Amazon Blocks Video Streaming On BlackBerry Tablet, Blames Apple 128
AZA43 writes "Amazon.com has blocked its Instant Video streaming service on BlackBerry PlayBook tablets, in an apparent effort to make its Kindle Fire device more attractive to tablet buyers. And it says Apple is the reason why it blocked the service. But the company hasn't blocked comparable Android tablets from streaming Instant Video, and Android tablets hold a much larger portion of the overall tablet market than PlayBooks. Amazon will likely succeed only in alienating customer with PlayBooks who have already purchased lots of streaming video content."
Summary is 100% correct (Score:1, Funny)
"Amazon will likely succeed only in alienating customer with PlayBooks who have already purchased lots of streaming video content."
Yup, that single customer is going to be really really upset about this. Good thing it doesn't affect more people.
Re:Summary is 100% correct (Score:5, Funny)
Indeed. I hear both Playbook owners are absolutely livid about this.
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"And it says Apple is the reason why it blocked the service."
????? Is someone from Slashdot running Amazon now??
Re:Summary is 100% correct (Score:5, Funny)
Indeed. I hear both Playbook owners are absolutely livid about this.
The guy has a multiple personality disorder? Didn't know that.
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I thought Mike and Jim were two different people, not personalities.
From who? (Score:5, Funny)
I hear both Playbook owners are absolutely livid about this.
Well to be fair the second guy has not got word to us yet, still trying to find his Blackberry so he can get an email out about his fury.
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Even once he finds his Blackberry, there's not much chance of the email getting to anyone.
Oh!
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He found the Berry but he has to do a battery pull.
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Well in a two income family, I'm sure they can rustle up the cash for an ipad if they are so inconvenienced by it.
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I was surprised to learn that Amazon has a video service.
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Good to hear the ex-co-ceos of RIM both stick behind their product.
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"Amazon will likely succeed only in alienating customer with PlayBooks who have already purchased lots of streaming video content."
Yup, that single customer is going to be really really upset about this. Good thing it doesn't affect more people.
Seriously, the press release should have ended "Sorry Frank. We'll just ship you a new Kindle Fire free, for being such a good customer."...
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Let me know when you find someone under 40 who uses a blackberry that isn't crammed down their throat against their will.
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Yoda by written the subject line was (Score:1, Informative)
Which makes the blog author look even more like a "I spend money at your store, how dare you not support X" over-reactionary.
Re:Yoda by written the subject line was (Score:4, Interesting)
Hence there is no technical reason why the videos shouldnt work on the Playbook. Also you cannot assume the CSR meant Adobe instead of Apple with any certainty unless you are Mr Mantri himself. The CS email is a buch of garbage that makes no sense. But Amazon has already gone back on their promise of a kindle app so im not too surprised.
Re:Yoda by written the subject line was (Score:4, Funny)
Since it only makes sense when you replace Apple with Adobe, then yes, you can assume they meant Adobe.
You might want to look up what "assume" means.
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But everyone blames Apple, it's the chic thing to do. 300 workers at an XBox assembly line threaten suicide? Blame Apple! Sony upping the price on Whitney's albums after her death, including on iTunes? Blame Apple! I am waiting for Apple to get the blame for the swine flu epidemic and Steven Tyler's horrid rendition of the U.S. national anthem next.
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"Apple Inc. has exclusive rights to the hardware and software that would make it possible for Amazon.com to provide Amazon Instant Videos for these devices"
It makes as much sense as Adobe having the hardware. It could have something to do with patents on DRM'ed video delivery that Apple owns or something like that.
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you may want to look up what "certainty" means.
Re:Yoda by written the subject line was (Score:4, Funny)
So... pretty much like every other customer service email from any major company that asks any sort of question more complex than "Where do I click to [insert action here]?" Just saying.
