libertango: (Default)
Earlier in the year we went and purchased a basic Roku box to watch streaming titles from Netflix on our TV. For the longest time, there were only three services available to use the box: Netflix, Amazon video-on-demand (pay per view), and MLB.com (US baseball games, on subscription).

This month, though, Roku rolled out an upgrade, introducing their Channel Store. It doesn't include Hulu (alas), but some of the things included are quite nifty indeed.

For example, one can now display Flickr photos. Putting them up on the TV, rather than on a computer monitor, makes an interesting experience. It reminds me a lot of how the Redmond library had a big HDTV screen (back when such things were rare) showing GalleryPlayer, a service that licensed images of paintings from museums (and has since gone under, it appears).

Pandora's music streaming is available, which nicely supplants our old music-via-cable that we lost after cancelling Comcast.

Most interesting, in some ways, is Mediafly, an aggregator service. It brings together podcasts and video feeds. Again, old hat for computers, especially those designed as Media Centers, but for plain-old-TVs a bit of a revelation. There was the Monocle piece I pointed to recently; Keith Olbermann's Countdown is available; lots of NPR/APM/PRI stuff; foreign radio podcasts from NRK (Norwegian radio) and SR Sverige (Swedish radio); and, not least, TED.

I just ran my first TED talk as a test, and it was great. It was the talk by Marc Pachter on interviewing people for the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery. A fine example of wonderfully humane, empathetic work. (And note, [livejournal.com profile] autopope, not a video or presentation software package to be seen -- not unlike Isabel Allende's talk, if it comes to that).

Most especially if you're a Netflix subscriber, and you don't want to be bothered with the hassle of roll-your-own media center software, the Roku box can be recommended more than ever. If you do like opening up the hood and doing your own custom rig (I'm looking at you, [livejournal.com profile] daveon), you're not alone -- the most frequently emailed piece on the New York Times' site just now is "Cable Freedom Is a Click Away", a how-to for just such a project.
libertango: (Default)
From a comment I just submitted re this post at the New York Times.

*^*^*^*^*

There's a contradiction in Mr. Moffett's analysis, assuming this is a fair representation of it.

He is quoted as saying copper wire is going away:

“It is an obsolete technology,” he said. “It’s not like horses lost share of the transportation market until they stabilized at 40 percent market share.”

Yet, at the same time he says copper is 100% going away, he also predicts that FiOS will only have a 40% uptake:

"He assumes that 40 percent of the customers passed will buy at least one FiOS service."

It's one or the other. It can't be both. And if his core assumption is that copper is completely going away, then he's understating Verizon's revenues in his model by a factor of 2.5

I suppose one way of getting out of this box is he's assuming 60% of Verizon's customers will switch to cable as their sole replacement for copper. But given he does not contest that FiOS is a better package from the consumer's point-of-view that seems like a very low number. Or he's very skeptical about people pursuing their own best interests -- not that there's anything wrong with that, but it's not the usual path of someone in the financial commentariat.

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libertango: (Default)
Hal

March 2022

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