PC that acts like a TV
An anonymous reader writes "CNN is reporting on the newest HP Media Center PC, a PC that "acts like a TV". Seems to me it is a TIVO with some additional features, like storing and displaying pictures and music files. Runs on some sort of Windows XP." The real killer with this whole genre of device is cost and confusion. Users don't know what they do, so its not worth the cost. Anyone who has used a tivo for a week knows what it means. Business just needs to get the costs down. I think including functionality like pictures and music is a good step towards increasing value, as long as it doesn't
add to the confusion.
And Slate thinks TiVo is doomed? When their competitors are trying to sell virtually the same thing for $1,400? Hah, I say! Hah!
The average person has no fucking clue as to what a "Tivo" is or does. HP, on the other hand, has some great marketing people that can actually educate and market their products. Tivo's barely keeping their head above water due to very poor marketing. It doesn't give a damn if Tivo's product is better and cheaper. If nobody knows what it is or what it does, price and quality are a moot point. I predict that HP will trounce Tivo.
New $5,000 Multimedia Computer System Downloads Real-Time TV Programs, Displays Them On Monitor
What I'm wondering, is why do these systems come with such powerful hardware? P4 1.8GHz, 256mb RAM, GeForce 4 ti based videocard, etc.. For what it's supposed to be, I just don't see the point. Is it a media center, or a gaming system? That's the entire reason the price is so high. I'm sure they could pull off the same system, with all the same features, running off a VIA chip, or even a Celeron or Duron, and a cheaper videocard. Until they do that, they won't sell to many of these.
RaGe
We're all just noise on the wires..
This concept has been out for a while, but has never appealed to me. I have no desire to fight with other family members over TV time vs computer time. It goes like this:
Mom and Dad are watching their fav show, a commercial comes on and Dad says 'I need to check my mail' - click - 'Oh look, someone sent me a new joke' click-click - The screen goes black, the system reboots. Mom whacks Dad with the newspaper for opening a virus and making her miss the end of the show.
May be this is just my opinion, but i am not willing to have a computer as a digital replacement for a TV. Yes, I like to have a TV tunner to watch or record something from time to time, but I am not such a huge TV fan.. there are days where I even don't look at the TV at all. I dislike all this trends to transform the computer in a multimedia black box. I want my computer to code, to write some documents, browse the net, even play games.. but I want it to have the feel of a computer, not of a tv or stereo. I enjoy the power to do whatever I want with my PC; if I want multimedia, I know what hardware and software to buy and use for this, but I would not buy a box that is limited to multimedia only and is sold as a "family device" to be placed under the TV. This is the same story with the Xbox - I understand it is a cheaper PC, but I love too much my opened case computer, in which i can fit whatever card I want, to switch to that black box, even if it has cool games or can run linux. I wonder if anybody else feels this entertainment devices as castrated computers, that lost all the fun.
The 'some sort of Windows XP' he is talking about is problaby the Freestyle interface Microsoft is developing. Put simply, it is basically a shell for XP which has huge icons so that it can be viewed from a distance. Its a bit more than that though.
Also related is 'Mira' which is more for Wi-Fi type devices.
I.O.U One Sig.
Apple has tried this several times, and Compaq has as well (tellingly, Compaq doesn't off this product / capability any more).
I'm not sure folks - and by that I mean the mass market, not geeks - are ready for this. I understand the HP product can record, unlike the MacTV (I own one, btw, as well as one of their 5500's which has a TV tuner card) or the Compaq machine but it seems like most people park their PC in one room and the TV in the other.
PC / TV convergence? Well, your toaster has been next to your refrigerator for 50+ years, and they haven't converged yet. I don't see a mass market for this now, and there clearly hasn't been in the past.
Nice box though.
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sigh.
Cmd taco, sometimes I feel like I want to bitch slap you. Bad taco bad.
http://saveie6.com/
The article is short on details about the computer, this is what it says:
Nothing special whatsoever, but what really scares me is what the executive VP of CompUSA says: "The remote control could well become the next standard PC peripheral". Huh? Is he saying that computers are heading down the path of glorified televisions and that in the near future all that you will need to operate your computer is a remote control?
Something's very fishy. This thing is a computer with a tv tuner card, it shouldn't approach $1,400, even with a monitor included. There have to be some other gimics, otherwise this thing seems to be one big rip off.
