SlashGear 101: What is Chromecast?

Google’s Chromecast device is a Web media player, introduced by the company just a bit over a year after they first showed of a machine with very similar capabilities: the Nexus Q. Where the Nexus Q came into play as a bocce-ball-sized TV “box”, Chromecast is the size of a USB dongle, small enough to fit in your pocket. It connects through a television’s full-sized HDMI port and you’ll be able to pull it up with the input button on your television remote, the same as you would a DVD player.

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Instead of playing physical content, like DVDs or Blu-ray disks, Chromecast uses the internet to pull content from web-based apps. Chromecast does not have a remote control included in the box it’s delivered with when you buy it because it’s able to connect with basically any smart device you’ve got in your home – or in your pocket.

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Size: 72(L) x 35(W) x 12(H) mm
Weight: 34g
Video Output: 1080p
Connectivity: HDMI, Wi-Fi
RAM: 256k
Processor: N/A
OS: Chromecast

You’ll plug Chromecast in to your TV, plug a microUSB power cord (included in the box) into Chromecast to keep it powered up, and press the single physical button on Chromecast to send out a wireless signal that effectively says, “I’m ready to go!”

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Turning the television on and the input to the HDMI port you’ve plugged Chromecast into, you’ll see a screen that directs you to google.com/chromecast/setup. Note that this URL may change over time, but this is the first place you’ll be sent in this initial launch of Chromecast when this article is first posted.

This one-time setup connects Chromecast to the web – if you’ve got a password on your Wi-Fi network, you’ll need to enter it. You can do this setup process from any device with an internet browser, while actually sending content to Chromecast is limited to the following:

• Android 2.3 and higher
• iOS 6 and higher
• Windows®7 and higher
• Mac OS 10.7 and higher
• Chrome OS (Chromebook Pixel, additional Chromebooks coming soon).

At the moment you’ll be able to use Chromecast to connect with Netflix, YouTube, Google Play Movies, and Google Music. Using Chromecast’s “Cast” protocol, you’re able to “fling” content from your control device (laptop, smartphone, tablet) to your TV.

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So you’ll open up YouTube, for example, and play a video, but you’ll also be clicking the Cast button that, (once you’re set up), appears in the upper right-hand corner of your Chrome web browser or app. From there you’ll be able to control said media as it plays OR continue on with your regularly scheduled web browsing as the media plays on your TV.

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Once the media you’ve chosen on your phone, tablet, or notebook has been flung to Chromecast, you no longer have to worry about it. If you DO want to control it again, you’ll have only to return to the app you were in and change it up. You can also choose to send something new to Chromecast, this immediately stopping the current media from playing, moving on to the next piece of media in kind.

There are also interesting side-loading features you can use if you’re not all about working with one of the few apps supported by Chromecast so far. At the moment Chromecast has a BETA mirroring feature that works with Chrome web browser windows.

You can open a file in a Chrome web browser window and fling it to Chromecast, your television then mirroring this window as you do so. This feature requires that you actually keep the window open if you want to keep watching it on your TV since the content is not on the web, it’s on your computer.

This BETA mirroring feature can be used for photos and video as well – we’ll be seeing how close we can get to real web-based gaming mirroring soon!

What else do you want to know about Chromecast? Is this a device (at $35 USD) that you’ll be picking up, supposing it’s not already sold out every which way from physical stores to Google Play? Let us know!


SlashGear 101: What is Chromecast? is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The Netflix Cropping Worst Case Scenario

You may not have noticed Netflix cropping your movies, and you may not care (although you should!). But at least we can all agree that at some point, it’s a problem. And who better than Conan O’Brien to show us just how bad things could get?