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Look at the bigger picture (Score:2)
I agree with you and think we should give them the benefit of the doubt. Still, the way I see it, the "blaming on Apple" part is not really the important one. What matters here is that we have hardware and software that can perform a task, and that Amazon prevents this from happening so that they can sell more of their own hardware (or so they think). Whoever they blame this on is secondary, and focusing on this secondary aspect would make you miss the important bit here: Amazon is evil for blocking its str
Re:Awful "journalism", the story is almost certain (Score:5, Insightful)
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You might want to read the article sometime so you don't sound like an ass.
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Amazon started using DRM on some videos in mid-January. It also breaks playback on certain Linux systems -- specifically those using 64-bit flash plugin, and those where (deprecated) HAL has been removed. As a Linux user and Amazon Prime subscriber, the videos I can watch are hit and miss.
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Since their latest Amazon Instant Video upgrade, I've been unable to watch any Amazon videos either on my 32 or 64 bit system. I've made sure I have the latest Adobe flash plug-in and have HAL installed. Their tech support was useless. I've cancelled my Amazon Prime membership over it.
And they wonder why some people resort to bit-torrent.
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No Customer Service is Perfect (Score:2)
I was amazed by an Amazon CS rep telling me the reason that I couldn't use Amazon Instant Videos on my Tivo was because my FIOS connection wasn't nearly fast enough.
I hung up and contacted Tivo who told me they don't support Amazon Instant Videos.
They did not blame Apple for it. ;)
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What doesn't work is Netflix streaming. Crashes the Tivo the instant there's a data underrun - probably a codec bug of some sort. I cancelled my trial Netflix subscription because of it and reported the problem, but got no useful response.
It may have been fixed by now, but I'm waiting for one of those "we want you back so here's another free trial" offers to c
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I mean the "free" videos you get when you're a prime member. They are not supported.
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Technical explanation for the problem, if you care (Score:2)
Technical explanation for the problem, if you care
Not all Amazon content is using the new DRM; if you've already downloaded something, even if it uses DRM, then it will continue to function.
The actual issue is a combination of the Flash 11 update on Jan 31, combined with Amazon switching Flash Access DRM on Feb 4/5/6.
The Flash Access DRM requires downloading and installing a new shared object, which is why it complains about needing an upgrade.
The code is busted. It uses hald/libhal (which was deprecate in
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I sincerely wish I had paid more and bought a cheap android tablet instead.
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You can quit looking guys - we found him.
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I see you omitted that wonderfully (stupid) power button.
I second your wishing for a cheap android tablet. Buddy of mine thought his was stolen out of his car. I said it was more likely misplaced since who would want to steal one. He ended up getting a lenovo android and found the playbook the next day. Needless to say the playbook has been relegated to his 2 year old daughter
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"physical buttons for media and volume"?
Wow, I feel so inadequate now.
Why blame Apple? (Score:1)
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It seems the Hegemons of Humorlessness are failing to applaud our homophonic hero.
Occam's razor... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Occam's razor... (Score:5, Informative)
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Please don't troll, PlayBook and QNX are not dead go troll elsewhere!
What, all 3 of them? (Score:2)
"Amazon will likely succeed only in alienating customer with PlayBooks who have already purchased lots of streaming video content."
Is this just an elaborate way to say "nobody will care", or is this thing more popular than I imagine? I have never even seen a PlayBook, never mind buying streaming video content for it.
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Where did you get yours? Best I can see is over $200 for the 16GB. For that you could pick up a lightly used Touchpad, and get a bigger screen.
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The 64gb is 200 bucks here at The Source, canadian radio shack. I picked one up.
I love it's web browser, it takes a giant shit over the worthless browser that shipped with my Iconia tablet. It's easily on par with the browser on the iPad. The 7" form factor is perfect for a device that will live most of its life in my glovebox. It plays video and music well, has HDMI with smooth 1080p. I like how the bezel outside of the screen is touch sensitive, so you can do stuff like scrolling and navigation, with
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Yeah, I doubt I'd buy one, but I do have a soft spot for QNX - I kept an Ergo Audrey going for years! Of course, the Audrey had an email client....
