Boxee Box coming Q2 2010, D-Link revealed as hardware partner

Like a good one-two punch, now that Boxee Beta has been unveiled, here comes a glimpse of the company’s first hardware unit, the Boxee Box. D-Link takes the honors of being the inaugural hardware partner and Astro the designer. The Box, more like a submerged cube, boasts HDMI, SD card slot, two USB 2.0 ports, WiFi, and ethernet for old school internet connectivity. Unfortunately, we don’t know at this point what’s powering it under the hood, but we’re hoping that NVIDIA collaboration on the beta software might suggest some Ion here. Target release sometime in the second quarter of 2010 for about $200.

Gallery: Boxee Box

Continue reading Boxee Box coming Q2 2010, D-Link revealed as hardware partner

Boxee Box coming Q2 2010, D-Link revealed as hardware partner originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 20:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boxee Beta unveiled: refreshed UI, DirectX support, and new content partners

Boxee‘s growing up! The media center’s hit beta status, and with the new Greek letter comes a revamped UI and some new functionality. For starters, the front page has been redesigned to highlight the menu, your personal queue, featured content, and recommendations that are fed in from Facebook or Twitter. For video, local files and online content are integrated into the same menu, can be filtered by free or pay content, and television shows are now sorted by season and episode. We’re particularly fond of the new global menu for quick shuffling through the menu and to shortcuts. At an event tonight in New York, the company’s also announced three new apps: The Escapist, Suicide Girls, and most interesting of all, “TV Guide to the Web” Clicker. On the more technical side of things, the graphical backend has switched from OpenGL to DirectX, and NVIDIA’s been cooperating to better optimize the software for use on the Ion platform via DXVA and Flash 10.1. Good changes all around, except we did just hear that it won’t support 64-bit in Karmick Koala — sorry, Ubuntu fans. As previously mentioned, there’s no wide release available yet, so you’ll just have to live vicariously through the gallery below!

Gallery: Boxee Beta

Boxee Beta unveiled: refreshed UI, DirectX support, and new content partners originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 Dec 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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YouTube pulls a Hulu — yanking API access from Popcorn Hour (Update: Google responds)

Hope you weren’t enjoying watching YouTube on the television screen via Popcorn Hour and other set-top boxes, as they have been given notice by the newly 1080p and network TV-friendly website that they are no longer welcome to access its content. The new Hulu-ish Terms of Service (section II, item 10) restricts API clients from the ability to “use the YouTube API in connection with any API Client created for use on television set top boxes, television game consoles, or video screens packaged and marketed as television sets;” according to Popcorn Hour COO Alex Limberis this applies to all with the exception of “a few strategic partner’s Google has singled out” — PlayStation 3, Wii, TiVo, Panasonic, Samsung and other licensed hardware is safe.

Update: After speaking with Alex we’ve got a better view of the situation — as is clear from the TOS, manufacturers streaming directly via the API as Popcorn Hour did are no longer welcome without cutting a seven figure check to license access. Google did offer to allow continued access via its YouTube XL interface, but for devices like theirs not built around Flash, that possible solution proved to be technologically unfeasible. Obviously these changes apply to all, but as of yet we’re not aware of anyone other than Popcorn Hour that has been contacted directly about it.

Update v2: After the break is Google’s response, stating Popcorn Hour and the like have been in violation of the above TOS for over a year, from its perspective, this is a simple matter of defending its rights from “video scraping technology.” As we mentioned above that means most are in no danger of losing access, but fans of these media streamers will have to live without it, until either YouTube can control the experience or the manufacturer pays up.

Continue reading YouTube pulls a Hulu — yanking API access from Popcorn Hour (Update: Google responds)

YouTube pulls a Hulu — yanking API access from Popcorn Hour (Update: Google responds) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Nov 2009 11:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAlex Limberis, YouTube TOS  | Email this | Comments

Boxee Signs Deal with Device Manufacturer for Boxee Box

boxee logo.jpg

Online video platform Boxee has signed a deal with an unknown device manufacturer to produce a “Boxee box” that will stream the site’s content. The company will show a mock-up of the box and reveal more details at its December 7 meet-up in Brooklyn, NY.

Boxee has been working on this deal since the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show (CES), CEO Avner Ronen said in a blog post. “During the show we met with several device manufactures interested in embedding Boxee into their existing devices or building a dedicated Boxee device,” he wrote.

Boxee has secured a partnership with a consumer electronics company, but they cannot “say more about the partner or the specs of the device,” Ronen said.

“This will be the first connected device running Boxee, but the idea is to provide consumers with a way to get Boxee in their living rooms, no matter whether it’s on a Connected TV, game console, set-top box, BluRay player, computer, etc,” he continued. “Our goal is to be on every Connected device in the living room.”

