Could YouTube Be the Killer-App for Apple's iTV? 111
mrspin writes "With Macworld Expo just over a week away, many expect Apple CEO Steve Jobs to announce further details (and the availability) of the company's yet to be released set-top-box, codenamed iTV. Powered by something similar to Apple's Front Row media center software, the iTV is designed to get the media content that's housed on a Mac (music, movies, and photos), streamed to the living room television. However, with its built-in wireless networking (suspected to be the faster 802.11n), why not bypass the Mac and have the iTV connect directly to the Internet? The combination of iTunes and DRM-free MP3s provided the 'killer app' for the iPod. YouTube could well do the same for Apple's soon-to-be released set-top box."
Nope (Score:2)
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Online access/sharing of photo albums - yes
Apple owned video sharing - possibly
I do (Score:2)
I do, and I know lots of people who do, too. Maybe you're just old :-)
Seriously, I used to watch youtube in the morning and in the evening while eating. Since the Wii Browser, I just use that instead. When I'm eating, I want some kind of distraction that doesn't require too much thinking on my part. Youtube works perfectly. I know people who watch youtube intead of TV. They just hang in front of the computer all eveni
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Seriously, though, Youtube is great, and I watch videos there all the time, but it's always videos that are linked on other sites like Digg and such. The interface just isn't conducive to being a replacement for most people's TV-watching habits. You can't just turn on the Youtube and have something to watch for the next while; instead, you have to select every little bit of video you want to see. Typically, this means having to select something new every few minutes. Then, you ha
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Yeah, but youtube always offers links to "related" videos, so I generally just click on whatever seems most interesting after a video has stopped playing. It's simple with the Wiimote. And a hypothetical iTV youtube feature would certainly make that easy using the Apple remote, too.
But yeah, the quality is crap. Dunno if most people care too much. I don't.
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I think Apple should scrap the iTV and work out a partnership with Nintendo to have iTunes as a free download for the Wii.
Think about it: the iTV and Wii are nearly identical. Both don't have hard drives (Wii has a SD slot though), both have built-in wifi, both have USB ports for additional devices, the Wii (and probably the iTV) is incredibly easy to navigate and use, and both are small white boxes. Hundreds of thousands (and soon, millions
wireless LAN broadband (Score:5, Insightful)
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But... (Score:2)
No Mac or PC needed.
I agree that Youtube as a source of video is... interesting at best but the idea of not needing a mac or pc for this device is very logical.
not youtube, but another (Score:5, Insightful)
The killer app won't be YouTube, but a youtube-like service that actually hosts full-length episodes. For example, NBC puts up their own shows for viewing on their website, 24hrs after they air. Other networks are starting to do this as well. To aggregate this content into one place for consumption by iTV owners will be the trick. Throw in a dash of quasi-legal bittorrent downloads, and you've got a winner.
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You mean like www.alluc.org ? The question is of course how long it survives until they get sued..
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I was more referring to something like DailyMotion [dailymotion.com], but yeah, alluc.org could work too.
Re:not youtube, but another (Score:5, Insightful)
The killer apps will be probably be nice Mac apps (like Xtorrent) that automate movie downloading and streaming, making things easy for the user.
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Now if only people would stop uploading the same videos over and over again... or uploading other people's clips, editing with some shitty song played over the top.
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YouTube Bandwidth (Score:2)
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I agree. I no longer watch TV live, I download the episodes at my leisure (torrents, etc) and watch them on my computer or TV via my Xbox 360. I'd love to have a central TV repos
better than what you get on BitTorrent (Score:2)
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My money is on Apple to become the first company to get the hang of housewide media networks. All they need is for the media producers to realise that they have potential access t
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Already doing this with my Wii (Score:2)
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Really? Without the tabbed browsing hack [blogspot.com] I'm not a fan of the Wii browsing experience. YouTube and Wii-targetted flash games are the only real reason to use it - anything else is clunky and awkward.
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Certainly helpful since my love wanted to watch the videos, but her own computer was a bit antiquated to be up to date on all plug-ins and have the necessary horsepower.