Re:What, all 3 of them? (Score:5, Informative)
If you install the 2.0 OS beta (or wait a couple weeks for the full release) you can have full email, contact and calendar apps which includes integration with other social networks like Twitter and Linkedin.
As for Android apps, with OS 2.0 you can sideload almost anything right now. You can also load the Marketplace directly onto a cracked playbook but that tends to have extremely unstable results. For new apps you don't even need to develop specifically for the Blackberry OS, the compiler translates most Android library calls for you so you simply compile your Android app twice and then list it directly in the BB Appworld. There's at least one Andorid market in the process of doing this right now for their entire library.
I picked up a playbook just before Christmas (it's the only BB device I own) and barely put it down the entire holiday season. It was hooked up to my parents TV for almost the entire 3 weeks I was visiting, streaming whatever I had downloaded or copied to it, and when my brother or nephews wanted to watch something I didn't I could still stream it and continue playing Angry Birds or read a ebook. I'm still using it every day. It's the perfect size to just lay down on and end table and grab to play a quick game of Monopoly or search for some useless tidbit of information.
My 66 year old mother loved hers and still comments on it whenever I'm talking to her. I just wish I didn't who her how easy the video chat was to use.
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What I am really missing on it is proper MKV support. I have the OS2 Beta on it and I have yet to figure out how to get MKVs to work in the video app. The thing that bugs me as well is it isn't going to have AC3 or DTS support so I still have to dick with the files I want to play on mine. It is handy though and I kind of like the size.
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Minor correction: you don't really compile the app twice, rather RIM provides a postprocessor to convert APKs into their own format.
Using their web-based converter it literally took 10min to get one of my apps to run on a friends Playbook.
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There are dozens of videos on reputable sites showing hands on examples of playbooks with full OS2 running and the email client/contact integration.
And yes, the built in video chat only connect to other playbooks, much like Facetime and iUsers, but if you want to talk to people on other platforms there are several video apps that do that. I personally don't want to video chat with anyone and was just commenting on the fact that the built in app is so easy to use my mother keeps ringing me on it.
Re:What, all 3 of them? (Score:5, Interesting)
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That would be me. I had no real interest in getting a tablet but when they heavily discounted it, I figured it would be worth getting. It was at the price I paid but at $500 it is a heaping pile and at any other price I would recommend an Android over the playbook.
You don't buy online streaming content (Score:5, Informative)
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who cares
for the $80 a year membership to amazon prime and the cheap prices on some of the TV content it's well worth it
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Strange, I never seem to have that problem with Demonoid...
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SHUT UP. Please apply fight club rule 1.
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I thought we weren't supposed to talk about that.
So its Adobe not Apple? (Score:4, Insightful)
... Amazon blamed the PlayBook's Flash player for the issue, saying the Flash software needed to be update, even though my Adobe Flash software is up to date (v11.1.122.4) ...
So its Adobe not Apple?
FWIW being current and needing an update is plausible. Amazon may have learned of an exploit in Flash and will only resume streaming after the security problem is fixed. OK, plausible but not terribly likely.
... Apple owns the rights to the hardware and software that would allow Amazon video content to be played on the BlackBerry PlayBook? Yet Amazon has allowed Instant Video customers to play video content on RIM's tablet for the past year, and just now the company decided to block the functionality? Something isn't right here, and I reached out to Amazon.com's media relations team more than 24 hours ago for clarification, but I haven't received a response. The above response from Amazon customer service could simply be misinformation sent by an irresponsible customer representative ...
Then maybe a better title for your article would have been "Amazon Blocks Instant Video on BlackBerry PlayBook, Customer Service Rep Blames Apple"
Look at the release versions (Score:2)
Stocking up on silver crosses, holy water (Score:2)
Steve Jobs' revenant is NOT going to like this!