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Here’s Everything Wrong with X-Men

It’s been forever and ago since X-Men first came out (13 years!) but since The Wolverine is coming out this weekend, CinemaSins decided to re-visit the comic book classic (is 13 years enough time to call it a classic?) and point out everything wrong with it. I would have just pointed out everything wrong with the first X-Men Origins: Wolverine movie but I think the entire world is pretending that movie never happened so we can see Hugh Jackman shirtless again. [CinemaSins]

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They’re doing a Superman/Batman movie… but that’s not the big news

They're doing a Superman/Batman movie... but that's not the big news

Man of Steel director Zack Snyder just came out and rocked our worlds at Comic-Con. Not just announcing that Batman will be in the Superman sequel — which he did with a cool-looking metallic Superman-Batman logo that drove the crowd nuts. But that was not the biggest deal.

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How Pacific Rim’s Monster-Mashing Amazingness Came Out of Digital Art

Have you seen Pacific Rim yet? We really liked it in all its creature-tastic, city destroying splendor. Watch this short behind-the-scenes video to hear about how it was all put together.

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How Computer Chess Was Shot With a Vintage Sony Tube Video Camera

Andrew Bujalski’s latest film, Computer Chess, is a black-and-white dive into a the world of programming, and specifically, the quest to teach a computer to play chess better than a human.

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A Movie of People in Movies Watching Movies

This supercut is a celebration of cinema appearing in the cinema. It’s so meta I think my head might explode—but it’s oddly compelling at the same time.

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X-Force movie confirmed: Marvel Comics movie tornado continues

If you know about Marvel Comics’ X-Men, you’ll likely recognize the basics in the next Marvel Comics movie title to be confirmed this week: X-Force. This family of mutants comes as a sort of second-tier to the original X-Men team, they being one of the more popular to mature in the relatively large boom of off-shoots that appeared in the 1990′s. As with all Marvel Comics characters, these ladies and gentlemen persist, and as all those that’ve waited many, many years to see such a big-screen film made are well aware: Never Say Never with Marvel!

xforce

The report today comes from The Hollywood Reporter where they’ve gotten word from the writer of Kick-Ass 2 that he’s also attached to this next comic book adaptation. X-Force will be developed by 20th Century Fox while producer Lauren Shuler Donner is said to be producing the flick.

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Donner you may remember from producing such X-Men films as X-Men (the original from 2000), X2, X-Men: Last Stand, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, and X-Men: First Class. And yes, that is the lot of them. She’s also attached as producer to the next X-Men film, X-Men: Days of Future Past as well as the currently floating Deadpool.

Good news is that though everyone’s favorite foul-mouthed red-suited assassin has been known to kick around a X-Force members from time to time, so there’s always the possibility that he’ll be appearing here in this first of what may very well be a new series of films.

deadpools

X-Force has played host to quite a few characters from the Marvel Comics universe including a certain time-traveling relative of Jean Grey (or her clone therein) and Scott Summers: Cable. This fellow has been known to cavort with another black-eyed assassin: Domino, who in turn has been pals – if you can call it that – with Deadpool once or twice.

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Those of you that are fans (or the opposite) of the depiction of Deadpool in the first Wolverine movie will be glad to hear rumblings aplenty of a relative re-boot of the Deadpool brand in this or the Deadpool movie as a stand-alone product. We shall see!

Release date unknown, actors for the film unknown, basically everything else is unknown as this very moment. Stay tuned!

VIA: MTV Splash Page


X-Force movie confirmed: Marvel Comics movie tornado continues is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Can You Guess Which Movies These Facial Mashups Belong To?

Can You Guess Which Movies These Facial Mashups Belong To?

Every director has his or her own distinct visual mood, but does that mood extend to what types of faces they cast? Based on data pushed through a facial recognition algorithm, these images shows us the aggregate of every face shown in a handful of blockbusters from the past few years. As you might guess, Avatar is very… blue.

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Meet X-Men: Days of Future Past‘s Sentinel (or at least its head)

Meet X-Men: Days of Future Past‘s Sentinel (or at least its head)

Trask Industries didn’t have a booth inside San Diego Comic-Con, but that didn’t stop the company from unveiling the head of its new Sentinel prototype outside the convention center! The feared mutant-hunting robots look different from the comic incarnations, but they still look pretty damn intimidating.

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