Livestream Livepack: a ‘satellite television truck in a backpack’

“Game changing” is thrown around way too frequently these days, but man, this thing just might be. The Livepack is being described as “a satellite television truck in a backpack” by creator Livestream, and for all intents and purposes, it is. Put simply (or as simply as possible), the pack includes everything one would need to stream “HD quality” footage: encoding hardware, a Firewire cable and the real kicker, a built-in wireless connection with six load-balanced 3G modems over three carriers (AT&T, Verizon Wireless and Sprint if you have to know). Users simply provide their own camcorder, mash a button when it’s show time, and out goes the signal. The Livepack can currently be rented for $2,500 per month (includes 30 hours of streaming) or $1,500 per month if you commit to a year-long agreement. So, who’s up for showing the world their high school prom live in HD? Demo vid is after the break.

[Via Red Ferret]

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Livestream Livepack: a ‘satellite television truck in a backpack’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 17:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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mSpot brings new release movie streaming to major US carriers

mSpot has been streaming full-length movies to cellphones for a few years now, but not until this week has the company had a potential customer base of 40 million. As of right now, mobile phone users on Sprint, AT&T, Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile (yes, that includes the G1, Pre, iPhone and every other smartphone with a half-decent browser) can surf over to m.mspot.com in order to stream major motion pictures, and being that the service is on-demand, you can also pause and restart ’em whenever you darn well please. Deals have been inked with Paramount Studios, Universal Pictures and the Weinstein Company, and we’re told that more agreements are in the works. Movie rentals will cost $4.99 per title, and can be viewed from 24 hours to 5 days after they’re rented. Naturally, mSpot recommends paying for an “unlimited” data plan, and if you’re smart, you won’t utilize the service whilst traveling abroad.

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mSpot brings new release movie streaming to major US carriers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Sep 2009 11:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Spawn Labs HD-720 aims to be the Slingbox to your game console, we go hands-on

Sure, your heart may be aflutter with thoughts of gaming cloud services like OnLive and OTOY, but quietly making its debut this week is Spawn Labs with its “Bring Your Own console” HD-720 video game streamer, due out this November for $199.95. In a nutshell, the device works as a Slingbox for your Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PS2, or GameCube and lets you play those consoles over the internet on your Windows PC (a Mac client is said to be in the works). The AV cables — component or composite, no HDMI at this point — are connected and can be then passed through to a TV as normal. A USB connection is used to sync up the controller, and there’s also an IR signal for turning the connected system(s) on and off. On the computer, you can log the Spawn Labs website and play either your own system or jump onto one of your friends’ systems for some faux-local co-op or to be a spectator.

We had a chance to take a look at the streamer and talk with some of the minds behind it at TechCrunch 50 to fill in some of the missing details. In a fairly controlled environment — the device hooked up via ethernet to a private router on the show floor — we were able to competently play Soul Calibur IV with what we were told was around 100ms audio / video and 5ms controller lag. Under ideal situations, it streams 720p / 30 frames per second in H.264 video with AAC-LC audio, but that can automatically downscale when the connection slows — should we decide we’re too lazy to make it from our bedroom to the couch to play Halo (an all too frequent scenario), it’ll clearly work fine over a local network, but it’s gonna be how well it works across that internet that’s the real deal-breaker, and we weren’t able to test that. Cross-continent play isn’t recommended, but you can have spectators from all over the world and it won’t at all affect your latency. Any PC controller can work and be custom-mapped, including just keyboard and mouse, although if you’re wanting to use a PS3 pad you’ll have to find the drivers for it yourself. The game window itself has buttons along the bottom for pulling up the system’s specific guide menu or recording the video for upload to YouTube. What’s impressive to us is that it’s said to work with any computer that can handle a 720p video stream, and so far in the labs they’ve apparently got it working well on an ION-based netbook — but we didn’t get to see that for ourselves, so we’ll hold applause until we can put it through its paces ourselves. See a video demonstration for yourself after the break.

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Video: Spawn Labs HD-720 aims to be the Slingbox to your game console, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 11:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Seagate launches FreeAgent Theater+ HD media player, we go hands-on

Remember when Seagate introduced its Betamax-esque FreeAgent Theater HD way back at CES this year? Of course not — you were locked onto the Palm Pre keynote. At any rate, the next generation of that very device somehow made it through the product development stage and now sits in our very hands, and we have to say, it’s no more modern in person than it is in press shots. Equipped with the usual assortment of ports (HDMI, component, composite, Toslink, Ethernet and two USB) ports, the FreeAgent Theater+ HD media player gets all of its content from a FreeAgent Go USB 2.0 hard drive (sold separately or in a bundle) or whatever you shove into those USB sockets. You can count on 1080p output and a pretty standard UI, and while it’s wired-or-die right now, Seagate’s hoping to pop out a USB WiFi adapter ($69.99) for it next month.

We’ve yet to really put this player through its paces, but we can say for sure that it’s not made for abuse. The mostly-plastic box is staggeringly light, and one drop from atop your AV rack could lead to utter disaster. Furthermore, this is really only useful for those wound tightly around Seagate’s finger; the bulk of its functionality relies on having a FreeAgent USB drive at your disposal, and if you’ve selected any other portable HDD, you’ll have to deal with connecting it the old fashion way and ditching the “clean look.” At $149.99 sans an HDD, it’s one of the cheaper options on the market, but it still can’t beat Popcorn Hour’s heralded lineup when it comes to value and format support. Those looking for an all-in-one deal can opt for the $289.99 bundle, which throws in a 500GB FreeAgent Go drive. Have a look at retro exemplified in the gallery below.