Blocked PlayBooks? (Score:1)
Re:Blocked PlayBooks? (Score:4, Informative)
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Total Playbook activations are closer to the 1M mark actually...
The op is obviously being facetious but the number of activations does not necessarily mean current users because hardware failures and returns would not necessarily be counted as decreasing that number of activated devices.
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note: this is not personal. it just seems everyone is jealous of the playbook and trying to keep it down. of course RIM's pathetic marketing doesnt help either.
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It only starts here... (Score:1)
To be honest, the PlayBook is a non entity, I am very surprised they would block this device. It does raise a lot of concerns about the future plans they have with Android/iPad/Win8. If they pull back from any of these OS's or devices it will severely alter the relevance of their streaming media/Prime offerings. They are walking tightrope here. All that being said; why start with the PlayBook? Who is buying one of those over a Kindle Fire?
I sense a great disturbance in the Force... (Score:5, Funny)
...as if 4 voices suddenly cried out in terror and then went on with their lives.
Dear RIM (Score:1)
I would get a Playbook at $149 (even for refurb) (Score:1)
I had the Nook Color (running CM7) and overclocked (1.2 Ghz) but it still felt laggy. I gave that away over Christmas so I need a new cheapie tablet that doesn't lag. The Playbook felt fine when I was testing it, but without a lot of apps it would just be used as a web tablet.
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Oh, come on, now. Really? (Score:1)
Isn't that a bit dramatic?? I mean look at this, "RIM sold into the channels approximately 150,000 BlackBerry PlayBook tablets in the third quarter..." [rim.com].
Ok, that is Q3, and you can go back to April 2011, but still, just how many are there really who a) bought a PlayBook, and b) "have already purchased lots of streaming video content" ??
I venture to think Amazon maybe "doe [youtube.com]
Amazon bans Slashdot from playing videos too! (Score:1)
OMG, I went to Slashdot.org to watch some videos and they are not loading! Amazon is really pissing me off.
I guess I'll go to Nintendo.com next so I can try to check my email. If that doesn't work, boy am I ever going to post about this on the Internets.
Stupid (Score:1)
I hate to be so crass in a subject, but that is just stupid. Not Amazon - the article. The author. WTH is wrong with people?
Good! (Score:1)
It means Apple "care", as in they see the Playbook as a greater threat to their gadgets than Android devices. "Start worrying, details to follow," as some like to put it. RIM is the only company that really compares to Apple in terms of hardware quality and market.
CSR meant RIM (Score:2)
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Precisely. The author could even have contacted Amazon for a clarification.
There is actually Amazon streaming drama (Score:2)
The (sweet) xbmc plugin Bluecop wrote suddenly quit working when they changed to use 'DRM' flash. See this thread for details;
http://forum.xbmc.org/showthread.php?t=108124&page=32 [xbmc.org]
Pretty painful.
Customer Rep made a mistake: he/she meant "RIM" (Score:2)
They assumed that the Playbook was an Apple product.
Read it again with that misconception in mind.
Suck attack (Score:1)
This seems like a typical suck attack. Adobe sucks, Amazon sucks, RIM sucks, so instead of trying to fix the problem, they just all stand around in a circle pointing at one another, sucking hickies on one another's spotty bottoms, and blaming Apple.
It may not be very effective, but its a hell of a lot easier than actually making products that work. Leave the toil and sweat up to Apple. Bottom feeders can always make a few bucks off cheap, knock-off lookalikes.
The new universal excuse? (Score:1)
"And it says Apple is the reason why it blocked the service."
http://i39.tinypic.com/28b9tnc.jpg [tinypic.com]
Off topic, but important (Score:1)
Does Not Support != blocked (Score:2)
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Also, see the GoogleTV vs many of the content providers web sites when GTV first came out. They were rushing to get all sorts of fixes to viewing their content on things there were not a traditional computer.
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Hi Netflix, this is Linux calling...
I can't heeeere you!
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About 10 less than that.