If someone's got real information on this thing to counteract the lack of information presented by CNN, that would be greatly appreciated.
---
"Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
I haven't rolled my own distro yet although my skills are increasing. A multimedia box has been the topic of many of my conversations, but I haven't made one yet simply (kind of silly or a reason) because the only way I knew I could get it to work would be with winwoes. This type of box would have to be totally easy and with little tweeking as possible. I know with XP I could make a box (under a grand for the hardware) with at least 100gb, a 1.6g processor, dvd,a wifi card,wireless mouse and keyboard, and a nice video card to connect to my televison so I could watch all the content I want,esp since I fileshare. But the tivoish functionality, wow... maybe Red Hat or some other major distro will make such a Linux version. I'm sure most of the linux community (at least the people I speak with via im, mail and lugs) could care less about multimedia; it's all about the code; but I'm a media junkie and I know I'm not alone. Your thoughts?
As an All-In-Wonder Radeon owner, here's the deal: PC's will never replace Tivos until they can replicate Tivo's Season Pass functionality and knowingly record not only the shows I want, but the ones it thinks I will want.
My All-In-Wonder Radeon is a pain in the rear because it won't track schedule changes and automatically record the show I want every time. When a show gets delayed by a football game, or like TLC just randomly changes schedule, I end up with recorded footage I don't want while missing the show I really DID want.
Plus, when the Discovery Channel shows a one-time special, "When Animals Attack Cops During Natural Disasters", or one of those other shows I love, the Radeon's software (ATI MMC) isn't smart enough to tape it automatically. Come on, guys, it can't be that hard if Tivo can do it. We're so close...
And now, 1,000 Linux guys are going to tell me that we could easily write our own using a web-based TV program repository, but just like every time I post this, the repository doesn't exist. Gemstar has it nailed down, and the market is locked up on that one.
What's your damage, Heather?
Yeah, a friend of mine had one of those "sears macs" from 7 years ago... (a quadra? performa? all the names meld together after a while) and she didn't have a tv but she did have a coax connector in the back, so she'd watch tv on her mac. IT was a nifty trick.
However her system had 1 SIMM slot (WTF?!) so it wasn't as if you could run permier and make some captures and put them in movies.
Without a killer app it isn't going to be more than a parlor trick. But then again, without having these parlor tricks around you don't give anyone the opportunity to create a killer app!
But given the inherit difference in the user interaction model:
TV: Sit. Watch. Enjoy!
PC: Sit. type. click. read. type some more. enjoy!
Don't get me wrong, there are spectator aspects to a pc- why, look at console gaming (the best example of TV/PC convergence yet)- even in games that aren't head to head I can watch my wife play and still have a good time.
In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
The problem with this is that this isn't just being marketed as a entertainment box as in Tivo but as a practical computer as well. In some ways this justifies the extremely high cost of the unit but it also causes a couple of problems namely:
display: Most Tvs are not of sufficient quality for displaying text clearly which makes them unsuitable for general computing. Most computer monitors are far smaller than you would wish to watch TV/DVD's on. Unless LCD screens get an awful lot cheaper this problem really isn't going to be solved.
functionality: If your going to use this as your main PC what's going to happen when someone wants to play a game/write a word document etc etc etc? Does everyone else in the family have to stop watching TV?
Phobia: people are in general afriad of computers. My mum likes TIVO because it doesn't look like a computer and it does its job well. This thing would scare the hell out of her somply because it's a pc.
All in all I think there's a place for this thing but only if they cut the price and market it as a piece of consumer electronics as opposed to an all singing all dancing pc.Anyone checked freevo.sf.net ? Reads divx/dvds, mp3/ogg, image files, watch tv... and is free software of course...
The article states that the inddustry expects computer sales to lukewarm since people are happy with what they have.
HP should be looking for exciting NEW concepts to exploit. Bring a little excitement to the industry.
PC. PC/TV. PC/TV/Stereo. PC/TV/Stereo/Phone. Nothing new....
Blah! Consolidation and not innovation.
Congratulations. Unfortunately, you're not the target market for these things. Most people don't even know what a "Radeon" is. You try to explain it, and most people will just look at you funny. So yes, for most people, it would be considered rocket science.
Yes, they are drm crippled in hardware but I do not know if they use palladium or not. If they do use pallidium then no linux is not an option.