Wii browsing can be
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As long as you watch TV after YouTube...
Why buy one? (Score:3, Insightful)
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iTV? (Score:2, Interesting)
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It's an abbreviation of the full title though, so possibly they can get away with it. Having the 'i' in lower case would also place the product in their 'i' line up, distinguishing it from ITV visually.
Sounds a stupid name to use all the same, do they never learn?
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Whether they can legally use the name isn't really the point.
In the UK, ITV is channel 3 in most places. It's one of the most popular free channels, and has been around for over half a century. In our television-obsessed nation, no Apple product is gonna usurp the abbreviation iTV in our collective consiousness.
Calling a set top box iTV is like bringing out a new digital radio receiver box and calling it the bBC.
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It's the same problem apple has with the iPhone. Great name on paper, but somebody got there first.
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ipod video has been basically killed here due to the non-availability of video for download, presumably because apple couldn't get the rights. It's marketed as a larger ipod, but of everyone I know that's got an ipod in the last few months they've gone for the cheaper version because video on its own is a bit pointless (not to mention video mobile phones are freely available and much cheaper).
xbox 360 in the US apparently h
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ipod video has been basically killed here due to the non-availability of video for download, presumably because apple couldn't get the rights.
There has never been any such thing as an "ipod video." Apple never marketed any such product, so I think "killed" is a little presumptuous. In fact, "ipod video" is just blathering blogspeak. It started before video was available when people thought that the "ipod video" would be some kind of PSP sized crap box for dedicated video viewing. It was never meant to be that way.
It's marketed as a larger ipod,
Yeah, see what they did is they added video playback to the (near) original form-factor iPod, which has
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The name 'iTV,' however, is only a pre-release name. It is expected to change before it ships.
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Yes: Apple has a choice in the naming of their products, and they choose names that conflict with existing usage. Of course, it's more likely ignorance and stupidity on Apple's part, rather than deliberate strategy, given that they have gotten burned by it before (cf Rendezvous/Bonjour).
And, technically, Apple should get their butt kicked if they try t
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PS3 (Score:5, Insightful)
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I have this thing called a "compute-er" with "aych tee pee see" software called MythTV that can browse YouTube in several different "web browsers." It can also record TV, let me know what will be playing on TV later that day, play tons of old console games (as well as some new games), rip and play DVDs, rip and play CDs, and even tell me the weather (for god's sake, it KNOWs the weather!).
Why would I need a "PS3" "console gaming system"?
Because it is a novelty item. It never claims to be the be-all and
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1- install azureus in ps3's linux, your distro of choice;
2- install rss feed scanner;
3- select your favorite shows;
4-
5- Watch them when ver you want;
It's like TiVO, but better, it's DRM free and supports any pirated tv show, movie or whatever.
That's something I'd pay for, even when I'm already doing for free.
Because (Score:2)
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Not innovative (Score:2)
Why the excitement? Ignoring all HTPC's completely (which can do the above and more), the Xbox 360 can do the above with a Windows box with ease (especially with Vista).
What is this based on? Apple sitting on a wir
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I'm not saying that it's proof, but it is an interesting decision by Apple.
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D'oh! I misread that - I read 'faster than 802.11n'; my mistake. I clearly need some sleep :)
it's not about "innovation" (Score:1, Flamebait)
I dispute that the HTPC "can" do anything; my experience with it is that it works for a few months and then things gradually stop working. I eventually erased mine completely and it's running Linux now. My home is Windows-free now, except for the rare occasion when I boot into Windows for playing some particular game.
the Xbox 360 can do the above with a Windows box with ease (especially with Vista).
Xbox 360 is itself a rip
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The third one is the killer. No MCE box currently available will do that.
Why all the hub-bub over YouTube? (Score:3, Insightful)
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DRM-Free? (Score:2, Funny)
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Re:DRM-Free? (Score:5, Insightful)
The iTunes store isn't, but the iTunes software is: when you rip your CDs. All the music I have is DRM free, and it's all music that I paid for.
