Verizon Commits to FiOS 3D TV

verizon fios logo.jpgVerizon jumped on the 3D TV bandwagon on Friday, announcing support for a 3DTV package that will launch before the 2010 holiday season.

The company said that the service will complement its existing standard-definition and HD services along its FiOS network, which totals about three million subscribers, most of them in the Northeast.

But Verizon also sounded the first notes in what could be a battle for content, complaining that early 3d broadcast rights were priced too high for its business.

“We’re monitoring the early sales of
3D TVs and expect to announce a 3D offering well in advance of the
holiday TV-shopping season, when 3D television sales will expand,” Shawn Strickland, vice president of FiOS product management for Verizon, said in a statement on Friday.

Netflix Starts Shipping Wii Streaming Discs to Small Group

netflix wii.jpg

Netflix has started to ship the discs required to stream over the Wii to some of its customers, the company announced Thursday. Netflix is sending the discs to only a small group of people and will use their feedback to “ensure that we deliver a great experience to everyone when we launch,” marketing exec Jessie Becker said in a blog post.

Any Netflix member with an unlimited plan for $8.99 per month or higher, a broadband connection, and a Wii console will be able to access the service at launch. To sign up, reserve a copy of the Wii disc online, and Netflix will send you an e-mail once it launches.

Netflix first announced plans for streaming on the Wii in January. The company said at the time that it was planning for a spring launch.

Eyes On: The First 3D NHL Hockey Broadcast in the U.S.

P3240500.JPG

Last night at Madison Square Garden in New York City, the first live 3D and HD sporting event in the U.S. was broadcast on Cablevision. And the NHL’s New York Rangers destroyed the New York Islanders in a 5-to-0 rout.  While I was less than impressed with the hockey game, I was amazed by the broadcast.  

After I got an invitation to see the broadcast, I assumed that it would be shown on one of the new consumer 3D TVs using “active shutter” glasses. But MSG actually showed the game in a giant theater, Avatar-style, using a Real 3D projector and passive glasses. So it wasn’t the home-viewer experience I was hoping for, in advance of the 3D sports bonanza coming our summer, when the World Cup will be broadcast in 3D. That said, what I saw blew me away.

The Gluvi: So Its Come to This

Gluvi.jpgAre you a fist-bumper? Do you instantly strip the cover off the hotel bed when you walk in? Do you think Adrian Monk and Howie Mandel have the right idea? Are you, in short, extremely cautious about germs? Well, here’s a new enabling product to feed your phobias: the Gluvi. This wrapper for remotes prevents contamination from handling a gadget that other people have touched before you. The makers claim it fits 95 percent of hotel cable TV remotes, which sounds like a made-up number, but maybe they really did visit hundreds of hotel rooms to check. They also claim it’s made from “easy grip stylish yoga inspired reflexology material.” Really? Because it looks like it was inspired by Saran Wrap.

The fear-mongering site also suggests that travelers can get herpes from a hotel remote. Perhaps you’d better get the bellboy to slip the Gluvi on for you. Tip him well. This product, which I’m hoping is an early April Fools joke, will be available March 30, for a price not yet named. Until then, consider wearing gloves while changing the channel.

An Ultra-thin TV Demands and Ultra-thin Speaker

DefTech_XTR50.jpg

A speaker that sticks out 4 to 5 inches from the wall was fine in the old days of plasma TVs that did the same, say the people at Definitive Technology. But in early 2010, we’re all flocking to ultra-thin LED-backlit LCD flat panels, and those hug the wall with a depth of 1.75 inches or less. Who wants some bulky 4- or 5-inch speaker next to that? Instead, look to the Mythos XTR-50. It measures 27 inches high, 6 inches wide, and 1.5 inches thick. It ships with a wall-mounting bracket for horizontal or vertical orientation, as well as stands for tabletop or shelf use.

One secret of the thin profile is an aluminum dome that replaces a cone-shaped diaphragm. The Mythos XTR-50 is available on Amazon.com and Crutchfield.com now, and in a few weeks you’ll be able to find it at Magnolia Home Theater (Best Buy’s high-end store within a store), Sixth Avenue Electronics, Abt Electronics, OneCall, Ultimate Electronics, and Vann’s for a list price of $699.

Toshiba Intros Line of Connected LED TVs

Toshiba55UX600U.jpg

Ditch that clunky box connected to your set and get your streaming media directly through the TV itself. Toshiba has introduced the UX600 series of LED TVs, which all offer Wi-Fi connections. The line includes 40-, 46-, and 55-inch sizes ($1,399, $1,699, and $2,499 respectively).

Built-in applications include Vudu, Pandora, Facebook, and Twitter. You can also access Flickr, YouTube, and Picasa and stay informed with New York Times, AP, National Weather, and other news sources. The TVs let you create a customizable ticker on the bottom of your screen to stay current with Twitter, news, weather, or stocks no matter what you’re watching. That’s a great list, but it would sound a lot better if Netflix was on it. What exactly has kept the Toshiba execs to busy that they didn’t notice the most successful movie streaming service around? Add it, Toshiba, and throw in Slacker while you’re at it.

The UX600 TVs offer 3M:1 dynamic contrast, a CrystalCoat high contrast screen coating, and AutoView to create the optimal picture in any lighting condition. All three models will be available this month.