I have not seen one comment here mentioning about this important issue.
http://saveie6.com/
What I want is a an inexexpensive thin client for my TV - say ~$200 - that could:
a. act as an X server when needed
b. connect to my stereo to stream audio from my PC upstairs.
SO, minumum would be TV out, 802.11b, sound card.
** The opinions expressed here are my own, and do not reflect those of my employers - past, present, or future**
well frankly, then they shouldn't be using computers to begin with!
Typical geek attitude. And anybody who can't gap their own spark plugs, and change their own timing belt shouldn't be using cars either, huh?
Typical geek attitude. And anybody who can't gap their own spark plugs, and change their own timing belt shouldn't be using cars either, huh?
The target customer of a $1400 computer with a tv card is the same user that constantly has problems keeping their computer running through stupidity, not necessarily a lack of tech or mech skills.
If someone is constantly crashing their car into walls and others- destroying other peoples cars, then we have a system that removes their right to use a car.
We also have a system in place called licensing which allows us to have some faith that others are responsibly operating their equipment/machinery in a safe manner.
I also find it very interesting that when the big computer manufacturers decide that people aren't buying new machines they pull out 5 year old technology, double the price and pretend that nobody had this option before. The cards are on the shelf and anyone can walk into computer store and pick one up. Also, most hardware like this has very plain instructions to make the installation dummy proof.
Creationists are a lot like zombies. Slow, but powerful and numerous. And they all want to eat our brains.
The ignorance of the slashdot crowd, and new media once again proves itself. Sony already has a TV connected pc, complete with remote, starting at $1,999. Check it out. Now who's over priced?
Billly Gates wrote:
/ 17 52228&mode=flat&tid=109
> I already got modded down as a troll for
> mentioning this but just a month ago I saw this
> link [slashdot.org] about these crippled boxen.
I've got good news. According to this story:
http://news.com.com/2100-1040-961376.html
referred to here on Slashdot:
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/10/09
HP forced Microsoft to back down on their DRM stance. Sony offers a competive product that does *not* include DRM. HP felt they could not compete if they were crippled.
Now if we could only get Apple, Sony and HP to go to Washington DC and tell the media sharks' pet congress critters what to do with their stupid DRM legislation, the good guys would win a big one.
"Lightning shines on wavey beach, and all clouds are made right:
Happiness Appears!"
From the song "Infanto no Musume" in the Japanese version of Mothra (1961).
G Countdown: 16 days (www.godzillaoncube.com)
The reason TiVo rocks is its functionality, interface, and ease of use. I heard about it from fellow geeks. If you're not showing those features to Joe and Jane Consumer, why would they be interested?
Karma is what occurs between posts.
The next generation of TiVo can be used just like a computer!
From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
I'm posting this comment from the sofa on it.
Lian-Li PC-12 Black Aluminum Case (2x80mm in, 1x80mm out)
Enermax 350W PSU (1x80mm in, 1x80mm out)
Lapped Duron 600 @ 980 (7.0x140)
Lapped GlobalWIN FOP32 @ Arctic Silver II
Asus A7V133 MB w Promise RAID
2 x 256MB PC133 RAM
40G Western Digital Caviar HD (VIA - Primary Master)
Lite-On 40x12x40 CD-RW (VIA - Secondary Master)
60G Seagate Barracuda ATA IV HD (Promise - Primary Master)
Pioneer DVD-ROM DVD116 (Promise - Primary Slave)
40G IBM Deskstar 60GXP (Promise - Secondary Master)
Lite-On 52x CD-ROM (Promise - Secondary Slave)
Asus V7100 Deluxe Combo Video Card (Lapped P100 HSF @ Arctic Silver II)
62cm Television on RCA output
Hercules GameTheater XP
Boston DT6000 5.1 Speakers on Optical SP-DIF output
3Com 10/100 NIC
Logitech Freedom Optical Keyboard/Mouse
Microsoft Sidewinder Pro Gamepads (2)
Homemade Remote Reciever (Serial Ports obsolete, eh?)
This is mostly old tech now, but it still plays DVDs, plays DivX5/AC3 spanned across up to 3CDs for highest quality, holds 70GB of MP3s, surfs web, checks mail, plays 3d shooters, emulates every console and arcade game EVER, captures, timeshifts, does slideshows off my digicam, supports my universal remote, and is simple enough for my wife to use.
