TenduTV

Where dance and digital collide.

Another small step towards convergence with Netflix

DVD delivery service Netflix is taking yet another step towards home ubiquity, by announcing another Blu-ray player/streaming integration deal, this time with Samsung. Owners of the two latest Samsung players, the BD-P2550 and BD-P2500, can upgrade their player at no cost (the boxes already have ethernet connectivity).

Samsung BD-P2500

Samsung BD-P2500

The bottom line is this: single function boxes are on their way out. In fact, only two boxes, the Slingbox and the Nintendo Wii, actually serve value as standalones due to their unique functionality. The new Tivos replace your cable box by using cable cards, the Playstation 3 is a game platform, a Blu-ray player and a streaming device. Oh, and hard drive equipped Wii’s are beginning to circulate as retail demonstration devices, and Sling/set top box integration is an inevitability given last year’s acquisition by The Dish Network.

The short end of the stick? That would go to second tier movie channels, such as Cinemax, Starz, The Movie Channel and Encore, who are seeing their value proposition to the consumer deteriorate rapidly. Whereas HBO and Showtime have high quality original programming (in HD), the only thing the others have going for them to warrant $5-$7 per month is the customer too busy or lazy to call their cable/satellite provider and cancel, especially with Starz and Encore streaming free on Netflix.

October 23, 2008 Posted by | Content, Distribution, Streaming | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Wii HD in 2011? Copyright made easy?

It appears that Nintendo is already starting to build the buzz for the successor to the highly successful Wii, currently being referred to as the Wii HD. An interesting highlight of the article is the massive rise in R&D that has taken place at Nintendo, especially in relation to what was spent developing the Wii.

Its safe to assume that HD video is part of the platform. But what about HD motion capture? Allow for four IR receiver bars instead of one, greater sensitivity to intake more information at larger distances, and the right bit of software, and you’ve got motion capture and fixation for copyright purposes made really, really easy.

October 1, 2008 Posted by | Copyright, Fixation, Motion Capture, Technology | , , , , , | Leave a comment