just yet, but folks looking to jailbreak their new Apple TV can now do so with relative ease thanks to the Dev-Team’s PwnageTool 4.1, which has just been made available for download. Of course, a command line today only means that we’re pretty much guaranteed to see some more interesting things tomorrow — hit up the source link below to get started.

Apple TV now jailbreakable with PwnageTool 4.1 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Oct 2010 16:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple TV jailbroken again with Greenpois0n, lets Shatter off the hook

The iOS dev community already shattered the new Apple TV, but now it’s been poisoned, too. What does this mean for you? It means that there’s still a chance your $99 set top box might be jailbroken to run apps, even though Shatter is gone. Now we’ll just have to wait and see if someone figures the hard part out, and gets some apps installed. Those Angry Birds don’t fling themselves, you know.

Apple TV jailbroken again with Greenpois0n, lets Shatter off the hook originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Oct 2010 23:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink 9to5 Mac  |  source@p0sixninja (Twitter)  | Email this | Comments

Apple TV hits 250,000 in sales, says Steve Jobs

Deep within the heart of Apple’s fiscal earnings call Q&A session, straight from the mouth of CEO Steve Jobs: “I can report that we’ve sold a quarter million Apple TVs.” Quite an impressive number for a device that’s only been out for 18 days but by no means on par with the likes of some other Apple debuts (the iPad, for instance, sold 300,000 on day one). Still, not bad for the once (and possibly still) hobby.

Apple TV hits 250,000 in sales, says Steve Jobs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Oct 2010 17:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Do I Need an Apple TV? [Video]

By lowering the price to $99, Apple has made a bold thrust into the living room, proclaiming, “This is the streamer for the masses.” But, ho, masses! Should you add this relatively inexpensive box to your increasingly cluttered TV system? More »

Our Remote Controls Are Amazing, Yet Nobody’s Happy

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Sony Controller for Google TV


We hate our remotes. Every electronic media device comes with its own remote. We lose them and can’t control our stuff without them. They break. We confuse them with each other. It’s too hard to do simple things. It’s way too hard to do hard things.

We ask too much of them. The batteries die, and they all take different batteries. They’re uncomfortable. They’re unresponsive. What we do with our hands doesn’t match what’s happening on the screen. And the software that’s on the devices that are controlled by the remote is frequently terrible.

And occasionally, as with Sony’s controller for its upcoming Google TV, the remotes just boggle the mind with their ugliness and complexity.

We’re not alone in disliking remotes. The preceding litany of problems comes from what readers told Consumer Reports in an article titled “Readers Dislike TV Remotes.”

Now we have an emerging class of internet-connected media devices with powerful software designed to make navigating TVs and movies easier. Google TV, Apple TV, TiVo and Roku join game consoles like Sony’s Playstation 3, XBox 360 and Nintendo’s Wii in providing multimedia content on the biggest screens in our house.

But however sophisticated the software, all of these devices still need hardware devices for us to control them. It’s quite likely that some of these devices won’t be dedicated remotes at all, but phones, tablets or other handheld media devices running apps. We might use these apps to control not just our TVs, but our entire house.

That’s one vision of the future of remote control.

Here, we want to examine the other side of the equation: dedicated hardware controllers. From traditional remotes to mini-keyboards, video controllers and devices that combine all three, here are 15 devices that offer you a glimpse of everything that’s good and bad about the current generation of remote controls.

Above:

Sony’s Google TV Controller

WIRED: Offers all the control you could want. Full QWERTY keyboard for text entry, which is essential for search — sure to be a key part of the Google experience. Raised buttons with different feel make it easier to use in the dark. It’s even got tab, control, number and function keys — not dependent on software to get it done.

TIRED: Sheer size of the thing will be a deal-breaker for some. In different shades of gray, it doesn’t look like a device from 2010. Too many buttons could be confusing or intimidating to non-expert users.

Image: ABC News

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5 Reasons We’re Tingly About Google TV [Video]

The last time the web smashed into television, over a decade ago, it exploded like poorly made breast implants. So why are we so excited about Google TV? More »

AirPlay Can Stream to Apple TV From Any iOS App – Not Just iTunes

Apple TV may not have native apps yet, but AirPlay provides a workaround to run apps on your TV — so long as those apps involve streaming video or audio.

Ars Technica’s Jacqui Cheng wasn’t able to try out video streaming to the Apple TV in full — that won’t be possible until iOS 4.2 ships in November — but in her extended review, she did unearth two important bits about AirPlay:

  • With iOS 4.1, you can already easily stream audio to the Apple TV, including audio from movie files;
  • With iOS 4.2, every iOS app using Apple’s standard audio and video profiles can stream to Apple TV. Not just videos in your iTunes library.

Some of these applications are no-brainers, like Netflix and YouTube. Since both apps run natively on Apple TV anyway, this might appear redundant; still, it’s nice to be able to seamlessly throw video from your phone to your TV in the middle of watching something, without having to start over and search for the same video again.

Other iOS apps add content that Apple TV doesn’t have. Ars Technica mentions sports applications like MLB At-Bat and local internet radio. You might be able to preview a movie you’re editing in the iPad’s iMovie mobile app on the big screen without plugging in.

Of course, applications that either don’t want their content streamed to Apple TV (like Hulu, perhaps) or don’t want to put in the work to reformat their video into H.264 will be left out — just keep your video and audio in a format that can’t be streamed. For others, there’s nothing else they have to do on the software or hardware side to make their applications AirPlay-compatible.

That prospect could be exciting for both developers and users — at least until full-fledged iOS apps for Apple TV come along. Or Google TV’s apps sweep through and steal the whole show.

YouTube video streaming over AirPlay; Image via Ars Technica

Ars reviews the Apple TV 2.0: little, black, different [Ars Technica]

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