Microsoft and HP can keep their crap.
-1 Uncomfortable Truth
Right from the article it's called "Windows XP Media Center.".
I have had the privelage of seeing and using Windows XP Media Center edition live, up close and personal.
My humble impression: It kicks TIVO's ass. In fact it kicks TIVO, ReplayTV, Snapstream, Showshifter even ATI's guide+ right out of the water. It's user interface is nothing short of breathtaking, it's real slick.
It just makes sence to me to move my "digital library" (music, videos, pictures, movies) to my entertainment center!
This type of system could work if it was an upscale gamebox that was somewhat open in terms of adding third party hardware. What could be done now with a PS/2 that had all the right options (disk, net, TV type remote, PCI slot or two for add ons, maybe fire-wire or USB). The apps aren't really there to make this excellent yet, so make something that the fringe Linux cases will make usable. Sony is at least moving this way a little with Linux support, why not take it to the next step?
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
It's quite possible that the huge expense in this system could be the TV tuner. According to the little blurb on the Microsoft site (sorry, forgot the URL), it will take signal input from an antenna, cable, or satellite. Doing this is going to require some pretty badass hardware to pull off.
.iso files. :)
:)
Granted there are a couple nice multifunction video cards out there, but IIRC they're all NTSC compliant only. The digital cards are the ones that require a couple extra hundred dollars to purchase. Granted, it might be worth it if this thing can record any of the digital streams directly to the HD much like the DirecTivo can. An HDTV digital receiver and 5.1 optical output would be pretty nice too.
If it can do all these things and more, then I might be tempted to jump...and also build that multi-terabyte array for my DVD
Personally, I'd rather build my own box and save a boatload of cash that way.
// Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
// IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
The more they stay the same.
Commodore annouced something very similar years ago.
They went out of business shortly after. I don't think anyone ever understood why they were supposed to buy the computer for your tv, it wasn't a Commodore 64 or Amiga, it wasn't a game console and it wasn't a VCR. It was something in-between all of that.
Who knows, maybe music will be the feature that saves this one.
If it is, they're a pack of fools. Any real tech-savvy person would laugh and point at HP for trying to sell them a crippled PC for twice what a normal one would cost.
I suspect that they're aiming for early-adopter types---those who don't care about what the technology is or does, but just want it because it's shiny and expensive. I suspect, especially with the economy tanking, that this is a much smaller market than HP thinks it is.
--grendel drago
Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
TV?
I'd like to see if a beowulf cluster of those would be more stupid than the collective of everyone watching the boob tube...
I have (well, have had) two big prejudices against television, both of which the past few years have worn away at.
:) Besides bad programs, there are the just-as-bad advertisements. I don't mind seeing some ads, but until I'm in the pickup truck buying mode (one in the family is really enough), I *don't want to see Silverado ads!* I don't need to see tampon ads, ads for Preparation H, ads for vaguely hinted-at medicines about which I am implored to ask my doctor -- ARRRGHH!
;)) If I can watch The Simpsons (hey, no accounting for taste) at the time of my own choosing, and pause as desired, and decide which of the comercials I feel like experiencing, then OK.
...
:)
1) Time-stealing. I hate the idea that a television show should dominate one's schedule, replacing other activities at all costs, and for this reason held my own one-man TV boycott for a long time, trying to avoid it. (Worse, when someone's whole life is written around the television schedule, day by day and timeslot by timeslot.) Besides the general obnoxious time-slavery, there's the other problem that most of what's on TV is awful anyhow
TiVo and other PVRs do a lot of answer this argument. (And tapes suck, as in my #2
2) Bulk. A TV is an annoying thing to carry around, at least for my particular part of the Venn diagram. If you can afford a GIGANTIC screen, perhaps you can also afford to be carried around in a sedan chair by beautiful servants, and have your television moved in (and moved at will later, if you want) by a set of insaller guys, like the characters in the video for the Dire Straights song "Money for Nothing." I can afford a smaller screen than that, and have ended up buying a couple televisions in the course of my life, and inevitably moving them around. I sold my last one (a small but pleasant Sony) and do not regret the transaction at all -- since then, the only TV I've *owned* is a tiny (handheld) LCD one.
