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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.

17 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. TiVo doomed? Hah! by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 5, Funny

    And Slate thinks TiVo is doomed? When their competitors are trying to sell virtually the same thing for $1,400? Hah, I say! Hah!

  2. P4 1.8GHz? by OutRigged · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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..
    1. Re:P4 1.8GHz? by cat_jesus · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The original SA Tivo runs on a 55Mghz PPC chip with 16 Meg of RAM. You are quite correct about bloatware. If they spent a little more energy on making a tight, light, stable OS and application perhaps they could use less expensive but suitable hardware and lower the price thus gaining market penetration.
      .not that you are I have all of our boxes so powerful.
      ..begin unrelated rant..
      Is the difference between are and or really that difficult? I can overlook "there's a few", but are instead of or? I hope for your sake that english is your second language. Or should I say for you're sake?
  3. It goes like this by octalgirl · · Score: 4, Funny

    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.

  4. castrated computers by vstanescu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

  5. New XP Interface by shird · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.
    1. Re:New XP Interface by DNAGuy · · Score: 4, Informative

      It is Windows XP Media Center Edition. I expect more partner manufacturers (Dell, etc.) to offer Media Center PC's soon. It's basically Windows XP Professional with an app that provides a TV/Remote friendly interface to audio/video functions. Manufacturers are required to provide TV tuners, remotes, etc. in order to distribute the OS.

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      BRENT ROCKWOOD, EST'd 1975

  6. Convergence - again!??? by The+Mutant · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.

  7. Ouch! by AntiFreeze · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This thing scares me. It costs $1,400, and a monitor is *extra*. In other words, they're just selling a computer preconfigured to hook up to your television.

    The article is short on details about the computer, this is what it says:

    The HP computer, which will be available by the end of October, comes with a remote control, television tuner, and can record and play television shows and digital music. A monitor is extra.

    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.

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    "Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller

    1. Re:Ouch! by NineNine · · Score: 5, Insightful

      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?


      EXACTLY! That's what people want! People want *simple*. Leave the real computers to the geeks. Hell, the PS2 is almost an all-in-one box... games, movies, and music all in one little box with a remote control. They add a SIMPLE Net connection to the next gen PS2, and a SIMPLE email and web interface (yes, that you can operate with a remote), and they'll have convergence.

    2. Re:Ouch! by AntiFreeze · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Yes, I agree, people most certainly want simple. But there's a line. There are many functions of a computer that just cannot be accessed by using a remote, short of that remote being some type of keyboard.

      On the other hand, if what you use a computer for can be boiled down into functions a remote control can send to your computer, then you can probably find something much cheaper than that computer to acomplish the task. If all you plan on using your computer for is tv viewing, buy a tivo, it's much cheaper than a computer, and you get all the same functionality. If you only use your computer to play mp3s, invest in an mp3 player, the computer is overkill.

      Also, with respect to your PS2 comment, it's a device designed for a specific task, and is much cheaper than a computer.

      In my roundabout way, I think what I'm getting at is that computers should be generalized. You should be able to do what you want with them. If you buy a computer and it's set up to do only one thing well, then to me you're not buying a computer, you're buying an appliance. TiVo is an appliance in that sense, so is the PS2. And those appliances are much cheaper than the general computer you could buy which can perform all those tasks. So if remote controls become the "next big peripheral", then the machine they come attached to better be damn cheap, or that remote control better include a keyboard.

      I hope I've made some sense, I running on 0 hours of sleep right now.

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      "Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller

  8. Tivo-wannabes don't get it by Brento · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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?
  9. problems by d80tb7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.
  10. its drm crippled and may not be able to run linux by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Informative
    I already got modded down as a troll for mentioning this but just a month ago I saw this link about these crippled boxen.

    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.

  11. Merchants' marketing sucks by Devlin-du-GEnie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    CmdrTaco said:
    "The real killer with this whole genre of device is cost and confusion."
    Based on a wide sample (here, me), merchants are doing nothing to reduce confusion. I bought a TiVo at Best Buy two weeks ago. They were boxed on a shelf. No demo unit was set up. No remote was available to touch and use. They had the cables baggie lying out, so I was able to see that I didn't need to buy any, but that was it.

    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.

  12. I've had one for a year by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.

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    -1 Uncomfortable Truth