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Seagate launches FreeAgent Theater+ HD media player, we go hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 09:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Spark’s egg-shaped VTube media player won’t fit neatly in your AV rack

Much like Sony’s PlayStation 3, Spark’s VTube clearly wasn’t designed to sit nicely in-between a 7.1-channel AV receiver and a cable set-top-box. Engineered in some backwoods lab about 30 kilometers south of Shenzhen, the so-called VTube looks to be a pretty standard media player outside of its unorthodox design. The unit packs HDMI / component / composite video outputs, an Ethernet jack and a Toslink optical audio output, and those who dig internal storage can slap a 2.5-inch HDD within to keep those old Office clips handy. Predictably, it also supports pretty much every file format known to man, and the built-in USB port ensures that you can add external storage if need be. It’ll only run you around $130, but the chances of seeing this on US soil are slim.

[Via Cloned In China]

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Spark’s egg-shaped VTube media player won’t fit neatly in your AV rack originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 09:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony network Blu-ray player spied at CEDIA

Why wait ’til October to get a peek at Sony’s BRAVIA Internet features come to Blu-ray on the BDP-N460? Check them out right now in the following gallery, we got a good look at the future on the CEDIA show floor, though whether Sony delivering all new hardware or everyone else’s strategy of upgrading existing players for Netflix, Amazon and other forms of streaming is the path to follow remains to be seen. The BDP-N460 should hit for about $250 starting next month.

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Sony network Blu-ray player spied at CEDIA originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 12 Sep 2009 20:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rhapsody App approved by Apple: 8 million tracks streaming to the ether (update: video!)

We had a feeling this day was coming. After Spotify’s subscription music app was approved, offline listening intact, there was every indication that Rhapsody was next for christening. Especially with the feds watching Apple’s every move. The free download just went hot and requires a $15 per month Rhapsody To Go subscription — you can try it for free for a week — and streams 64kbps quality (ugh) music over WiFi or cellular data (only, no off-line access) from a catalog of about 8 million tracks offered by the MTV and RealNetwork tie-up. Now go ‘n get it.

Update: Added video demo after the break.

[Via Komo News, thanks Bill Y.]

Read — Rhapsody App [iTunes link]

Continue reading Rhapsody App approved by Apple: 8 million tracks streaming to the ether (update: video!)

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Rhapsody App approved by Apple: 8 million tracks streaming to the ether (update: video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Sep 2009 01:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Eyes-on: Sony’s XBR10 LCD and its wireless video streaming box

We know, it’s easy to be distracted by the sexy, slim BRAVIA LCD HDTV in front of you, but refocus your eyes for a moment on that unassuming box to the lower right. Given a distinct lack of (read: none) media inputs on the screen itself, that little devices is where all your HDMI, coax and other video sources will be going. With it’s $5,000 pricetag the ability to hide DVR’s, game consoles and whatever else well away from the television itself is a major selling point so feel free to peruse these pictures (no iPhone comparisons, we promise) and get familiar before this set hits shelves in October.

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Eyes-on: Sony’s XBR10 LCD and its wireless video streaming box originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Sep 2009 19:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony goes in a cheaper direction with wireless XBR10 BRAVIA LCDs

Proudly rocking the XBR10 nameplate, this is the latest Sony BRAVIA (peep the video from its Japanese launch), though the potential to be greatest is up for debate. These 52- and 42-inch models skip over the company’s well received (but expensive) Triluminos LED technology for cheaper edge lit LEDs like Samsung. Sony is taking advantage of the tech’s slim frames to include wireless HD streaming — you’ll be plugging set-top boxes, game consoles and other video sources into a separate media box, plugging in anything other than AC would ruin the style. Still, it’s hard to see many people deciding that wireless HD, Internet powered TV Guide, BRAVIA Engine 3 processing, Motionflow 240Hz, video streaming from Amazon, YouTube and Netflix and Sony’s version of Yahoo! Widgets is enough to overcome a serious case of sticker shock. The KDL-52XBR10 and KDL-46XBR10 arrive in October with $5,000 and $4,500 MSRPs, respectively; over a thousand bucks north of comparable, wireless-less Samsung models featuring the same backlighting tech. That Sony brand and experience worth the difference to you?

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Sony goes in a cheaper direction with wireless XBR10 BRAVIA LCDs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Sep 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VUDU equips LG’s BD390 Blu-ray player with movie streaming abilities

LG’s WiFi-enabled, DivX-friendly BD390 Blu-ray player has been shipping here in the States since May, but not until now have you really had a reason to pick one up. Here at CEDIA, VUDU is taking one step further away from its standalone movie set-top-box by announcing that the aforementioned deck will become the first of its kind to tap into VUDU’s growing library of on-demand film rentals. Of course, adding VUDU to this player was a natural move given the built-in Ethernet port, though users will have to wait until the end of this month to suck down the free update. In case you’re wondering, the VUDU interface on LG’s player will be the same as the one found on the company’s own hardware (not to mention a few LG HDTVs), and the $399 price point will remain the same even after the new functionality is added.

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VUDU equips LG’s BD390 Blu-ray player with movie streaming abilities originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Sep 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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