Besides the moving-around part, TV bulk is also a problem in that conventional (CRT) TVs take up a lot of space in a room, and often end up being made a sort of shrine, which bugs me. TV is one possible input in a home (or office or wherever) but I always cringe to see rooms / houses which seem to be devoted to it as a household god. Better to have none than to have one which determines the placement of every other piece od furniture.
I had a VCR once, too, and though it was OK, *but* -- I rarely used it, even more rarely programmed it to record anything, and it broke on probably day 366 with a year's warranty. Oh well. Have never bought another, and am happy not to have one. Tapes are like weights on one's ankles. They break, they get lost, they get recorded and then not labeled
[I have had the *use* of some other TVs since I sold mine 3 years ago, but none are permanantly attached.]
So: TiVo (and this thingamajiggie from HP, and Replay TV, etc.) kill my biggest complaints (time restrictions, inapprpopriate and annoying advertisements), and the advent of LCD screens with TV tuners (including computers with tuner cards attached to LCDs) and plasma TVs are doing a good job of killing the others.
In fact, I saw recent-model plasma TV (a 42" Panasonic) for the first time a few weeks ago. [I had seen some others at trade shows, but they were basically *monitors* rather than TVs, and I did not inspect them as closely; a few years ago I saw some at Frys in Palo Alto, and they were OK but nowhere near as impressive.] Amazing colors, bright, sharp picture -- much better, frankly, than I had expected.
One nice thing about them is that though they need *careful* handling, it looks not outrageous for one person to lift up to the 42" size at least. (Someone correct me if that's wrong -- this is conjecture on my part.).
Just as important, once installed, they can be put out of sight, or at least reduced to "inconspicuous" when not being used. Not true of a 42" conventional television. With a plasma screen, I can see hanging a velvet curtain (or more likely a protective louvre) in front of the screen *unless* actively watching it.
(Even if the MS-centric way of doing things is bound to be annoying, I am glad that people are starting to accept computer-things as being a legitimate adjunct to their television-things.)
Soon, a large hard drive filled with arguably good content, connected to a reasonably large flat display (whether Plasma, or LED, or OLED, or whatever) will be a fairly normal thing. I will not weep for the death of "regular" television
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
Well, I'll go out on a limb.
If I show you how to gap your spark plugs, and then you still can't do it, then you probably shouldn't be using a car. I honestly think if we got rid of the bottom 25% of drivers ranked by skill, we'd do away with 90% of the accidents. But that's neither here nor there.
The same sort of thing goes to computers. If I make you (hi mom!) a dial up networking icon on the desktop, and you still can't click it after I show you how a few times, just stop, okay? Go listen to the radio. Seriously, not everyone 'needs' a computer.
What I would pay $1,400 for is the feature lacking from my DishTV PVR, the damn thing won't fast forward when in live mode.
Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
Now wonder how long it will take until you *definitely* won't dare to disable it *any more* !?
Is this why everyone's VCR still blinks 12:00? Well, if you ask me, a secure DRM system is GOOD for these people; should you not have the education is takes to operate a secure computing system, then you sure as hell shouldn't. Let some(thing) else take care of the security for you.
I don't think going into CMOS is that daunting, moron. I do what I want; if I want DRM, I'll use a Palladium MS OS; if not, I'll use a Free OS. To each his own. Obviously this place isn't about independent thinking -- it's one way or the highway.
After the RIAA and MPAA are done, you won't need more than a remote control to access the allowable functions on a multimedia box.
Xix.
"Everything is adjustable, provided you have the right tools"
Mod UP!
You answered my question. I think this new pc is cool and is great for dorms or people who live in studio apartments with limited space.
I just think its important that as consumers we are aware of what these machines can and can not do. I just wanted to warn everyone about drm and what the past slashdot articles have said about this particular product. If its not crippled then I am for it since HP did the right thing by telling Microsoft to shove it.
http://saveie6.com/
PC Makers - here's a million dollars worth of market research: this is a fine strategy for HDTV sets, but NTSC is just too miserable for modern GUI's. This won't be a profitable market until 2006, when everybody is replacing their analog sets.
Lots of companies have tried it over the past 20 years, and none of those products is alive today. Adding WindowsXP to the mix won't help.
New video gear is shipping with DVI connectors - that's the direction you need to go.
My God, it's Full of Source!
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