Archive for January, 2008

38% of U.S. Viewing TV Shows Online

A report from Deloitte & Touche says that 38% of Americans are watching TV shows online. A previous study conducted just 8 months ago found that 23% watched shows on the Internet.

About 54 percent said they are creating their own online content such as photos, videos or music. Most of these are for others to see. In fact, 32 percent said they consider themselves to be “broadcasters” of their own media.

Additionally:

  • 54 percent socialize via social networking sites, chat rooms or message boards,
  • 36 percent said they use their cell phones as entertainment devices. Just eight months ago, 24% said they did so meaning that usage has grown over 50 percent. Most are using digital cameras, text messaging, and games on their phones.
  • 45 percent are creating online content like Web sites, music, videos and blogs
  • 20 percent view videos on their cell phones daily or almost daily
  • 45 percent maintain a profile on a social networking site.
  • 85 percent still find TV advertising to have the most impact on their buying

[Press release here]

[tags] research, analysis, Deloitte & Touche, TV, advertising, mobile, mobile media, social networking,  content creators [/tags]

street



street

Originally uploaded by jalvear


Deal Alert: Tivo Series 3 for $389

Just saw this on TechBargains. A Tivo Series 3 for $389.99 after a $200 rebate from Buy.com.

The rebate is good until January 26th, so check it out if you’re in the market for an HD Series 3 Tivo.

[tags] deal, Tivo, Series 3, DVR, Tivo Series 3 [/tags]

Digeo Layoffs – CEO Steps Down

Digeo, make of the Moxi brand DVR, said it is laying off almost half of its workforce (80 employees) and that CEO Mike Fidler was stepping down. Fidler is being replaced by president and COO Greg Gudorf.digeo.gif

Even more bad news, is that Digeo will also drop plans to release two new products, the Moxi Multi-Room DMR and Moxi Home Cinema Edition DMR. It will focus on its existing products and an HD DVR. From CNET:

In an interview with CNET News.com, Fidler blamed the shift in strategy on the company’s “inability to deliver some products on time” and “dynamics that occur in the marketplace.”

The company said that it had been spreading its “energies across too many platforms” and needed to refocus. Most of Digeo’s products have been delayed and slow to come to market. And they’ve only been available via some cable systems, rather than directly through retailers.

Sling Supporting BlackBerry

Sling Media (now owned by EchoStar) announced that it was now supporting BlackBerry smartphones.

The Slingbox allows customers to watch and control their home TV on an Internet-connected computer, or mobile phone including those based on Windows Mobile, Palm OS and Symbian operating systems. Having support for BlackBerry was a long time coming and it should bring some more users to Sling. BlackBerries, however, were never known as multimedia friendly devices, which is probably why it took so long to support them.

There are other ways to get your TV content on the go, but Slingboxes are the best way to actually connect and control your home TV, DVR and other components while you’re traveling or away from your home. However, you must have pretty fast broadband connections in order to make it work. Since you don’t have the videos saved locally to your PC or phone, you do save on storage space, which can be a premium for older smartphones. However, the streaming, live nature of Slingbox makes it only for those with fast connections, like broadband cards or unlimited data plans for your phone.

Here are the ways how I see how to watch your home DVR/TV shows while on the road.

Transferring to Portable Devices. Rather than use a Slingbox, I use Tivo’s Desktop software to transfer shows to my PC. From there, I can burn videos onto a DVD or transfer it to my portable device, like my Windows-based smartphone. The downside? It’s a slow and clunky process–I have to wait for Tivo to transfer the file over my home network, then wait while I burn the show on a DVD. The whole process can take about 1 hour or more.

Portable DVRs. Comcast’s upcoming portable DVR is going after the same market–those who want complete access to their DVRs while away from the home. But the Comcast portable device is the actual set-top. So what happens when you un-dock the device from your home and take it on the road? Will you miss recordings? Will your family that’s not traveling be able to watch TV? Or should this portable DVR be relegated as a second set-top and not the primary one for the home? I guess it’s still too early to tell since the Comcast DVR isn’t out yet.

Network DVRs. This would seem to be a great option since you theoretically wouldn’t need to buy anything. Network DVRs save your shows on your TV provider’s hard drive so you don’t actually need to buy a separate set-top box like a Tivo. Everything is saved out there in the network. The benefits are that you get unlimited storage (well, almost), and access from anywhere. Imagine recording a show like American Idol, traveling to another city, then just logging in to your cable provider’s network DVR via your laptop (or smartphone) and streaming it. All your shows would be available and you don’t need to buy a Slingbox. Unfortunately, here in the U.S. network DVRs are available because of a lawsuit between Cablevision and the TV studios and networks. Things are different in Europe, and maybe things will change here in the future.

I think network DVRs are a great idea and wish that consumers were able to use them. In the short term, I would really like it if Tivo started offering place-shifting (Slingbox functionality) in its boxes. I just don’t feel the need to go out and buy and hook up yet another device to my TV/DVR right now. Perhaps if I traveled more often I would feel differently.

More Than Half of U.S. Own DTV Sets

A press release by the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) said that over 50% of U.S. households own a digital television (DTV). The group predicts that TV manufacturers will post 11% revenue growth, to over $25 billion, from sales of digital televisions in 2007. CEA also is predicting 13% of revenue and 17% unit sales growth for digital television in 2008.

Now keep in mind DTV does not necessarily mean HDTV. DTV, according to the FCC, just means the ability to view digital programming via a built in or external digital tuner.

Nevertheless, consumers in the U.S. are definitely buying more HDTV sets–or at least are planning on buying them in 2008. The Financial Times writes:

“According to research published last month by The Diffusion Group, almost a third of non-HDTV households in the US are interested in purchasing a new HDTV set in the next six months.”

With the analog switch-off happening in Feb. 2009, it’s a fair bet to say that 2008 will see a huge growth in DTV sets.

Shrimp Quesadilla



Shrimp Quesadilla

Originally uploaded by jalvear


Steak and Nachos



Steak and Nachos

Originally uploaded by jalvear


gumball



gumball

Originally uploaded by jalvear


Speed Hump



Speed Hump

Originally uploaded by jalvear


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