Boxee inks deal with first hardware partner: a ‘Boxee Box’ is coming

Color us shocked and elated. Boxee, the white-hot startup that has risen from nothing to everywhere thanks to its internet TV software portal, has just announced that a deal has been inked between it and an undisclosed “hardware partner.” If you’ll recall, we actually heard that the outfit was mulling the production of its own set-top-box back in January, and now it looks like Roku, Apple TV and a host of other mini PCs will have yet another formidable rival vying for space underneath the tele. The firm isn’t spilling any details whatsoever on the so-called “Boxee Box,” but we are told that mockups and the like will be presented at the Boxee Beta Unveiling on December 7th. Oh, and as if you aren’t excited enough already, chew on this — the company has informed us that they believe “this will be the first of several living room devices you’ll see running Boxee in 2010,” so don’t be shocked if your favorite game console or Blu-ray player gains an embedded Boxee app in the near future.

Boxee inks deal with first hardware partner: a ‘Boxee Box’ is coming originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 11:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Myka ION brings Hulu, Boxee and other web content to your TV

It’s been almost a full year since we heard a peep from the fine folks at Myka, but it looks like we could be talking about ’em a lot more often judging by the specs list on its latest contraption. The simply-titled ION is an Atom-based media PC that relies on NVIDIA’s Ion graphics set and a customized interface that brings Hulu, Boxee and pretty much any other web content you can stumble upon to your television. Within, you’ll find a 1.6GHz dual-core Atom 330 CPU, up to 4GB of RAM, ten USB 2.0 ports, VGA / DVI / HDMI outputs, an eSATA connector, Ethernet and plenty of audio outputs. The fanless design ensures that things remain quiet, and for those oozing cash, a Blu-ray drive, HDD and WiFi module can be implanted. It’s up for order right now starting at $379, but you’ll be stuck waiting four to six weeks for delivery.

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Myka ION brings Hulu, Boxee and other web content to your TV originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Nov 2009 19:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boxee shows off its new look at Beta Unveiling jam December 7

We won’t cancel our trips to Vegas just yet, but Boxee is planning on giving users an early peek at its new beta release — with all new UI, queue, navigation and search features — December 7 at the Music hall of Williamsburg. Beta Unveiling visitors will be the first to get their hands on the new version and see new applications being launched by partners, leading to early access beta testers giving it a four week shakedown run before the planned wide release January 7 at CES. Any ideas what form Boxee might take in this next step on its road to commercial viability?

Boxee shows off its new look at Beta Unveiling jam December 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Nov 2009 16:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boxee locks up additional funding, plots route from underground to mainstream

We’re not sure how this affects the zero-dollar revenue goal for 2009, but popular media player software Boxee announced it has closed a $6 million round of financing including a new partner, General Catalyst. We’ll let the money men assess value, the key point for users is how this affects the company’s plan to take the platform from underground darling to mainstream hit – embedding the software in connected TVs, Blu-ray player, game consoles and set-top boxes. With a Windows alpha release in the bag and latest support from MLB.tv Boxee seems well on the way towards reaching larger audiences, CEO Avner Ronen says to look forward to the beta release this fall, more content deals and extending the App Store and API support. Our advice is to avoid tearing an ACL itself dancing on stage like another recent independent performer turned-mainstream star, what would you like to see from Boxee now that the company has more resources to provide it?

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Boxee locks up additional funding, plots route from underground to mainstream originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Aug 2009 21:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boxee updates: Windows alpha gone public, MLB.tv HD streams and more

Just as promised, the Windows alpha of Boxee media center software is now open to all, but that’s far from the only big announcement made, so hang tight for a second. MLB.tv has been added as a partner, allowing subscribers to catch games live and even in HD within the Boxee interface, as well as other new and upcoming integration with Digg, Tumblr and Current. Speaking of the interface, there’s a new look (pictured above) to separate internet and locally-hosted content more clearly, and among the more granular tweaks Jaunty Jackalope support is official and Ubuntu users can enjoy 1080p playback via NVIDIA hardware acceleration. Check the blog for all the details including one more that probably only we can appreciate, it’s now officially “Boxee” with a capital B, so the grammar police can set their weapons back to stun.

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Boxee updates: Windows alpha gone public, MLB.tv HD streams and more originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 12:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows version of boxee open to all June 23rd

Drooling over boxee on other platforms but haven’t been able to nab an invite to the Windows alpha? De-stress, CEO Avner Ronen announced the plan is to open things up starting June 23. Other things touched upon at the Connections digital entertainment conference Wednesday included his belief that TV is going the way of the internet and that tech giants need to just let it happen, and the company’s potential to make money from its media streaming platform, possibly from content providers for pushing their shows, collecting a fee from for-pay add-ons in an application store, or licensing boxee to hardware makers. Don’t worry too much about a money grab on the way anytime soon, with a zero-dollar revenue goal for the year. In the meantime, chill and check out a preview of the Windows version and an example of how it can work as a simple Windows Media Center plugin.

[Via Download Squad]

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Windows version of boxee open to all June 23rd originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 06 Jun 2009 11:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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