YouTube also has the high quality somewhere (Score:3, Interesting)
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Is there some reason why Youtube (for example) would make this higher quality content available via iTV when it's not available through any other method?
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*Sigh* (Score:2)
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Just wanted to mention non-DRMed AAC files, which probably keep many people away from any player that doesn't play AAC.
Somehow, nobody making portable music players dared putting AAC capability in their player, probably to avoid upsetting Microsoft (I'd love to be corrected if I am wrong). And
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The music I load on my iPod from iTunes (from cds and other sources)
carries no DRM. Never used the iTunes Music Store.
XBMC has this (Score:4, Informative)
XBMC rocks (Score:2)
I don't see it (Score:2)
YouTube just isn't suited for TV viewing (Score:3, Insightful)
No one is seriously going to sit down in front of their TV and "watch YouTube", and it's hardly going to convince owners to buy a $250 device. Apple's store, on the other hand, if they actually managed to secure content from studios other than Disney, is another story.
iTV's been beaten to it... (Score:2)
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The iTV, to me, is worth putting beside my Wii, my Neuston (and quite possible PS3 once they come down in price in AU) simply because it promises to be a seamless consumer experience. Well integrated to both your local library and an online source (in this case we're speculating YouTube), which anyone can use much like they can use the cable and DVD boxes to watch stuff.
I've had a http://www.neuston.com/en/mc500.php [neuston.com] Neuston for abou
It's a nice idea - for geeks (Score:1)
Meh. As a non-geek, she couldn't care less - and I think that's most people. Youtube is useful for "Hey, Bob - did you see this video?" And maybe if there's a series you like (like Chad Vader or the shaving series by Mantis I like) - but typically, Youtube is a great idea, but I don't see the casual person sitting there going "Oh - look, I can surf Youtube!"
The two killer apps as I see it:
1. See
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Actually, that's an excellent idea. For everyone who doesn't know it yet: You pay for TV by watching the advertisements. That's why TV compani
Only if quality is not an issue (Score:2)
If so, then the second quality issue comes into play, the quality of the content. I personally find the vast majority of internet video to be worthless. But, with the seeming success of YouTube, and all the video links that end up on Digg, I guess many others
Don't Care (Score:1)
The Venice Project vs iTV (Score:2)
Flash video? You're joking right? (Score:4, Insightful)
The killer app for any of these set top boxes is well compressed HD programming on demand. Right now on Xbox Live, HD movies run about 6 GB, which takes a long time to download at 1.5 Mbs or even a cable modem's top speed of 8 Mbs.
Comcast, on the other hand, has the bandwidth and set-top boxes to deliver HD on demand right now. I'm not sure how Apple is going to compete against this unless they have some awesome new codec to do it. Comcast has already rendered the Tivo Series 3 POA (Pointless On Arrival). Comcast's HD DVR solution, while crappy, is $10 a month; the HD Tivo is $800 plus another $20 a month for dual CableCards and can't do on demand HD at any point. When I click on an HD movie using Comcast's On Demand, it plays within a second or two. I'm just don't see Apple--or Microsoft, or Tivo or anyone--competing in the face of this bandwidth juggarnaut, even if their equipment is superficially nicer to use.
Been done. (Score:3, Informative)
As a person able to do this I can tell you:
a) You don't want to sit on your couch f'in about with millions of crappy little clips.
b) The crappy little clips look REALLY crappy on a big TV.
Proper IPTV is here and will only grow. Multicast handles all the broadcast stuff, what we need is a P2P addon that'll handle the OnDemand stuff (I don't just mean conventional PayPerView, I mean providerless YouTube style stuff) and I want a nice Open front end that'll let me view all this on anything (and if MS will support it in MCE2, then I'll buy MCE2)
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The technology is there, the networks just have to figure out that people will pay to have this and companies like Apple just have to figure out how to package it so you can plug and view. If someone writes a DAAP plugin for MythTV, then I'm all over that itv th
Well ..... (Score:1)
Dear Mr. Jobs. (Score:1)