Harman Releases New Spring Line

HKTS30.jpgAttention, movie buffs and audio enthusiasts: Harman International introduced its new spring line this morning.

Action movie fans will want the Harman Kardon HKTS 20 and HKTS 30 (left), two new 5.1 home entertainment solutions. Both offer a 200W powered, 200mm subwoofer and two-way loudspeakers. The package also includes a dual-driver center channel speaker for distinct movie dialogue. Look for them this month for $699 $799 and $899 $999.

The JBL MS-8 is a clever system integration digital processor that can optimize a car’s audio performance in only 10 minutes, Harman Kardon says. Use it to maximize frequency response, bass performance, dynamics, clarity, and more. You’ll find it in April for $799.

Old favorites are back, as well, with new versions of the Harman Kardon Go + Play Micro ($399), the JBL On Time 200P ($249), the JBL On Time Micro ($249), and the JBL On Stage Micro II ($129). Improvements include iPod and/or iPhone compatibility.

Google-Powered Google TV Set-top Box Concept Surfaces Again

google logo.jpgA little more than a week ago, The Wall Street Journal reported that Google and DISH Network had begun testing a set-top box that uses Google as a search algorithm. In a story published late Wednesday, The New York Times went a step further, claiming that a “Google TV” platform is in the works, from Intel, Google, Sony and Logitech.

The Times reported that the Google service will run on Atom-powered set-top boxes, and that Logitech is developing complementary remote controls. The Google TV platform will be opened to third-party developers to write their own plug-ins, as they have for the Android platform, the paper reported.

Given the two complementary reports from two of the major daily papers, it seems logical to assume that Google is likely leaking the news ahead of a launch. Furthermore, the open platform concept seems to be in keeping with Google’s strategy.

Sony apparently will manufacture the set-top boxes, although I have yet to see a mass-market Sony set-top besides the PlayStation 3.

EDIT: I wrote earlier that, since the announcement of a plug-in TV widget technology with Intel in 2008, a Yahoo-Intel partnership for developing widgets on set-top boxes has been extremely quiet. Yahoo representatives have pointed out that the company has announced partnerships with Vizio, LG, Sony, and Samsung.

Chrome: Not Just a Speedy Browser

ChromeHDTV.jpg

Finally, someone has solved the problem of HDTVs that aren’t shiny enough. TV- and monitor-maker Sceptre has just released a 24-inch LCD HDTV in sleek sleek chrome.

It’s not all about the beautiful exterior, though. These sets offer 1080p resolution, a 2ms response time, 4,000:1 contrast ratio, and dual HDMI ports. You’ll also get a USB port for listening to music and viewing digital photos. The chrome TV is Energy Star 3.0 compliant, so maybe it’ll even save you a few bucks. The neck and base are detachable, and the TV features a Kensington security slot, in case you want to carry it around with you.

You can pick up the chrome set at Sears, Kmart, Costo, and NewEgg.com for a list price of just $399. If chrome isn’t for you, this model also comes in black, red, pink, and blue.

SXSW: Sparks Fly at Internet TV Debate

d-link-boxee-box.jpgOn the opening night of SXSW Interactive, HDNet founder Mark Cuban and Boxee founder Avner Ronan traded verbal barbs and a few well-reasoned arguments trying to answer the simple question: will Internet TV take over? Ronan sees Internet video services replacing the cable TV model and allowing users to purchase programming a la carte. Ever the businessman, Cuban just wants to see the money, or as he put it at one point, the “shekels.”

At times the debate seemed rehearsed, but that is because it started more than a year ago in a combative exchange of blog posts. (One of Cuban’s was titled “Why Do Internet People Think Content People Are Stupid?“) With the rhetorical groundwork laid, the two executives held nothing back in their face-to-face meeting.

“If you think that the Internet going to replace cable you’re crazy,” Cuban said, noting that no one in the Internet video space is making money, including Boxee, and that the current model of delivering content for free is going nowhere.

“But people are willing to pay for Internet video right now,” Ronan responded.  “They are paying for Netflix, they are paying for MLB, they are paying for a lot of things,” he said. “It isn’t about free or not free. It is about whether the Internet can deliver video and it can.”

How much video and how reliably it can be delivered is a different question. And that is where Cuban made his strongest points.  Having a few million users download programming a few times a week is one thing, but what about when it is tens of millions? The Internet simply wasn’t built to support that kind of delivery.

“When do you think that ESPN will say Monday Night Football could have 20 million subscribers, so let’s stream it over the Internet?” asked Cuban.

“A couple of years…,” began Ronan.

“Ha! Like two years or 200 years!?” snapped Cuban.

The hour-long debate, briefly interrupted by a fire alarm that cleared the Austin Convention Center, also touched on net neutrality, the limits of Wi-Fi home networks, and development platforms for set-top boxes.

Despite the testy exchanges and the ideological divide, there was actually a lot of agreement on practical matters. Ronan acknowledged that pay models needed to evolve and that providers like HDNet should be paid for their content. Cuban offered to put video on any network, including Internet-based platforms, as long as the numbers made sense.

For better or worse, as Cuban put it, “The future of television is television.”

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]